181 DOSE-DEPENDENT REDUCTIONS IN SERUM FERRITIN CORRELATE WITH CHANGES IN SERUM TRANSAMINASE LEVELS DURING LONG-TERM IRON CHELATION THERAPY WITH DEFERASIROX (EXJADE®, ICL670)

2008 ◽  
Vol 48 ◽  
pp. S77
Author(s):  
P. Brissot ◽  
P. Cianciulli ◽  
H. Cario ◽  
B. Rabault ◽  
Y. Deugnier
1998 ◽  
Vol 339 (7) ◽  
pp. 417-423 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nancy F. Olivieri ◽  
Gary M. Brittenham ◽  
Christine E. McLaren ◽  
Douglas M. Templeton ◽  
Ross G. Cameron ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 1686-1686
Author(s):  
Dagmar Pospisilova ◽  
Jana Cmejlova ◽  
Tomas Adam ◽  
Radek Cmejla

Abstract Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA) attracts much attention, since the symptoms of the disease are associated with mutations in ribosomal protein (RP) S19 in 25% of patients and in RPS17 and RPS24 in other DBA patients, indicating a possible relationship between ribosomal function, translation level and erythropoiesis. Indeed, translational efficiency has been found to be lowered in most DBA patients, and the amino acid leucine was tested in vitro as a potential modulator of protein synthesis with promising results. We therefore decided to evaluate the effects of leucine administration in several DBA patients. For leucine therapy, 4 patients with the lowest levels of translation (patients 1, 2, 4 and 6; see Table) and 2 others were selected from the Czech DBA registry. Due to iron overload, all patients were receiving iron chelation therapy at the start of the leucine therapy. A total dose of 2000 mg/m2/day of L-leucine was administered orally in three subdoses in the form of a capsule prepared by the hospital pharmacy. The doses were based on the leucine content in sports dietary protein supplements, and reduced according to each patient’s body surface area. Two and 4 hours after administration, serum leucine levels doubled, but did not exceed normal values. Changes in other amino acids serum levels were not observed. After 8 weeks of leucine supplementation, all patients reported a noticeable increase in appetite and weight gain. Over a period of 6 months of follow-up, a gradual improvement in reticulocyte counts, hemoglobin levels and a reduction of serum ferritin levels were observed in all patients (see Table). One patient became transfusion independent, and is currently still in remission (>5 months); in two other transfusion dependent patients, the inter-transfusion period doubled; in steroid-dependent patients, the steroid dose could be reduced. The patient with the RPS17 mutation significantly improved in weight and well-being, and the iron chelation therapy was stopped. Our results thus show for the first time that leucine administration can greatly improve the quality of life of DBA patients in at least two ways - it can reduce the need for iron chelation; and it can gradually enhance erythropoiesis, reducing the steroid dose or the frequency of transfusions. Patients’ characteristics Patient No. Age (y) / Sex Status before Leu Level of translation (% of controls)* Duration of Leu administration (mo) Serum ferritin level before Leu/current (μg/l) Reticulocyte count before Leu/current (%) Effect of Leu administration MUT: mutation in RPS17; NM: no mutation in RPS17, RPS19 or RPS24; TD: transfusion dependent; HDS: high dose steroid treatment; LDS: low dose steroid treatment; ND: not done; PTP: prolongation of the transfusion period (before Leu/ current); *: Haematologica91:1456(2006) 1 NM 7 / F TD 21 12 1220 / 381 0.1 / 3.3 Remission 2 NM 8 / M TD 47 9 1311 / 492 0.1 / 0.4 PTP (3 / 6 weeks) 3 NM 11 / F TD ND 2 1950 / ND 0.1 / ND Increased appetite 4 MUT 31 / M LDS 39 8 860 / 496 1.1 / 1.5 Steroid dose reduction 5 NM 13 / M TD 77 6 1427 / 1110 0.6 / 1.4 PTP (4 / 8 weeks) 6 NM 18 / M HDS 42 12 1605 / 862 0.4 / 0.8 Steroid dose reduction


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 5155-5155
Author(s):  
Stuart L Goldberg ◽  
Patricia Giardina ◽  
Joan Parkhurst Cain ◽  
Deborah Chirnomas ◽  
