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Red cell transfusion thresholds in outpatients with myelodysplastic syndromes: Results of a pilot randomized trial RBC-ENHANCE
Buckstein, R., Callum, J., Prica, A., Bowen, D., Wells, R. A., Leber, B., Heddle, N., Chodirker, L., Cheung, M., Mozessohn, L., et al
Transfusion. 2024
Abstract
BACKGROUND The optimal hemoglobin (Hb) threshold for red blood cell transfusions in adult patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) has not been defined. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS We conducted a pilot randomized multi-center study of two transfusion algorithms (liberal, to maintain Hb 110-120 g/L, transfuse 2 units if Hb < 105 g/L and 1 unit if Hb 105-110 g/L vs. restrictive, 85-105 g/L, transfuse 2 units when Hgb < 85 g/L). Primary objectives were 70% compliance in maintaining the q2 week hemoglobin within the targeted range and the achievement of a 15 g/L difference in pre-transfusion Hb. Secondary outcomes included measures of quality of life (QOL), iron studies and safety. RESULTS Twenty-eight patients were randomized between February 2015-2020, 13 to the restrictive arm and 15 to the liberal arm in three tertiary care centers. The compliance was 66% and 45% and the mean pre-transfusion Hb thresholds were 86 (standard deviation [SD] 8) and 98 g/L (SD 10) in the restrictive and liberal arms, (mean difference 11.8 g/L, p < .0001), respectively. Patients in the liberal arm experienced a mean of 3.4 (SD 2.6) more transfusion visits and received a mean of 5.3 (SD 5.5) more units of blood during the 12-week study. Ferritin increased by 1043 (SD 1516) IU/L and 148 (SD 1319) IU/L in the liberal and restrictive arms, respectively. Selected QOL scores were superior pre-transfusion and more patients achieved clinically important improvements in the liberal arm compared with the restrictive arm for selected symptoms and function domains. CONCLUSION The results establish that policies for transfusion support can be delivered in practice at multiple hospitals, but further research is required to understand the full clinical effects and safety of liberal transfusion policies in MDS outpatients.
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Subcutaneous marzeptacog alfa (activated) for on-demand treatment of bleeding events in subjects with haemophilia A or B with inhibitors
Faraj, A., Nyberg, J., Blouse, G. E., Knudsen, T., Simonsson, U. S. H.
Clinical pharmacology and therapeutics. 2024
Abstract
Marzeptacog alfa (MarzAA) is under development for subcutaneous treatment of episodic bleeds in hemophilia A/B patients and was studied in a Phase 3 trial evaluating MarzAA compared to standard-of-care (SoC) for on-demand use. The work presented here aimed to evaluate MarzAA and SoC treatment of bleeding events on a standardized 4-point efficacy scale (poor, fair, good and excellent). Two continuous-time Markov modeling approaches were explored; a four-state model analyzing all four categories of bleeding improvement and a two-state model analyzing a binarized outcome (treatment failure [poor/fair], and treatment success [good/excellent]). Different covariates impacting improvement of bleeding episodes as well as a putative relationship between MarzAA exposure and improvement of bleeding episodes were evaluated. In the final four-state model, higher baseline diastolic blood pressure and higher age (>33 years of age) were found to negatively and positively impact improvement of bleeding condition, respectively. Bleeding events occurring in knees and ankles were found to improve faster than bleeding events at other locations. The covariate effects had most impact on early treatment success (=<3 hours) whereas at later timepoints (>12 hours), treatment success was similar for all patients indicating that these covariates might be clinically relevant for early treatment response. A statistically significant relationship between MarzAA zero-order absorption and improvement of bleedings (p< 0.05) were identified albeit with low precision. No statistically significant difference in treatment response between MarzAA and intravenous SoC was identified, indicating the potential of MarzAA for treatment of episodic bleeding events with a favorable subcutaneous administration route.
