1. Systematic review of defibrotide studies in the treatment of veno-occlusive disease/sinusoidal obstruction syndrome (VOD/SOS)
- Author
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Kathleen F. Villa, Paul G. Richardson, Saurabh Aggarwal, Ozlem Topaloglu, and Selim Corbacioglu
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation ,Defibrotide ,Gastroenterology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,European union ,education ,Cancer ,media_common ,Transplantation ,Chemotherapy ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Mortality rate ,Hematology ,Tolerability ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Drug therapy ,business ,Complication ,030215 immunology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Veno-occlusive disease (VOD), also called sinusoidal obstruction syndrome (SOS), is a potentially life-threatening complication of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) conditioning or high-dose nontransplant chemotherapy. VOD/SOS with multi-organ dysfunction (MOD) is associated with a mortality rate of > 80%. Defibrotide (25 mg/kg/day) is approved to treat hepatic VOD/SOS with renal or pulmonary dysfunction post HSCT in the United States and to treat severe hepatic VOD/SOS in patients > 1 month of age in the European Union. A random effects model was used for pooling data from 17 systematically chosen defibrotide studies. For patients in these reports (n = 2598), and those in the subset of 10 reports of patients treated with ~ 25 mg/kg/day (n = 1691), estimated Day + 100 survival rates were 54% and 56%, respectively. Among those patients treated with ~ 25 mg/kg/day, estimated Day + 100 survival was 44% among patients with MOD and 71% in patients without MOD; survival was 41% and 70%, respectively, for the population of patients receiving any dose of defibrotide. Safety results were not pooled owing to differences in reporting methodology but were generally consistent with the known tolerability profile of defibrotide. This analysis provides the largest assessment of survival in patients treated with defibrotide for VOD/SOS with or without MOD.
- Published
- 2019
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