1. Cardiac effects of deferasirox in transfusion‐dependent patients with myelodysplastic syndromes: TELESTO study.
- Author
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Sarocchi, Matteo, Li, Junmin, Li, Xiao, Wu, Depei, Montaño Figueroa, Efreen, Rodriguez, Maria Guadalupe, Hou, Ming, Finelli, Carlo, Shi, Hong‐Xia, Xiao, Zhijian, Oliva, Esther Natalie, Gercheva Kyuchukova, Liana, Drummond, Mark, Symeonidis, Argiris, Velazquez, Eric J., Rivoli, Giulia, Izquierdo, Miguel, Kolekar, Yogita, Spallarossa, Paolo, and Angelucci, Emanuele
- Subjects
MYELODYSPLASTIC syndromes ,IRON overload ,FETOFETAL transfusion ,DEFERASIROX ,CONGESTIVE heart failure ,IRON chelates ,DIASTOLE (Cardiac cycle) - Abstract
Summary: Iron overload from repeated transfusions has a negative impact on cardiac function, and iron chelation therapy may help prevent cardiac dysfunction in transfusion‐dependent patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). TELESTO (NCT00940602) was a prospective, placebo‐controlled, randomised study to evaluate the iron chelator deferasirox in patients with low‐ or intermediate‐1–risk MDS and iron overload. Echocardiographic parameters were collected at screening and during treatment. Patients receiving deferasirox experienced a significant decrease in the composite risk of hospitalisation for congestive heart failure (CHF) or worsening of cardiac function (HR = 0.23; 95% CI: 0.05, 0.99; nominal p = 0.0322) versus placebo. No significant differences between the arms were found in left ventricular ejection fraction, ventricular diameter and mass or pulmonary artery pressure. The absolute number of events was low, but the enrolled patients were younger than average for patients with MDS, with no serious cardiac comorbidities and a modest cardiovascular risk profile. These results support the effectiveness of deferasirox in preventing cardiac damage caused by iron overload in this patient population. Identification of patients developing CHF is challenging due to the lack of distinctive echocardiographic features. The treatment of iron overload may be important to prevent cardiac dysfunction in these patients, even those with moderate CHF risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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