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Long-term treatment with fostamatinib in Japanese patients with primary immune thrombocytopenia: An open-label extension study following a phase 3 placebo-controlled, double-blind, parallel-group study
Kuwana, M., Ito, T., Kowata, S., Hatta, Y., Fujimaki, K., Naito, K., Kurahashi, S., Kagoo, T., Tanimoto, K., Saotome, S., et al
American journal of hematology. 2024
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Determinants of lenalidomide response with or without erythropoiesis-stimulating agents in myelodysplastic syndromes: the HOVON89 trial
van de Loosdrecht, A. A., Cremers, E. M. P., Alhan, C., Duetz, C., In 't Hout, F. E. M., Visser-Wisselaar, H. A., Chitu, D. A., Verbrugge, A., Cunha, S. M., Ossenkoppele, G. J., et al
Leukemia. 2024
Abstract
A randomized phase-II study was performed in low/int-1 risk MDS (IPSS) to study efficacy and safety of lenalidomide without (arm A) or with (arm B) ESA/G-CSF. In arm B, patients without erythroid response (HI-E) after 4 cycles received ESA; G-CSF was added if no HI-E was obtained by cycle 9. HI-E served as primary endpoint. Flow cytometry and next-generation sequencing were performed to identify predictors of response. The final evaluation comprised 184 patients; 84% non-del(5q), 16% isolated del(5q); median follow-up: 70.7 months. In arm A and B, 39 and 41% of patients achieved HI-E; median time-to-HI-E: 3.2 months for both arms, median duration of-HI-E: 9.8 months. HI-E was significantly lower in non-del(5q) vs. del(5q): 32% vs. 80%. The same accounted for transfusion independency-at-week 24 (16% vs. 67%), but similar in both arms. Apart from presence of del(5q), high percentages of bone marrow lymphocytes and progenitor B-cells, a low number of mutations, absence of ring sideroblasts, and SF3B1 mutations predicted HI-E. In conclusion, lenalidomide induced HI-E in patients with non-del(5q) and del(5q) MDS without additional effect of ESA/G-CSF. The identified predictors of response may guide application of lenalidomide in lower-risk MDS in the era of precision medicine. (EudraCT 2008-002195-10).
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Mitapivat improves ineffective erythropoiesis and iron overload in adult patients with pyruvate kinase deficiency
van Beers, E. J., Al-Samkari, H., Grace, R. F., Barcellini, W., Glenthøj, A., DiBacco, M., Wind-Rotolo, M., Xu, R., Beynon, V., Patel, P., et al
Blood advances. 2024
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Editor's Choice
Abstract
Pyruvate kinase (PK) deficiency is a rare, hereditary disease characterized by chronic hemolytic anemia. Iron overload is a common complication regardless of age, genotype, or transfusion history. Mitapivat, an oral, allosteric PK activator, improves anemia and hemolysis in adult patients with PK deficiency. Mitapivat's impact on iron overload and ineffective erythropoiesis was evaluated in adults with PK deficiency who were not regularly transfused in the phase 3 ACTIVATE trial and long-term extension (LTE) (NCT03548220/NCT03853798). Patients in the LTE received mitapivat throughout ACTIVATE/LTE (baseline to Week [W] 96; mitapivat-to-mitapivat [M/M] arm) or switched from placebo (baseline to W24) to mitapivat (W24 to 96; placebo-to-mitapivat [P/M] arm). Changes from baseline in markers of iron overload and erythropoiesis were assessed to W96. Improvements in hepcidin (mean [95% confidence interval ⟨CI ⟩] 4770.0 ng/L [-1532.3, 11,072.3], erythroferrone (-9834.9 ng/L [-14,328.4, -5341.3]), soluble transferrin receptor (-56.0 nmol/L [-84.8, -27.2]), and erythropoietin (-32.85 IU/L [-54.65, -11.06]) were observed in the M/M arm (n=40) from baseline to W24, sustained to W96. No improvements were observed in the P/M arm (n=40) to W24; however, upon transitioning to mitapivat, improvements similar to the M/M arm were seen. Mean (95% CI) changes from baseline in liver iron concentration (LIC) by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at W96 were -2.0 mg Fe/g dry weight (dw) (-4.8, -0.8; M/M arm) and -1.8 mg Fe/g dw (-4.4, 0.80; P/M arm). Mitapivat is the first disease-modifying pharmacotherapy shown to have beneficial effects on iron overload and ineffective erythropoiesis in patients with PK deficiency.
PICO Summary
Population
Adults with pyruvate kinase deficiency not regularly transfused, enrolled in the phase 3 ACTIVATE clinical trial and long term extension (LTE) (n= 80).
Intervention
Mitapivat throughout ACTIVATE/LTE baseline to week (W) 96 (mitapivat-to-mitapivat M/M arm, n= 40).
