Effects of deferasirox-deferoxamine on myocardial and liver iron in patients with severe transfusional iron overload
Date
2015Author
Kattamis, Antonis
Perrotta, Silverio
Viprakasit, Vip
Habr, Dany
Constantinovici, Niculae
Shen, Junwu
Porter, John B.
Karakas, Zeynep
Elalfy, Mohsen
Origa, Raffaella
Cappellini, M. Domenica
KILINÇ, YURDANUR
El-Beshlawy, Amal
AYDINOK, YEŞİM
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Show full item recordAbstract
Deferasirox (DFX) monotherapy is effective for reducing myocardial and liver iron concentrations (LIC), although some patients may require intensive chelation for a limited duration. HYPERION, an open-label single-arm prospective phase 2 study, evaluated combination DFX-deferoxamine (DFO) in patients with severe transfusional myocardial siderosis (myocardial [m] T2* 5-= 56%) followed by optional switch to DFX monotherapy when achieving mT2* >10 ms. Mean dose was 30.5 mg/kg per day DFX and 36.3 mg/kg per day DFO on a 5-day regimen. Geometric mean mT2* ratios (Gmean(month12/24)/G(meanbaseline)) were 1.09 and 1.30, respectively, increasing from 7.2 ms at baseline (n = 60) to 7.7 ms at 12 (n = 52) and 9.5 ms at 24 months (n 5 36). Patients (17 of 60; 28.3%) achieved mT2* >= 10 ms and >= 10% increase from baseline at month 24; 15 switched to monotherapy during the study based on favorable mT2*. LIC decreased substantially from a baseline of 33.4 to 12.8 mg Fe/g dry weight at month 24 (-52%). LVEF remained stable with no new arrhythmias/cardiac failure. Five patients discontinued with mT2* <5 ms and 1 died (suspected central nervous system infection). Safety was consistent with established monotherapies. Results show clinically meaningful improvements in mT2* in about one-third of patients remaining on treatment at month 24, alongside rapid decreases in LIC in this heavily iron-overloaded, difficult-to-treat population. Combination therapy may be useful when rapid LIC reduction is required, regardless of myocardial iron overload.
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