Jason Esposito ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 5155 Introduction: Deferasirox (Exjade®, Novartis Pharmaceuticals) is an oral iron chelator indicated for the treatment of transfusional iron overload. The recommended mode of administration is to be taken on an empty stomach in water, apple juice or orange juice ≥30 minutes before food. However, there have been post-marketing reports of discontinuation or reduced compliance of deferasirox secondary to palatability and gastrointestinal adverse events. Registration trials with deferasirox did not evaluate different food combinations in an attempt to maintain predictable plasma levels. Early single dose studies suggested that the bioavailability of deferasirox is increased when administered with or before meals, and is positively influenced by fat content, but is not affected by degree of dispersion nor type of liquid. Long-term pharmacokinetic and tolerability studies involving a food effect have not been conducted to date, and the ability of alternate methods of administration to improve patient compliance with iron chelation therapy is unknown. Method: This is an ongoing single-arm, open-label, multi-center study designed to evaluate the palatability, safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of deferasirox when administered with food, dispersed in any liquid of choice, or crushed and added to food. The patient population includes patients with transfusional hemosiderosis (minimum entry serum ferritin ≥500 μ g/L) aged >2 years with thalassemia major, sickle cell disease (SCD), low or intermediate (INT-1) risk MDS or other anemias, who are on, starting, or resuming treatment with deferasirox. The study began with a 1-month run-in phase with deferasirox dosed according to prescribing information, then a 3-month assessment phase where subjects could choose each week from 5 general administration options including with or without meals, in the morning or evening, crushed and added to a soft food, or mixed in a liquid of choice. Subject diaries are used to record the meal and method of administration at the end of each week. Palatability is assessed with a modified facial hedonic scale, with additional directed questions capturing gastrointestinal side effects. This is a data analysis of the run-in phase. Result: Target enrollment has been met with 65 patients. Baseline data on the first 58 subjects include 8 in the 2 to <10 years of age group (median 7.5 years; range 3–9); 42 in the 10 to <60 years of age group (median 18.5 years; range 10–48); and 8 in the ≥60 years of age group (median 74 years; range71-83). Underlying hematologic diagnoses included SCD (41%), thalassemia major (29%), MDS (12%) and other anemias (17%). Sixty-nine percent of subjects were receiving deferasirox prior to entering the study. The median baseline serum ferritin level was 2405 μ g/L (range 560–8660) and was distributed as shown in Table 1. The most frequent adverse events were diarrhea (19%) and nausea (9%) (Table 2), which were more common in MDS (P=0.23 and P<0.01, respectively). Conclusion: This ongoing trial (NCT00845871) is evaluating whether alternative modes of administration improve palatability and tolerability while maintaining safety. Preliminary data from the assessment phase (deferasirox taken with meals, different liquids, or crushed and added to food) will be presented at the meeting. Disclosures: Goldberg: Novartis Oncology: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding, Speakers Bureau. Off Label Use: Exjade, iron chelation therapy, off-label method of administration. Giardina:Novartis: Research Funding. Parkhurst Cain:Novartis: Research Funding. Chirnomas:Novartis: Research Funding. Esposito:Novartis: Employment. Paley:Novartis: Employment. Vichinsky:Novartis: Consultancy, Research Funding, Speakers Bureau; Hemaquest: Consultancy, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Apotex: Consultancy, Research Funding.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 1028-1028 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amal El-Beshlawy ◽  
Mohsen Elalfy ◽  
Lee Lee Chan ◽  
Yongrong Lai ◽  
