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Published in: Annals of Hematology 2/2013

Open Access 01-02-2013 | Original Article

Efficacy and safety of deferasirox at low and high iron burdens: results from the EPIC magnetic resonance imaging substudy

Authors: J. B. Porter, M. S. Elalfy, A. T. Taher, Y. Aydinok, L. L. Chan, S.-H. Lee, P. Sutcharitchan, D. Habr, N. Martin, A. El-Beshlawy

Published in: Annals of Hematology | Issue 2/2013

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Abstract

The effect of deferasirox dosing tailored for iron burden and iron loading based on liver iron concentration (LIC) was assessed over 1 year in less versus more heavily iron-overloaded patients in a substudy of the Evaluation of Patients’ Iron Chelation with Exjade®. Deferasirox starting dose was 10–30 mg/kg/day, depending on blood transfusion frequency, with recommended dose adjustments every 3 months. Therapeutic goals were LIC maintenance or reduction in patients with baseline LIC <7 or ≥7 mg Fe/g dry weight (dw), respectively. Changes in LIC (R2-magnetic resonance imaging) and serum ferritin after 1 year were assessed. Adverse events (AEs) and laboratory parameters were monitored throughout. Of 374 patients, 71 and 303 had baseline LIC <7 and ≥7 mg Fe/g dw, respectively; mean deferasirox doses were 20.7 and 27.1 mg/kg/day (overall average time to dose increase, 24 weeks). At 1 year, mean LIC and median serum ferritin levels were maintained in the low-iron cohort (−0.02 ± 2.4 mg Fe/g dw, −57 ng/mL; P = not significant) and significantly decreased in the high-iron cohort (−6.1 ± 9.1 mg Fe/g dw, −830 ng/mL; P < 0.0001). Drug-related gastrointestinal AEs, mostly mild to moderate, were more frequently reported in the <7 versus ≥7 mg Fe/g dw cohort (39.4 versus 20.8 %; P = 0.001) and were not confounded by diagnosis, dosing, ethnicity, or hepatitis B and/or C history. Reported serum creatinine increases did not increase in low- versus high-iron cohort patients. Deferasirox doses of 20 mg/kg/day maintained LIC <7 mg Fe/g dw and doses of 30 mg/kg/day were required for net iron reduction in the high-iron cohort, with clinically manageable safety profiles. The higher incidence of gastrointestinal AEs at lower iron burdens requires further investigation.
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Metadata
Title
Efficacy and safety of deferasirox at low and high iron burdens: results from the EPIC magnetic resonance imaging substudy
Authors
J. B. Porter
M. S. Elalfy
A. T. Taher
Y. Aydinok
L. L. Chan
S.-H. Lee
P. Sutcharitchan
D. Habr
N. Martin
A. El-Beshlawy
Publication date
01-02-2013
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Annals of Hematology / Issue 2/2013
Print ISSN: 0939-5555
Electronic ISSN: 1432-0584
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00277-012-1588-x

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