How fast can lurbinectedin cause anaphylaxis?
The provided information doesn’t include any onset-time data for lurbinectedin–induced anaphylaxis (for example, whether reactions occur during infusion, within minutes, or hours after dosing). Without that evidence, there’s no reliable, source-based way to state an onset time.
Where to look for the onset timing in practice (label and reports)
Onset timing for drug-induced anaphylaxis is usually found in:
- the drug’s prescribing information (under “Warnings” or “Adverse Reactions,” sometimes with case descriptions),
- postmarketing safety reports,
- case reports/series in the medical literature.
If you share the specific label excerpt or a link you’re using (or the country/brand name and formulation), I can pull out the exact onset timeframe stated there.
What to do clinically while onset timing is uncertain
Because anaphylaxis can present quickly with many IV anticancer agents, clinicians typically treat suspected reactions as potentially immediate and monitor closely during infusion and shortly afterward until the prescribing information’s monitoring window is met.
If you want, tell me where you’re checking (FDA label, EMA product info, DrugPatentWatch.com page, or a case report), and I’ll extract the precise “time to onset” language from that source.