Kai-Hsin Lin ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 1028 Background: To prevent complications associated with iron overload in patients with transfusion-dependent anemias, iron chelation therapy is required throughout life starting from early childhood. Long-term studies of iron chelation therapy are therefore required, particularly in pediatric patients. The 1-year open-label, single-arm, multicenter EPIC (Evaluation of Patients' Iron Chelation with Exjade®) trial evaluating the efficacy and safety of deferasirox in patients with transfusion-dependent iron overload enrolled 577 pediatric patients across 23 countries. In an extension period of up to 18 months, or until deferasirox was available locally, patients completing the core study could continue to receive deferasirox, thus providing long-term efficacy and safety data of deferasirox in iron-overloaded pediatric patients. Methods: At enrolment, transfusion-dependent pediatric patients (defined as ≥2–<16 years at enrollment) had serum ferritin ≥1000 ng/mL OR <1000 ng/mL with a history of multiple transfusions (>20 transfusions or >100 mL/kg red blood cells transfused) and liver iron concentration >2 mg Fe/g dw confirmed by R2 magnetic resonance imaging. Deferasirox starting dose was 10–30 mg/kg/day depending on frequency of blood transfusions, with protocol-specified adjustments of 5–10 mg/kg/day (range 0–40 mg/kg/day) based on 3-monthly serum ferritin trends and safety. Biochemistry analysis including serum ferritin was performed on a monthly basis, and growth was monitored every 12 weeks, with continuous assessment of safety parameters. Creatinine clearance was calculated using the Schwarz formula for pediatric patients. Changes from the start of deferasirox treatment (core baseline) are presented. Results: 267 pediatric patients aged 2–<6 (n=68), 6–<12 (n=114) and 12–<16 (n=85) years entered the extension period (n=141 [52.8%] male; n=248 [92.9%] with underlying thalassemia; n=33 [12.4%] with a history of hepatitis B and/or C). Median duration of deferasirox exposure was 101.3 weeks (range 55.6–159.9) with mean ± SD deferasirox dose 25.7 ± 5.8 mg/kg/day (13.4–40.0). Median serum ferritin decreased from a baseline of 3222 ng/mL (951–16,944) to 2431 ng/mL (238–29,681) at the end of the extension (absolute change from baseline –528 ng/mL [–6354 to 25,127]; P<0.0001; last observation carried forward). Overall, 257/267 (96.3%) patients completed the extension; main reasons (more than two patients) for discontinuation were unsatisfactory therapeutic effect (n=4, 1.5%) and consent withdrawal (n=3; 1.1%). The most common (>5%) investigator-assessed drug-related AEs were increased alanine aminotransferase (ALT; n=47, 17.6%), increased aspartate aminotransferase (AST; n=44, 16.5%), increased blood creatinine (n=24, 9.0%) and rash (n=23, 8.6%). ALT and AST increases were mostly mild in severity, transient, non-progressive and managed with dose adjustments. There were no reported drug-related serious AEs and no deaths occurred. 45/267 (16.9%) patients had two consecutive ALT values >5 × upper limit of normal (ULN). Of these 45 patients, 40 had high ALT levels at baseline and 30 had ALT or AST >2.5 × ULN at baseline; 13/45 had a history of hepatitis B and/or C. 6/267 (2.2%) patients had two consecutive serum creatinine values >33% above baseline and >ULN; all had normal values at baseline. The relative change in creatinine clearance from baseline to end of the extension was between –10 and –20% for the majority of patients (n=52, 19.5%), although changes in both directions were variable. Stature, growth and weight assessments indicated positive growth velocity. For all patients combined, mean ± SD growth velocity at end of extension was 5.9 ± 43.3 cm/year (median 2.6 cm/year). Conclusions: Deferasirox therapy for up to 3 years in pediatric patients significantly decreased serum ferritin, similar to previous reports. The majority of patients with elevated liver enzymes during the study also had elevated levels at baseline; renal safety was consistent with previous reports. While patient age and gender will influence individual growth rates, positive growth velocity was nonetheless maintained during treatment. Disclosures: Lin: Novartis: Honoraria. Aydinok:Novartis: Honoraria, Research Funding, Speakers Bureau; Ferrokin: Research Funding. Galanello:Novartis: Research Funding, Speakers Bureau; Apopharma: Research Funding, Speakers Bureau; Ferrokin: Research Funding. El-Ali:Novartis: Employment. Martin:Novartis: Employment. Cappellini:Novartis: Speakers Bureau.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 2660-2660
Author(s):  
Mohammed Al-Darwish ◽  
Asim F Belgaumi ◽  
Neameh A Farhan ◽  
Ali Al-Ahmari ◽  
Amal Al-Seraihy ◽  
...  

