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

Department of Clinical and Biological Sciences, Turin University, Turin, Italy. Dipartimento della Donna, del Bambino e della Chirurgia Generale e Specialistica, Università degli Studi della Campania "Luigi Vanvitelli," Naples, Italy. Thalassemia Unit, Arcispedale S. Anna, Ferrara, Italy. Laiko General Hospital, Athens, Greece. Ospedale "A. Perrino," Brindisi, Italy. Rare Red Blood Cell Disease Unit, Cardarelli Hospital, Naples, Italy. Azienda Ospedaliera di Rilievo Nazionale e di Alta Specializzazione Garibaldi, Catania, Italy. Centro Emocromatosi e Malattie Eredometaboliche del Fegato, Medicina 2, Modena, Italy. Section of Pediatrics, Department of Medical Sciences, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy. Acceleron Pharma, Cambridge, MA; and. Celgene Corporation, Summit, NJ.

Blood. 2019;(12):1279-1289

Abstract

β-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.

Methodological quality

Publication Type : Clinical Trial ; Multicenter Study

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