Maintenance Efficacy of Low Dose Imiglucerase for Gaucher Disease

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhengqing Qiu ◽  
Baohui Zhang ◽  
Yuhang Song ◽  
Hongbing Zhang ◽  
Yuting Wu

Abstract Background Imiglucerase is the recommended treatment for Gaucher disease (GD), a hereditary metabolic disease. In high risk adults and all children, the minimum recommended dose for long-term maintenance is 30 U/kg/2 weeks. However, the extremely high cost of this enzyme largely hinders its clinical use. The minimal maintenance dose of imiglucerase has thus been a subject of debate. We aimed to analyze the long-term maintenance outcomes of imiglucerase at dosage < 20 U/kg/2 weeks after standard dose. Methods Seventeen patients with GD type 1 or GD type 3 were enrolled for analysis. We evaluated maintenance efficacy of imiglucerase on hemoglobin, platelet, visceral volumes and bone conditions during the 7-year follow-up. Results Parameters on hemoglobin, platelet, liver, and spleen volumes of all patients were stabilized or improved. Seven out of 14 patients showed bone mineral density improvement. Three out of 16 patients showed worse bone pain; 6 out of 15 patients showed worse Erlenmeyer flask; 6 out of 15 patients showed worse bone infarction; 1 out of 16 patients showed worse marrow infiltration and 3 out of 15 patients showed worse osteonecrosis. Conclusions Imiglucerase less than 20 U/kg/2 weeks is enough to maintain blood and visceral parameters, but is not sufficient to stabilize skeletal conditions.

2019 ◽  
Vol 126 (2) ◽  
pp. S49
Author(s):  
Tama Dinur ◽  
Ari Zimran ◽  
Michal Becker Cohen ◽  
David Arkadir ◽  
Claudia Cozma ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (10) ◽  
pp. 1662 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dinur ◽  
Zimran ◽  
Becker-Cohen ◽  
Arkadir ◽  
Cozma ◽  
...  

The introduction of disease-specific therapy for patients with type I Gaucher disease (GD1) was a revolution in the management of patients, but not without cost. Thus, the management of mildly affected patients is still debated. We herein report a long-term follow-up (median (range) of 20 (5–58) years) of 103 GD1 patients who have never received enzymatic or substrate reduction therapy. The median (range) platelet count and hemoglobin levels in last assessment of all but six patients who refused therapy (although recommended and approved) were 152 (56–408) × 103/mL and 13.1 (7.6–16.8) g/dL, respectively. Most patients had mild hepatosplenomegaly. Nine patients were splenectomized. No patient developed clinical bone disease. The median (range) lyso-Gb1 levels at last visit was 108.5 (8.1–711) ng/mL; lowest for patients with R496H/other and highest for patients refusing therapy. This rather large cohort with long follow-up confirms that mildly affected patients may remain stable for many years without GD-specific therapy. The challenge for the future, when newborn screening may detect all patients, is to be able to predict which of the early diagnosed patients is at risk for disease-related complications and therefore for early treatment, and who may remain asymptomatic or minimally affected with no need for disease-specific therapy.


2019 ◽  
Vol 67 (8) ◽  
pp. 1142-1147
Author(s):  
Habibe Hezer ◽  
Hatice Kiliç ◽  
Osama Abuzaina ◽  
H Canan Hasanoǧlu‎ ◽  
Ayşegül Karalezli

Recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rt-PA) is the most commonly used thrombolytic agent in patients with high risk and intermediate to high mortality risk acute pulmonary embolism (PE). Clinical trials have shown early efficacy and safety of low-dose rt-PA. This study investigated the effects of low-dose rt-PA treatment on acute PE in long-term prognosis, recurrence of pulmonary thromboembolism, or the development of late complications. In this study, 48 patients undergoing low-dose rt-PA for the relative contraindications of thrombolytic therapy and 48 patients undergoing standard-dose therapy were evaluated retrospectively. Long-term follow-up investigated the chronic PE, recurrence, and causes of morbidity and mortality.In both treatment groups, embolism-induced mortality and overall mortality rates were similar in the first 30 days (p=1.000, p=0.714, respectively). Overall mortality rates in long-term follow-up were 41.7% in the low-dose treatment group and 16.7% in the standard-dose treatment group (p=0.013). The mortality rate at the first year was higher in the low-dose-treated group (p=0.011) and most of the deaths were due to accompanying comorbidities. There was no difference in PE recurrence and duration of recurrence between the groups (p=0.598, p=0.073, respectively). Intracranial hemorrhage due to therapy developed in one patient in both groups.Low-dose thrombolytic therapy in acute PE reduces PE-related mortality in the early period. Long-term follow-up showed that thrombolytic therapy did not affect mortality rates independently of the dose and PE recurrence.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Lin ◽  
Jasmine A. Mack ◽  
Brittany Bruggeman ◽  
Laura M. Jacobsen ◽  
Amanda L. Posgai ◽  
...  

