1. Effect of deferasirox + erythropoietin vs erythropoietin on erythroid response in Low/Int-1-risk MDS patients: Results of the phase II KALLISTO trial.
- Author
-
Gattermann, Norbert, Coll, Rosa, Jacobasch, Lutz, Allameddine, Allameddine, Azmon, Amin, De Bonnett, Laurie, Bruederle, Andreas, and Jie Jin
- Subjects
DEFERASIROX ,ERYTHROPOIETIN ,ERYTHROPOIESIS ,MYELODYSPLASTIC syndromes ,CLINICAL trials - Abstract
Objectives: Erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) remain first-choice to treat symptomatic anemia and delay transfusion dependence in most patients with lower-risk myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) without del(5q). Deferasirox increased erythroid responses in some lower-risk MDS patients in clinical trials, and adding low-dose deferasirox to ESA treatment may further improve erythroid response. Methods: KALLISTO (NCT01868477) was a randomized, open-l abel, multicenter, phase II study. Lower-risk MDS patients received deferasirox at 10 mg/kg/d (dispersible tablets) or 7 mg/kg/d (film-coated tablets) plus erythropoietin (n = 11), or erythropoietin alone (n = 12) for 24 weeks. The primary endpoint was the between-group difference in erythroid response within 12 weeks. Results: Erythroid response occurred in 27.3% of patients receiving deferasirox plus erythropoietin vs 41.7% of patients receiving erythropoietin alone within 12 weeks (difference 14.4%; 95% CI -24.0, 48.16). Within 24 weeks, the hematologic response rate was 27.3% with deferasirox plus erythropoietin vs 50% with erythropoietin alone, and hematologic improvement rates were 45.5% vs 100%. Deferasirox plus erythropoietin was generally well tolerated. Conclusions: In this small pilot study, combining low-dose deferasirox with erythropoietin did not improve erythroid response. It remains of interest to investigate early chelation approaches with even lower deferasirox doses plus erythropoietin in lower-risk MDS patients before the onset of transfusion dependence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF