Back to Search Start Over

Improved Health-Related Quality of Life in Patients with Hematological Disorders Receiving Deferasirox (Exjade®)

Authors :
Adam Gater
John B. Porter
Gabor Domokos
Maria-Domenica Cappellini
Arnold Ganser
Donald K. Bowden
Jean-François Baladi
Source :
Blood. 112:1307-1307
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2008.

Abstract

Introduction: Iron chelation therapy (ICT) is essential in removing excess iron deposited in body organs, ultimately preventing organ failure and extending the lives of patients (pts) with transfusion-dependent hematological disorders such as β-thalassemia and myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). As a life-long treatment, traditional ICT (deferoxamine, Desferal®, DFO) is based on a burdensome regimen (subcutaneous delivery 5–7 times a week) that has been shown to negatively impact on pts’ health-related quality of life (HRQoL). The oral chelator deferasirox (Exjade®) is less burdensome to pts offering 24-hour ICT, 7 days a week. Methods: This substudy was part of a single arm, multicenter, 1-year open-label trial (the EPIC study) to investigate the efficacy/safety of deferasirox. The first 558 pts with a variety of hematological disorders were recruited. These pts came from sites in seven countries: Australia, Belgium, France, Germany, UK, Greece, and Italy. Treatment-naïve pts and those having previously received ICT (DFO or deferiprone [Ferriprox®] exclusively, or combined) participated (n=558). Pts were asked at baseline, week 4 and week 52 (end of study [EOS]) to complete the 36-item Short Form health survey (SF-36). The SF-36 is a self-administered questionnaire and measures eight HRQoL domains: physical functioning; role-physical; bodily pain; general health; vitality; social functioning; role-emotional; and mental health. Mean change in SF-36 domain scores were calculated for all pts who had completed data at baseline and week 4, as well all those with completed data at baseline and EOS. All domains are scored so that higher scores indicate a better QoL. Results: Overall, the mean age of the 558 pts (274 β-thalassemia, 168 MDS, 50 sickle cell disease and 66 other anemias) recruited to take part in this substudy was 40.8 years (SD=22.58); 51.5% of patients (n=289) were male and 48.5% (n=272) were female. Within this sample, 337 pts aged ≥16 years completed the SF-36 at baseline, 322 at week 4 and 277 at EOS. Mean domain scores for pts at baseline, week 4 and EOS are presented in Table 1. With the exception of role-emotional (mean=0.78, SD=40.56), mean change in SF-36 domain scores significantly improved (P Table 1. SF-36 domain scores at baseline, week 4 and EOS in pts aged 3 16 years and treated with deferasirox SF-36 domains Baseline mean (SD) Week 4 mean (SD) End of study mean (SD) Physical functioning 66.32 (25.98) n=336 69.70 (25.98) n=317 71.67 (26.95) n=275 Role-physical 54.33 (42.43) n=331 61.03 (42.69) n=315 62.38 (41.71) n=270 Bodily pain 65.80 (26.89) n=336 74.67 (26.16) n=322 73.11 (27.20) n=276 General health 46.62 (21.15) n=330 48.01 (22.32) n=311 48.42 (22.19) n=269 Vitality 51.12 (21.28) n=328 54.57 (22.06) n=316 55.80 (23.06) n=272 Social functioning 71.73 (25.74) n=336 74.77 (23.72) n=321 73.05 (24.71) n=276 Role-emotional 68.05 (40.92) n=326 69.60 (41.60) n=313 69.81 (40.44) n=270 Mental health 67.04 (19.85) n=328 70.40 (19.73) n=316 67.85 (20.19) n=272 Conclusions: Since mean change scores were often of the magnitude of 3 to 5 units for role-physical and bodily pain, these results indicate clinically meaningful improvement for pts with hematological disorders receiving deferasirox.

Details

ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Volume :
112
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f2f9edc5fdd8a7f69b0a09e3fc1936b4