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Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria and vascular liver disease: Eculizumab therapy decreases mortality and thrombotic complications

Authors :
Aurélie Plessier
Marina Esposito‐Farèse
Anna Baiges
Akash Shukla
Juan Carlos Garcia Pagan
Emmanuelle De Raucourt
Isabelle Ollivier‐Hourmand
Jean‐Paul Cervoni
Victor De Ledinghen
Zoubida Tazi
Jean‐Baptiste Nousbaum
René Bun
Christophe Bureau
Christine Silvain
Olivier Tournilhac
Mathieu Gerfaud‐Valentin
François Durand
Odile Goria
Luis Tellez
Agustin Albillos
Stefania Gioia
Oliviero Riggio
Andrea De Gottardi
Audrey Payance
Pierre‐Emmanuel Rautou
Louis Terriou
Aude Charbonnier
Laure Elkrief
Regis Peffault de la Tour
Dominique‐Charles Valla
Nathalie Gault
Flore Sicre de Fontbrune
Source :
American Journal of Hematology. 97:431-439
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Wiley, 2022.

Abstract

A total of 2%-10% of patients with vascular liver disease (VLD) have paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH). Eculizumab reduces complement-mediated haemolytic activity in PNH. This study was aimed at assessing the impact of eculizumab on VLD outcome. Retrospective cohort of PNH patients, in Valdig registry, who had VLD diagnosed between 1997 and 2019 is considered. Eculizumab was the exposure of interest. Studied outcomes were death, venous thrombosis, bleeding, arterial ischemic event, infection, and liver-related complications. We compared survival and new thrombotic events from PNH/VLD cohort to Envie2 non-PNH cohort. Sixty-two patients (33 women), median age 35 years (28-48) and median follow-up VLD diagnosis 4.7 years (1.2-9.5), were included. Clone size was 80% (70-90), median hemoglobin concentration was 10.0 g/dl (8-11), and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) was 736 IU (482-1744). Forty-two patients (68%) had eculizumab; median exposure time was 40.1 [9.3-72.6] months. Mortality was significantly lower in exposed versus nonexposed period: 2.6 versus 8.7 per 100 (PY), incidence rate ratio (IRR) was 0.29, 95% CI (0.1-0.9), p = .035. Thrombosis recurrence occurred less frequently during the exposure to eculizumab: 0.5 versus 2.8 per 100 PY, IRR 0.22 (0.07-0.64). Other secondary end points (i.e., bleeding, arterial ischemic lesions, infection, and liver complications) were less common during the exposure to eculizumab, although not reaching statistical significance. Six-year thrombosis-free survival was 70%, 95% CI [0.60-0.83] for PNH cohort and 83%, 95% CI [0.70-1.00] for non-PNH Envie 2 patients, (p .001). In conclusion, patients with PNH and VLD are at higher risk of recurrent thrombosis than non-PNH patients. Eculizumab is significantly associated with a lower mortality and less thrombotic recurrence in patients with PNH and VLD.

Details

ISSN :
10968652 and 03618609
Volume :
97
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Hematology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....aa0fdf986214e3986da35de7a8a36f61
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ajh.26474