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Adding the thrombopoietin-receptor agonist eltrombopag to standard immunosuppressive therapy markedly improved the frequency, speed, and robustness of hematologic recovery in a phase I-II trial of patients with severe aplastic anemia, according to a report published online April 20 in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Previously, researchers found that eltrombopag was effective against aplastic anemia that was refractory to immunosuppression, inducing higher platelet counts, hemoglobin levels, and neutrophil numbers when used as a single agent. They then examined whether adding the drug to immunosuppression in treatment-naive patients would improve the response in this nonrandomized prospective trial, said Danielle M. Townsley, MD, of the hematology branch, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, and her associates.

Ninety-two consecutive patients aged 3-82 years were divided into three cohorts with different timing and duration of treatment. Cohort 1 (30 patients) received eltrombopag from day 14 to 6 months; cohort 2 (31 patients) received it from day 14 to 3 months; and cohort 3 (31 patients) received it from day 1 to 6 months.

The primary efficacy endpoint – the rate of complete hematologic response at 6 months – was highest, at 58%, in cohort 3, which had the earliest initiation and the longest duration of eltrombopag treatment. It was lowest, at 26%, in cohort 2, which had the shortest duration of eltrombopag treatment. The rate of complete hematologic response was intermediate in cohort 1, at 33% (N Engl J Med. 2017 Apr 20. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1613878).

These complete response rates all exceeded those reported historically, which range from 10% to 20%. Moreover, the rate of partial or complete hematologic response was 87% across all three cohorts, compared with the 66% partial or complete response rate that would be expected with standard immunosuppression alone. Absolute neutrophil counts and platelet counts in all three cohorts also were higher at both 3 and 6 months than were those that have been reported historically.

The average time to independence from transfusions in the entire study population was 1 month, and clinically meaningful improvements in neutrophil levels were seen within a few weeks of initiating eltrombopag.

Two cases of severe cutaneous eruptions led to discontinuation of the study drug. Liver abnormalities were frequent but transient and did not limit the use of eltrombopag.

If these results are validated in future studies, and if no unexpected late complications are identified, adding eltrombopag to standard immunosuppressive therapy “may help patients optimize the timing of allogeneic stem-cell transplantation or avoid it. Of particular interest would be use of eltrombopag in combination with less toxic immunosuppressive regimens that omit antithymocyte globulin, particularly in older patients, in patients with coexisting conditions, and in developing countries where aplastic anemia is prevalent and conventional therapies [are] extremely costly,” Dr. Townsley and her associates noted.

One such confirmatory study, a large randomized placebo-controlled trial (NCT02099747), is now underway in Europe, they wrote.

This trial was supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. Dr. Townsley and her associates reported ties to GlaxoSmithKline and Novartis, makers of eltrombopag.

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Adding the thrombopoietin-receptor agonist eltrombopag to standard immunosuppressive therapy markedly improved the frequency, speed, and robustness of hematologic recovery in a phase I-II trial of patients with severe aplastic anemia, according to a report published online April 20 in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Previously, researchers found that eltrombopag was effective against aplastic anemia that was refractory to immunosuppression, inducing higher platelet counts, hemoglobin levels, and neutrophil numbers when used as a single agent. They then examined whether adding the drug to immunosuppression in treatment-naive patients would improve the response in this nonrandomized prospective trial, said Danielle M. Townsley, MD, of the hematology branch, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, and her associates.

Ninety-two consecutive patients aged 3-82 years were divided into three cohorts with different timing and duration of treatment. Cohort 1 (30 patients) received eltrombopag from day 14 to 6 months; cohort 2 (31 patients) received it from day 14 to 3 months; and cohort 3 (31 patients) received it from day 1 to 6 months.

The primary efficacy endpoint – the rate of complete hematologic response at 6 months – was highest, at 58%, in cohort 3, which had the earliest initiation and the longest duration of eltrombopag treatment. It was lowest, at 26%, in cohort 2, which had the shortest duration of eltrombopag treatment. The rate of complete hematologic response was intermediate in cohort 1, at 33% (N Engl J Med. 2017 Apr 20. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1613878).

These complete response rates all exceeded those reported historically, which range from 10% to 20%. Moreover, the rate of partial or complete hematologic response was 87% across all three cohorts, compared with the 66% partial or complete response rate that would be expected with standard immunosuppression alone. Absolute neutrophil counts and platelet counts in all three cohorts also were higher at both 3 and 6 months than were those that have been reported historically.