Abstract The treatment of AML in children utilizes intensive chemotherapy and often myeloablative hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT). This results in significant myelosuppression, necessitating blood product transfusions. Repeated PRBC transfusions result in an increase in the body iron load which can lead to secondary hemochromatosis and organ dysfunction, particularly the heart and liver. Patients with hemoglobinopathies on chronic PRBC transfusions require iron chelation therapy usually after 10-20 units transfused. While patients with AML receive multiple transfusions, there is little data on the number or volume of PRBC transfused or the estimate of the iron load received. This retrospective study evaluated the number and volumes of PRBC transfusions administered to pediatric (<14 years) patients with AML, and calculated an estimate of the iron infused. Twenty-two patients with AML were diagnosed and treated at our institution between January 2010 and December 2012. There were 13 girls and 9 boys with a median age at diagnosis of 7.5 years (mean 6.95; range 0.4-13.2). One patient died early of sepsis without achieving complete remission (CR), and another died in CR following her last course of chemotherapy. Eight patients underwent HCT following myeloablative conditioning with busulfan, cyclophosphamide and etoposide; the remaining received chemotherapy alone. For patients who completed their chemotherapy the cumulative anthracycline dose was 450 mg/m2. Patients received a median of 17.5 PRBC transfusions (mean 16.6; range 3-28) during the course of their treatment. The cumulative PRBC transfusion volume was 185.4 ml/kg (mean 175.8; range 24.87 – 311.58), which translates to a median iron dose of 129.8 mg/kg (mean 123.1; range 17.4 – 218.1). The median serum ferritin level for those patients who were tested (n=12) was 1794.5 mg/L (mean 9074.5; range 699 – 78500). The median projected hepatic iron content, based on the transfused iron burden was 12.24 mg/g liver dry weight (mean 11.61; range 1.64 – 20.58); 17 (77.3%) patients had projected hepatic iron concentrations in excess of 7.0 mg/g, and none were <1.6 mg/g. Ten patients have developed a > 10 percentage point reduction in their left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF; range -11% to -45%) however only one patient is on cardiac failure medications. Cardiac T2* MRI studies are being conducted to evaluate cardiac iron status for patients in this cohort. 13 patients were alive in CR at a median follow-up duration of 1.83 years (mean 2.16; range 0.27 – 3.43). Pediatric patients with AML receive large volumes of PRBC transfusions during their treatment and as a consequence accumulate high total body iron. This is in excess of the threshold for chelation therapy, used to prevent organ dysfunction, in patients with hemoglobinopathies. In addition, AML patient also receive significant cardio-toxic medications which may compound the effect of iron on the myocardium. With improvements in long term survival for patients with AML the addition of iron chelation therapy must be studied in order to prevent long term toxicity of AML therapy. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2020 ◽  
Vol 95 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Natalia Scaramellini ◽  
Dario Consonni ◽  
Elena Cassinerio ◽  
Carola Arighi ◽  
Alessia Marcon ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 2685-2685 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lap Shu Alan Chan ◽  
Rena Buckstein ◽  
Marciano D. Reis ◽  
Alden Chesney ◽  
Adam Lam ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction: The biology of myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) is poorly understood, and treatment options are limited. Thus, most MDS patients require chronic red blood cell transfusion, and many develop secondary iron overload. Although the pathophysiological consequences of iron overload to the heart, liver, and endocrine organs have been well characterized, its effects on haematopoiesis have not been studied. However, it has been observed that chelation therapy in iron-overloaded MDS patients may result in reduction of transfusion requirements, and recent studies have suggested a correlation between the use of iron chelation therapy and improvement in leukaemia-free survival in MDS. At the cellular level, iron toxicity is mediated in large part via