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      Darbepoetin alpha for the treatment of anaemia in low-intermediate risk myelodysplastic syndromes.

      British Journal of Haematology
      Aged, Anemia, blood, drug therapy, etiology, Erythrocyte Count, Erythropoietin, analogs & derivatives, therapeutic use, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Myelodysplastic Syndromes, complications, Pilot Projects

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          Abstract

          Thirty-seven anaemic subjects with low-to-intermediate risk myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) received the highly glycosylated, long-acting erythropoiesis-stimulating molecule darbepoetin-alpha (DPO) at the single, weekly dose of 150 microg s.c. for at least 12 weeks. Fifteen patients (40.5%) achieved an erythroid response (13 major and two minor improvements, respectively, according to International Working Group criteria). Such results are currently maintained after 7-22 months in 13 of the responders, one of whom required iron substitutive therapy during the treatment. One patient relapsed after 4 months. Another responder died after 5 months because of causes unrelated to the treatment. No relevant side-effects were recorded. At multivariate analysis, significant predictive factors of response were baseline serum levels of endogenous erythropoietin <100 IU/l, absent or limited transfusional needs, no excess of blasts and hypoplastic bone marrow. This study suggests that DPO, at the dose and schedule used, can be safely given in low-intermediate risk MDS and may be effective in a significant proportion of these patients.

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