The average time to independence from transfusions in the entire study population was 1 month, and clinically meaningful improvements in neutrophil levels were seen within a few weeks of initiating eltrombopag.

Two cases of severe cutaneous eruptions led to discontinuation of the study drug. Liver abnormalities were frequent but transient and did not limit the use of eltrombopag.

If these results are validated in future studies, and if no unexpected late complications are identified, adding eltrombopag to standard immunosuppressive therapy “may help patients optimize the timing of allogeneic stem-cell transplantation or avoid it. Of particular interest would be use of eltrombopag in combination with less toxic immunosuppressive regimens that omit antithymocyte globulin, particularly in older patients, in patients with coexisting conditions, and in developing countries where aplastic anemia is prevalent and conventional therapies [are] extremely costly,” Dr. Townsley and her associates noted.

One such confirmatory study, a large randomized placebo-controlled trial (NCT02099747), is now underway in Europe, they wrote.

This trial was supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. Dr. Townsley and her associates reported ties to GlaxoSmithKline and Novartis, makers of eltrombopag.

 

Adding the thrombopoietin-receptor agonist eltrombopag to standard immunosuppressive therapy markedly improved the frequency, speed, and robustness of hematologic recovery in a phase I-II trial of patients with severe aplastic anemia, according to a report published online April 20 in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Previously, researchers found that eltrombopag was effective against aplastic anemia that was refractory to immunosuppression, inducing higher platelet counts, hemoglobin levels, and neutrophil numbers when used as a single agent. They then examined whether adding the drug to immunosuppression in treatment-naive patients would improve the response in this nonrandomized prospective trial, said Danielle M. Townsley, MD, of the hematology branch, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, and her associates.

Ninety-two consecutive patients aged 3-82 years were divided into three cohorts with different timing and duration of treatment. Cohort 1 (30 patients) received eltrombopag from day 14 to 6 months; cohort 2 (31 patients) received it from day 14 to 3 months; and cohort 3 (31 patients) received it from day 1 to 6 months.

The primary efficacy endpoint – the rate of complete hematologic response at 6 months – was highest, at 58%, in cohort 3, which had the earliest initiation and the longest duration of eltrombopag treatment. It was lowest, at 26%, in cohort 2, which had the shortest duration of eltrombopag treatment. The rate of complete hematologic response was intermediate in cohort 1, at 33% (N Engl J Med. 2017 Apr 20. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1613878).

These complete response rates all exceeded those reported historically, which range from 10% to 20%. Moreover, the rate of partial or complete hematologic response was 87% across all three cohorts, compared with the 66% partial or complete response rate that would be expected with standard immunosuppression alone. Absolute neutrophil counts and platelet counts in all three cohorts also were higher at both 3 and 6 months than were those that have been reported historically.

The average time to independence from transfusions in the entire study population was 1 month, and clinically meaningful improvements in neutrophil levels were seen within a few weeks of initiating eltrombopag.

Two cases of severe cutaneous eruptions led to discontinuation of the study drug. Liver abnormalities were frequent but transient and did not limit the use of eltrombopag.

If these results are validated in future studies, and if no unexpected late complications are identified, adding eltrombopag to standard immunosuppressive therapy “may help patients optimize the timing of allogeneic stem-cell transplantation or avoid it. Of particular interest would be use of eltrombopag in combination with less toxic immunosuppressive regimens that omit antithymocyte globulin, particularly in older patients, in patients with coexisting conditions, and in developing countries where aplastic anemia is prevalent and conventional therapies [are] extremely costly,” Dr. Townsley and her associates noted.

One such confirmatory study, a large randomized placebo-controlled trial (NCT02099747), is now underway in Europe, they wrote.

This trial was supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. Dr. Townsley and her associates reported ties to GlaxoSmithKline and Novartis, makers of eltrombopag.

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Key clinical point: Adding eltrombopag to standard immunosuppression markedly improves the frequency, speed, and robustness of hematologic recovery in patients with severe aplastic anemia.

Major finding: The rate of partial or complete hematologic response was 87% across all 3 cohorts, compared with the 66% partial or complete response rate that would be expected with standard immunosuppression alone.

Data source: A prospective phase I-II study involving 92 patients aged 3-82 years who were followed for a median of 2 years.

Disclosures: This trial was supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. Dr. Townsley and her associates reported ties to GlaxoSmithKline and Novartis, makers of eltrombopag.