the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). It has been shown in animal models that accumulation of ROS leads to senescence of haematopoietic stem cells, and that ROS cause DNA damage and promote the development of malignancy. These effects of ROS may be particularly important in MDS, in which haematopoiesis is already severely compromised and genetic instability is a striking feature. Hypothesis: We hypothesize that iron overload secondary to transfusion leads to increased levels of intracellular ROS in early haematopoeitic cells in MDS. The increase in intracellular ROS in MDS would be predicted to lead further impairment of haematopoiesis via stem cell exhaustion and while promoting accumulation of DNA damage by myelodysplastic stem cells and early progenitors, thus accelerating progression of MDS to acute leukaemia. Results: To test this hypothesis, we examined the relationship between transfusion-related iron overload and ROS content of CD34+ bone marrow cells in MDS. ROS content was measured in CD34+ cells by flow cytometry in bone marrow aspirates from 34 consecutive MDS patients (CMML=4, MDS/MPD=2, RA=4, RARS=3, RCMD=2, RAEB 1=6, RAEB 2=12, RAEB-t/AML=1). The patients represented a wide range of prior transfusion burden (0-&gt;300 units PRBC) and serum ferritin levels (11-&gt;10000 μg/L). ROS was strongly correlated with serum ferritin concentration for patients with iron overload (serum ferritin &gt;1000 μg/L; n=14, R=0.733, p&lt;0.005). The correlation between ROS and ferritin level was even stronger in the subset of patients with RAEB 1 or RAEB 2 and iron overload (n=11, R=0.838, p&lt;0.005). In contrast, no correlation between ROS and ferritin level was demonstrated for patients with serum ferritin &lt;1000 μg/L (n=20). Importantly, iron chelation therapy was associated with a reduction in CD34+ cell ROS content in one patient. To assess the effect of iron overload on normal stem cell and progenitor function, we established a mouse model of subacute bone marrow iron overload. B6D2F1 mice were loaded with iron dextran by intraperitoneal injection (150mg total iron load over 21 days), and sacrificed three days after the end of iron loading. Iron staining of tissue sections confirmed iron deposition in the bone marrow, liver, and myocardium. The development of splenomegaly was noted in iron-loaded animals. Flow cytometric analysis revealed increased apoptosis of bone marrow cells in iron loaded mice based on annexin V+/7 AAD-staining (6.26±0.96% versus 3.54±0.99% for control mice, paired student’s t-Test p&lt;0.005). However, ROS content in CD117+ progenitors of iron loaded mice was similar to control mice. Thus, subacute iron loading in mice increases apoptosis but does not alter the ROS content of HSCs; we postulate that chronic iron overload is required to achieve this effect. Conclusions: These results establish a relationship between CD34+ cell ROS content and serum ferritin concentration in MDS patients with iron overload, and indicate that iron chelation therapy in this patient population reverses this ROS accumulation. The physiological consequences of this relationship are currently being investigated in this patient set by haematopoietic colony assays and assessment of DNA damage in CD34+ cells. Nonethelesss, these data may have key implications for the deployment of iron chelation therapy in MDS patients, and may explain the association between the use of iron chelation and improved leukaemia-free survival in MDS.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 3183-3183
Author(s):  
Vassilis Ladis ◽  
Marouso Drossou ◽  
Dimitria Vini ◽  
Ersi Voskaridou ◽  
Miranda Athanasiou-Metaxa ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 3183 Background: The introduction of iron chelation treatment has led to a significant improvement in morbidity and overall survival in patients with transfusion-dependent anemias. Deferasirox is a once-daily, oral iron chelator approved for the treatment of transfusional iron overload in both adult and pediatric patients. The efficacy and safety of deferasirox in a variety of transfusion-dependent anemias has been established in numerous Phase II/III clinical trials. Since most patients with transfusion-dependent anemias require lifelong iron chelation therapy, there is a need to assess the long-term safety of deferasirox in both adult and pediatric patients. Aim: To assess the safety