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      Sustained improvements in myocardial T2* over 2 years in severely iron‐overloaded patients with beta thalassemia major treated with deferasirox or deferoxamine

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          Abstract

          Long-term controlled studies are needed to inform on the clinical benefit of chelation therapy for myocardial iron removal in transfusion-dependent beta thalassemia patients. In a 1-year nonrandomized extension to the CORDELIA study, data collected from patients with myocardial siderosis provided additional information on deferasirox or deferoxamine (DFO) efficacy and safety. Myocardial (m)T2* increased from baseline 11.6 to 15.9 ms in patients receiving deferasirox for 24 months (n = 74; geometric mean [Gmean ] ratio of month 24/baseline 1.38 [95% confidence interval 1.28, 1.49]) and from 10.8 to 14.2 ms in those receiving DFO (n = 29; Gmean ratio 1.33 [1.13, 1.55]; P = 0.93 between groups). Improved mT2* with deferasirox was evident across all subgroups evaluated irrespective of baseline myocardial (mT2* < 10 vs. ≥ 10 ms) or liver (LIC <15 vs. ≥15 mg Fe/g dw) iron burden. Mean LVEF was stable and remained within normal limits with deferasirox or DFO. Liver iron concentration decreased from high baseline values of 30.6 ± 18.0 to 14.4 ± 16.6 mg Fe/g dw at month 24 in deferasirox patients and from 36.8 ± 15.6 to 11.0 ± 12.1 mg Fe/g dw in DFO patients. The long-term safety profile of deferasirox or DFO was consistent with previous reports; serious drug-related AEs were reported in 6.8% of deferasirox and 6.9% of DFO patients. Continued treatment of severely iron-overloaded beta thalassemia patients with deferasirox or DFO led to sustained improvements in myocardial iron irrespective of high or low baseline myocardial or liver iron burden, in parallel with substantial improvements in liver iron (Clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT00600938).

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          Survival and complications in patients with thalassemia major treated with transfusion and deferoxamine.

          Seven Italian centers reported data on survival, causes of death and appearance of complications in patients with thalassemia major. The interactions between gender, birth cohort, complications, and ferritin on survival and complications were analyzed. Survival after the first decade was studied for 977 patients born since 1960 whereas survival since birth and complication appearance was studied for the 720 patients born after 1970. Better survival was demonstrated for patients born in more recent years (p<0.00005) and for females (p=0.0003); 68% of the patients are alive at the age of 35 years. In the entire population 67% of the deaths were due to heart disease. There was a significant association between birth cohort and complication-free survival (p<0.0005). The prevalence of complications was: heart failure 6.8%, arrhythmia 5.7%, hypogonadism 54.7%, hypothyroidism 10.8%, diabetes 6.4%, HIV infection 1.7%, and thrombosis 1.1%. Lower ferritin levels were associated with a lower probability of heart failure (hazard ratio =3.35, p<0.005) and with prolonged survival (hazard ratio = 2.45, p<0.005), using a cut-off as low as 1,000 ng/mL. Survival and complication-free survival of patients with thalassemia major continue to improve, especially for female patients born shortly before or after the availability of iron chelation.
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            Author and article information

            Journal
            American Journal of Hematology
            Am. J. Hematol.
            Wiley
            0361-8609
            1096-8652
            February 2015
            November 19 2014
            February 2015
            : 90
            : 2
            : 91-96
            Affiliations
            [1 ]NIHR Cardiovascular Biomedical Research UnitRoyal Brompton HospitalLondon United Kingdom
            [2 ]Department of HaematologyUniversity College LondonLondon United Kingdom
            [3 ]Department of PaediatricsUniversity of TurinTurin Italy
            [4 ]Department of HematologyThe First Affiliated Hospital of Guangxi Medical UniversityNanning China
            [5 ]Department of Pediatric HematologyCairo UniversityCairo Egypt
            [6 ]Department of PediatricsAin Shams UniversityCairo Egypt
            [7 ]Department of Pediatric Hematology‐OncologyAkdeniz UniversityAntalya Turkey
            [8 ]Department of BiochemistryCukurova University Medical FacilityAdana Turkey
            [9 ]Novartis PharmaceuticalsEast Hanover New Jersey
            [10 ]Novartis Pharma AGBasel Switzerland
            [11 ]Department of Pediatric HematologyEge University HospitalIzmir Turkey
            Article
            10.1002/ajh.23876
            25345697
            30593136-2c4e-448c-a8c9-ddbfbdc29947
            © 2015

            http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

            http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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