Luspatercept improves hemoglobin levels and blood transfusion requirements in a study of patients with β-thalassemia

Author:

Piga Antonio1,Perrotta Silverio2,Gamberini Maria Rita3,Voskaridou Ersi4,Melpignano Angela5,Filosa Aldo6,Caruso Vincenzo7,Pietrangelo Antonello8,Longo Filomena1,Tartaglione Immacolata2ORCID,Borgna-Pignatti Caterina9,Zhang Xiaosha10,Laadem Abderrahmane11,Sherman Matthew L.10,Attie Kenneth M.10

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical and Biological Sciences, Turin University, Turin, Italy;

2. Dipartimento della Donna, del Bambino e della Chirurgia Generale e Specialistica, Università degli Studi della Campania “Luigi Vanvitelli,” Naples, Italy;

3. Thalassemia Unit, Arcispedale S. Anna, Ferrara, Italy;

4. Laiko General Hospital, Athens, Greece;

5. Ospedale “A. Perrino,” Brindisi, Italy;

6. Rare Red Blood Cell Disease Unit, Cardarelli Hospital, Naples, Italy;

7. Azienda Ospedaliera di Rilievo Nazionale e di Alta Specializzazione Garibaldi, Catania, Italy;

8. Centro Emocromatosi e Malattie Eredometaboliche del Fegato, Medicina 2, Modena, Italy;

9. Section of Pediatrics, Department of Medical Sciences, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy;

10. Acceleron Pharma, Cambridge, MA; and

11. Celgene Corporation, Summit, NJ

Abstract

Abstractβ-thalassemia is a hereditary disorder with limited approved treatment options; patients experience anemia and its complications, including iron overload. The study aim was to determine whether luspatercept could improve anemia and disease complications in patients with β-thalassemia. This open-label, nonrandomized, uncontrolled study consisted of a 24-week dose-finding and expansion stage (initial stage) and a 5-year extension stage, currently ongoing. Sixty-four patients were enrolled; 33 were non–transfusion dependent (mean hemoglobin, <10.0 g/dL; <4 red blood cell [RBC] units transfused per 8 weeks), and 31 were transfusion dependent (≥4 RBC units per 8 weeks). Patients received 0.2 to 1.25 mg/kg luspatercept subcutaneously every 21 days for ≥5 cycles (dose-finding stage) and 0.8 to 1.25 mg/kg (expansion cohort and 5-year extension). The primary end point was erythroid response, defined as hemoglobin increase of ≥1.5 g/dL from baseline for ≥14 consecutive days (without RBC transfusions) for non–transfusion-dependent patients or RBC transfusion burden reduction ≥20% over a 12-week period vs the 12 weeks before treatment for transfusion-dependent patients. Eighteen non–transfusion-dependent patients (58%) receiving higher dose levels of luspatercept (0.6-1.25 mg/kg) achieved mean hemoglobin increase ≥1.5 g/dL over ≥14 days vs baseline. Twenty-six (81%) transfusion-dependent patients achieved ≥20% reduction in RBC transfusion burden. The most common grade 1 to 2 adverse events were bone pain, headache, and myalgia. As of the cutoff, 33 patients remain on study. In this study, a high percentage of β-thalassemia patients receiving luspatercept had hemoglobin or transfusion burden improvements. These findings support a randomized clinical trial to assess efficacy and safety. This study was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01749540 and #NCT02268409.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

Reference20 articles.

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4. How I treat thalassemia;Rachmilewitz;Blood,2011

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