Comparison
Switched from placebo (baseline to W24) to mitapivat W24 to 96 (placebo-to-mitapivat P/M arm, n= 40).
Outcome
Changes from baseline in markers of iron overload and erythropoiesis were assessed to W96. Improvements in hepcidin (mean [95% confidence interval (CI)] 4770.0 ng/L [-1532.3, 11,072.3]), erythroferrone (-9834.9 ng/L [-14,328.4, -5341.3]), soluble transferrin receptor (-56.0 nmol/L [-84.8, -27.2]), and erythropoietin (-32.85 IU/L [-54.65, -11.06]) were observed in the M/M arm from baseline to W24, sustained to W96. No improvements were observed in the P/M arm to W24; however, upon transitioning to mitapivat, improvements similar to the M/M arm were seen. Mean (95% CI) changes from baseline in liver iron concentration by magnetic resonance imaging at W96 were -2.0 mg Fe/g dry weight (dw) (-4.8, -0.8; M/M arm) and -1.8 mg Fe/g dw (-4.4, 0.80; P/M arm).
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Red cell transfusion thresholds in outpatients with myelodysplastic syndromes: Combined results from two randomized controlled feasibility studies
Buckstein, R., Callum, J., Prica, A., Bowen, D., Wells, R. A., Leber, B., Heddle, N., Chodirker, L., Cheung, M., Mozessohn, L., et al
American journal of hematology. 2023
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Editor's Choice
PICO Summary
Population
Red blood cell, transfusion dependent patients with myelodysplastic syndromes enrolled in two feasibility trials: REDDS in United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand, and RBC-Enhance in Canada (n= 66).
Intervention
Liberal transfusion strategy (maintain Hb 110-125 g/L), (n= 33).
Comparison
Restrictive transfusion strategy (maintain Hb 85-100 g/L), (n= 33).
Outcome
The transfusion strategy was applied for 12 weeks. In total, 232 and 471 units of red blood cells were transfused in the restrictive and liberal arms, respectively. Patients in the liberal arm had more complete blood count tests (13.8 vs. 10.3), a mean of 3.1 ± 2.9 more transfusion visits, and a mean of 6.3 ± 5.9 extra units of blood. Overall, the authors of this combined analysis of two feasibility trials, observed less variability in Hb levels in the liberal arm with patients reporting clinically important improvements pre- and post-transfusion (compared with baseline) in selected symptom and functional domains. However, many patients in both transfusion arms experienced stability or declines in their scores.
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Ferric carboxymaltose effects on restless legs syndrome and on brain iron in patients with iron deficiency anemia
Bae, H., Cho, Y. W., Kim, K. T., Li, X., Earley, C. J.
Sleep medicine. 2023;109:128-131
Abstract
OBJECTIVE Brain iron status is fundamental in RLS pathogenesis. The aim of this study was to determine the clinical efficacy and brain iron concentration improvement in RLS patients with IDA, using 1500 mg FCM. METHODS This is a randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled study. RLS patients with IDA were grouped into either 1500 mg FCM or placebo. The primary outcomes were the change from baseline on the International Restless Legs Syndrome Study Group scale (IRLS) and brain iron measured by QSM and R2∗. RESULTS A total of 18 RLS patients with IDA were enrolled, 10 in the FCM group and 8 in the placebo. At the week 6 endpoint, the FCM group showed significant improvement in both IRLS (-13.60 ± 9.47 vs. -3.63 ± 5.40, p = 0.011) and VAS (-40.50 ± 28.81 vs. -0.63 ± 28.28, p = 0.004) from baseline. Change from baseline with R2∗ techniques showed a treatment effect for the thalamus and QSM technique for both the substantia nigra and pulvinar. A correlation was proved between the IRLS difference and the difference of QSM in thalamus (p = 0.028). CONCLUSION This study demonstrates that 1500 mg FCM effectively treats RLS symptoms in IDA patients over six weeks, with MRI measurements of improved brain iron content serving as a potential biomarker for RLS patients.
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Effect of Benson's relaxation technique versus music intervention on physiological parameters and stress of children with thalassemia during blood transfusions: A randomized controlled trial
Badr, E. A., Ibrahim, H., Saleh, S. E.