profile of deferasirox in patients with transfusional iron overload in a real-world clinical setting. To further investigate the safety profile of deferasirox in patients with congenital erythrocyte disorders and transfusional iron overload, with ferritin levels <4000 ng/ml and without severe cardiac siderosis. Methods: Between July 2009 and September 2010, 85 patients with transfusion-induced iron overload treated with deferasirox as per the approved product labeling were enrolled in the study. These data represent the 24-week planned interim analysis of a 12-month observational study on deferasirox safety profile in the treatment of pediatric and adult patients with transfusion-dependent anemias who were newly-treated with deferasirox. Safety was evaluated through the monitoring and recording of all adverse events and serious adverse events, as well as routine laboratory testing, including hematology, blood chemistry and hepatic function assessments. Results: The population had a median age of 37.6 years (range: 5.3–61.4) and a female to male ratio of 1.3. Beta-thalassemia (67.1%) was the most common transfusion-dependent anemia, followed by thalassemia intermedia requiring periodic transfusions (20.0%) and sickle cell anemia (12.9%). Mean baseline ferritin levels were 1502.1±870.5 (pediatric group: 1480.2±522.8 and adult group: 1503.6±891.4), while 53 out of the 85 patients (62.4%) had serum ferritin level above 1000 ng/ml. Mean baseline liver T2* value was 10.4±9.7 ms; 44.4% of patients demonstrated minimal liver iron deposition (MRI T2* > 6.3 ms), 51.4% had mild to moderate liver iron overload (T2* ≤ 6.3 ms), and 4.2% had severe liver iron overload (T2*<1.4 ms). 54 (63.5%) of patients analysed had been pre-treated with iron chelators and 31 (36.5%) were chelation-naïve. The initial average daily dose of deferasirox was 25.9±4.8 mg/kg, and 70.6% of patients had no dose modification during the 24-week follow-up period. A statistical significant decrease in median serum ferritin levels was observed by Week 24 (mean absolute change from baseline:-214.5 ng/mL; p=0.009) [Figure 1]. No statistically significant changes were observed in creatitine levels, creatinine clearance and transaminases by Week 24 [Figure 1]. 37 ADRs were reported by 17 patients (20%) over the 24-week period. Among the most frequently observed ADRs (>5%) were epigastralgia reported by 7.1% of patients (6/85) and loose stools/diarrhoea by 5.9% of patients (5/85). The majority of ADRs reported (nevents=25; 67.6%) were graded as mild in severity, while 21.6% (nevents=8) were graded as moderate and 10.8% (nevents=4) as severe. Most ADRs (nevents=31; 83.8%) resulted in full recovery by Week 24. The overall incidence of SADRs was as low as 1.2% (in particular one patient experienced severe epigastralgia and upper extremity pain which resulted in her withdrawal from the study after four months of treatment). The all-cause discontinuation rate was 9.4% (8/85), while only two patients (2.4%) discontinued the study therapy due to ADR; 1 patient due to increased transaminase levels and 1 patient due to the aforementioned SADR. Conclusions: These data highlight the safety profile of deferasirox in both adult and pediatric patients; the regular monitoring of serum ferritin levels as well as other iron-overload parameters and transfusion requirements play a major role in determining and optimizing the outcome of iron chelation therapy. Disclosures: Ladis: Novartis Hellas S.A.C.I.: Investigator participating in a trial sponsored by Novartis. Drossou:Novartis Pharmaceuticals: Investigator participating in a trial sponsored by Novartis. Vini:Novartis Pharmaceuticals: Investigator participating in a trial sponsored by Novartis. Athanasiou-Metaxa:Novartis Hellas S.A.C.I.: Research Funding. Oikonomou:Novartis Hellas S.A.C.I.: Investigator participating in a trial sponsored by Novartis. Vlachaki:Novartis Hellas S.A.C.I.: Investigator participating in a trial sponsored by Novartis. Tigka:Novartis Hellas S.A.C.I.: Employment. Tzavelas:Novartis Hellas S.A.C.I.: Employment. Liakopoulou:Novartis Hellas S.A.C.I.: Investigator participating in a trial sponsored by Novartis. Adamopoulos:Novartis Hellas S.A.C.I.: Investigator participating in a trial sponsored by Novartis. Kattamis:Novartis Hellas S.A.C.I.: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees.


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