Previously, we demonstrated low-dose anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG) and granulocyte colony stimulating factor (GCSF) immunotherapy preserved C-peptide for two years in a pilot study of subjects with established type 1 diabetes (n=25). Herein, we evaluated the long-term outcomes of ATG/GCSF in study participants with five years of available follow-up data (n=15). The primary endpoint was area under the curve (AUC) C-peptide during a two-hour mixed-meal tolerance test (MMTT). After five years, there were no statistically significant differences in AUC C-peptide when comparing subjects who received ATG/GCSF versus placebo (p = 0.41). A modeling framework based on mean trajectories in C-peptide AUC over five years, accounting for differing trends between groups, was applied to re-categorize responders (n=9) and non-responders (n=7). ATG/GCSF reponders demonstrated nearly unchanged HbA1c over five years [mean (95% CI) adjusted change = 0.29% (-0.69%, 1.27%)], but the study was not powered for comparisons against non-responders 1.75% (-0.57%, 4.06%) and placebo 1.44% (0.21%, 2.66%). These data underscore the importance of long-term follow up in previous and ongoing phase 2 trials of low-dose ATG in recent-onset type 1 diabetes.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. e55 ◽  
Author(s):  
Magy Abdelwahab ◽  
Derek Blankenship ◽  
Raphael Schiffmann

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Lin ◽  
Jasmine A. Mack ◽  
Brittany Bruggeman ◽  
Laura M. Jacobsen ◽  
Amanda L. Posgai ◽  
...  

Previously, we demonstrated low-dose anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG) and granulocyte colony stimulating factor (GCSF) immunotherapy preserved C-peptide for two years in a pilot study of subjects with established type 1 diabetes (n=25). Herein, we evaluated the long-term outcomes of ATG/GCSF in study participants with five years of available follow-up data (n=15). The primary endpoint was area under the curve (AUC) C-peptide during a two-hour mixed-meal tolerance test (MMTT). After five years, there were no statistically significant differences in AUC C-peptide when comparing subjects who received ATG/GCSF versus placebo (p = 0.41). A modeling framework based on mean trajectories in C-peptide AUC over five years, accounting for differing trends between groups, was applied to re-categorize responders (n=9) and non-responders (n=7). ATG/GCSF reponders demonstrated nearly unchanged HbA1c over five years [mean (95% CI) adjusted change = 0.29% (-0.69%, 1.27%)], but the study was not powered for comparisons against non-responders 1.75% (-0.57%, 4.06%) and placebo 1.44% (0.21%, 2.66%). These data underscore the importance of long-term follow up in previous and ongoing phase 2 trials of low-dose ATG in recent-onset type 1 diabetes.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 2323-2323
Author(s):  
Marcio M Andrade-Campos ◽  
Laura Lopez de Frutos ◽  
Jorge J Cebolla ◽  
Blanca Medrano-Engay ◽  
Mercedes Roca-Espiau ◽  
...  

Introduction Type 1 Gaucher disease (GD)(OMIM # 230800), has a pan-ethnic distribution, in Spain its prevalence is about 1/100,000. Since more than twenty years the impact of therapies in the awareness of the disease is changing the characteristics and expectations of patients. The Spanish Gaucher disease Registry (SGDR) is working since 1993 and compiled demographic, clinical, genetic, analytical and imaging data about 360 type 1 GD Spanish patients. The application of new high computing capacity and powerful network analysis to analyze the registered data could provide a visualization tool and allows to extract knowledge from complex and very numerous relationships. The objective of this analysis is to discover useful ideas and new correlations to predict the risk of developing late complications and to extract knowledge of complex and very numerous relationships. Patients & Methods From 416 patients included in the SGDR we have selected 358 with more than 70% of data and follow-up. GD type 2 patients have been excluded. The variables included in the database at diagnosis: demographic data and the clinical, analytical and imaging information at diagnostic and during the treatment follow-up as well as comorbidities. With Kampal Data Solutions, a spin-off company of the University of Zaragoza dedicated to the development of computer applications and advanced data analytics, this company has experience in the homogenization of information and in the elaboration of classic and advanced statistics projects, as well as in the visualization of said information complex network techniques and the relationship between variables and model designs.Variables:Birthdate, age at diagnosis, gender, death date, severity category of disease (mild, moderate, severe), concomitant diseases, Parkinson disease in relatives, liver volume, spleen volume, spleen removal, bone disease, S-MRI, DEXA, chitotriosidase, CCL18/PARC, lyso Gb1, B12 vitamin level, iron concentration, ferritin, cholesterol, triglycerides, HDL-cholesterol, LDL-cholesterol, AST, ALT, GGT, acid phosphatase, bilirubin, hemoglobin concentration, Hsc, WBC count, platelets count, serum gammaglobulin fraction, IgG, IgA, IgM, GBA activity, GBAgenotype, CHIT1genotype, age to start therapy, type of therapy (ERT, SRT), new bone crisis or joint replacement, development of malignancies or Parkinson disease. Results: The 358 subjects were mostly GD1 (340 vs 18 GD3), 18% were splenectomized and 39% have advanced bone disease and bone complications. Most of the patients have a complex heterozygous genotype (81% vs 19% homozygous). 47% of patients were diagnosed before 2,000 and 10% die before this study. Most of them are receiving ERT (54%). About comorbidities, 4% of patients developed MGUS or Parkinson disease and 6% malignant neoplasias. The main results have founded a significant correlation between skeletal complications and impaired and spleen removal (p=0.0005); this fact confirm previous reports. In this study a low IgA serum level shows a significant correlation with severe bone disease(p=0.0000), and with the incidence of new bone crisis during long term ERT. A IgG increase was related to the development of neoplasia. There were two more important factors that we have found; the age at diagnosis and the age to start therapy. Comments: Registries are key resources to help increasing timely and accurate diagnosis, improving patient's management, tailoring treatments, facilitating clinical trials, supporting healthcare planning and speeding up research. This is the very first attempt to establish a correlation network among different biomarkers and clinical characteristics in a national base cohort. As has been hypothesized seems that the impairment of immune system has a strong impact in long term complications, in our study the humoral immunity dysfunction pops up as an important factor. Despite of our short cohort, the quality of data is accurate and can reflect the own Spanish Gaucher disease characteristics. Currently we are working in the design of algorithms to help to predict patient outcomes. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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