Journal of pediatric nursing. 2023
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Editor's Choice
Abstract
BACKGROUND Children with thalassemia are generally dependent on blood transfusions and face a lot of stress and alteration in their physiological parameters through the procedure. AIM: This study aimed to investigate the effect of Benson's relaxation technique versus music intervention on physiological parameters and stress of children with thalassemia during blood transfusions. DESIGN A randomized, controlled trial with three parallel groups. METHODS One hundred and twenty preschool-age children with thalassemia who underwent blood transfusions were randomly assigned to three groups. Children of the control group received only routine hospital care through blood transfusions. Music intervention group children listened to recorded Mozart's music and children of Benson's relaxation group received relaxation intervention before and during the blood transfusions. Outcome measures were physiological parameters and behavioral distress levels. SETTING Hematology outpatient clinic of the Children's University Hospital at El-Shatby in Alexandria from October 2022 to February 2023. RESULTS The mean total score of children's behavioral responses to stress before the blood transfusions procedure was 19.32 ± 4.08, 14.20 ± 0.93, and 16.92 ± 4.74 in the control, music, and Benson groups, respectively. Beyond that, there was a decline in their physiological parameters and behavioral stress response during and after procedure among groups of study (P = 0.005 & <0.001, respectively). CONCLUSION Music and Benson's relaxation interventions had a helpful effect on stabilizing the physiological parameters and reducing behavioral distress levels in children with thalassemia undergoing blood transfusions. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS This study directs paediatric nurses to apply Benson's relaxation and music interventions for children with thalassemia to enhance their responses.
PICO Summary
Population
Preschool-age children with thalassemia who underwent blood transfusions (n= 120).
Intervention
Benson’s relaxation technique intervention (n= 40).
Comparison
Mozart's music intervention (n= 40); routine hospital care (n= 40).
Outcome
The mean total score of children's behavioral responses to stress before the blood transfusions procedure was 19.32 ± 4.08, 14.20 ± 0.93, and 16.92 ± 4.74 in the control, music, and Benson groups, respectively. Beyond that, there was a decline in their physiological parameters and behavioral stress response during and after procedure among groups of study.
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Platelet Transfusion before CVC Placement in Patients with Thrombocytopenia
van Baarle FLF, van de Weerdt EK, van der Velden Wjfm, Ruiterkamp RA, Tuinman PR, Ypma PF, van den Bergh WM, Demandt AMP, Kerver ED, Jansen AJG, et al
The New England journal of medicine. 2023;388(21):1956-1965
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Editor's Choice
Abstract
BACKGROUND Transfusion guidelines regarding platelet-count thresholds before the placement of a central venous catheter (CVC) offer conflicting recommendations because of a lack of good-quality evidence. The routine use of ultrasound guidance has decreased CVC-related bleeding complications. METHODS In a multicenter, randomized, controlled, noninferiority trial, we randomly assigned patients with severe thrombocytopenia (platelet count, 10,000 to 50,000 per cubic millimeter) who were being treated on the hematology ward or in the intensive care unit to receive either one unit of prophylactic platelet transfusion or no platelet transfusion before ultrasound-guided CVC placement. The primary outcome was catheter-related bleeding of grade 2 to 4; a key secondary outcome was grade 3 or 4 bleeding. The noninferiority margin was an upper boundary of the 90% confidence interval of 3.5 for the relative risk. RESULTS We included 373 episodes of CVC placement involving 338 patients in the per-protocol primary analysis. Catheter-related bleeding of grade 2 to 4 occurred in 9 of 188 patients (4.8%) in the transfusion group and in 22 of 185 patients (11.9%) in the no-transfusion group (relative risk, 2.45; 90% confidence interval [CI], 1.27 to 4.70). Catheter-related bleeding of grade 3 or 4 occurred in 4 of 188 patients (2.1%) in the transfusion group and in 9 of 185 patients (4.9%) in the no-transfusion group (relative risk, 2.43; 95% CI, 0.75 to 7.93). A total of 15 adverse events were observed; of these events, 13 (all grade 3 catheter-related bleeding [4 in the transfusion group and 9 in the no-transfusion group]) were categorized as serious. The net savings of withholding prophylactic platelet transfusion before CVC placement was $410 per catheter placement. CONCLUSIONS The withholding of prophylactic platelet transfusion before CVC placement in patients with a platelet count of 10,000 to 50,000 per cubic millimeter did not meet the predefined margin for noninferiority and resulted in more CVC-related bleeding events than prophylactic platelet transfusion. (Funded by ZonMw; PACER Dutch Trial Register number, NL5534.).
PICO Summary
Population
Patients with severe thrombocytopenia enrolled in the PACER randomised controlled trial (n= 338).
Intervention
Placement of a central venous catheter (CVC) with one unit of prophylactic platelet transfusion (188 placements).
Comparison
Placement of an CVC without a platelet transfusion (185 placements).
Outcome
A total of 373 episodes of CVC placement involving 338 patients were included in the per-protocol primary analysis. Catheter-related bleeding of grade 2 to 4 occurred in 9 of 188 patients (4.8%) in the transfusion group and in 22 of 185 patients (11.9%) in the no-transfusion group (relative risk, 2.45; 90% confidence interval (CI), [1.27, 4.70]). Catheter-related bleeding of grade 3 or 4 occurred in 4 of 188 patients (2.1%) in the transfusion group and in 9 of 185 patients (4.9%) in the no-transfusion group (relative risk, 2.43; 95% CI [0.75, 7.93]). There were 15 adverse events, of these events 13 (all grade 3 catheter-related bleeding [4 in the transfusion group and 9 in the no-transfusion group]) were categorized as serious. The net savings of withholding prophylactic platelet transfusion before CVC placement was $410 per catheter placement.
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10.
Pegcetacoplan controls hemolysis in complement inhibitor-naive patients with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria
Wong RSM, Navarro-Cabrera JR, Comia NS, Goh YT, Idrobo H, Kongkabpan D, Gómez-Almaguer D, Al-Adhami M, Ajayi T, Alvarenga P, et al
Blood advances. 2023
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Editor's Choice
Abstract
Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) is a rare disease characterized by complement-mediated hemolysis. Pegcetacoplan is the first C3-targeted therapy approved for adults with PNH (United States), adults with PNH with inadequate response to or intolerance of a C5 inhibitor (Australia), and adults with anemia despite C5-targeted therapy for 3 months (European Union). PRINCE was a phase 3, randomized, multicenter, open-label, controlled study to evaluate efficacy and safety of pegcetacoplan versus control (supportive care only; eg, blood transfusions, corticosteroids, and supplements) in complement inhibitor-naive patients with PNH. Eligible adults receiving supportive care only for PNH were randomized and stratified based on their number of transfusions (<4, ≥4) 12 months before screening. Patients received pegcetacoplan 1080 mg subcutaneously twice weekly or continued supportive care (control) for 26 weeks. Coprimary endpoints were hemoglobin stabilization (avoidance of >1-g/dL decrease in hemoglobin levels without transfusions) from baseline through week 26 and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) change at week 26. Overall, 53 patients received pegcetacoplan (n=35) or control (n=18). Pegcetacoplan was superior to control for hemoglobin stabilization (pegcetacoplan, 85.7%; control, 0; difference, 73.1% [95% CI: 57.2, 89.0]; P <0.0001) and change from baseline in LDH (least-square mean change: pegcetacoplan, -1870.5 U/L; control -400.1 U/L; difference, -1470.4 U/L [95% CI: -2113.4, -827.3]; P <0.0001). Pegcetacoplan was well tolerated. No pegcetacoplan-related adverse events were serious, and no new safety signals observed. Pegcetacoplan rapidly and significantly stabilized hemoglobin and reduced LDH in complement inhibitor-naive patients and had a favorable safety profile. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT04085601.
PICO Summary
Population
Adult patients with paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria enrolled in the PRINCE trial conducted in 22 centres in Hong Kong, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Colombia, Mexico and Peru (n= 53).
Intervention
Subcutaneous infusions of pegcetacoplan (pegcetacoplan group, n= 35).
Comparison
Supportive care including transfusions, anticoagulants, corticosteroids, and supplements (control group, n= 18).
Outcome
Pegcetacoplan was superior to control for haemoglobin stabilization (pegcetacoplan, 85.7%; control, 0; difference, 73.1%, 95% CI [57.2, 89.0]) and change from baseline in lactate dehydrogenase, (least-square mean change: pegcetacoplan, -1870.5 U/L; control -400.1 U/L; difference, -1470.4 U/L, 95% CI [-2113.4, -827.3]). Pegcetacoplan was well tolerated. No pegcetacoplan-related adverse events were serious, and no new safety signals were observed.