21 research outputs found

    Highlights on the Luspatercept Treatment in Thalassemia

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    Luspatercept has been shown to act as a ligand trap, selectively suppressing the deleterious effects of GDF11 that blocks terminal erythroid maturation, restoring normal erythroid differentiation and improving anemia in animal models of beta-thalassemia. Effective doses of luspatercept achieved hemoglobin increase within 7 days of the first dose, and plasma half-life supports subcutaneously administration every 21 days in adults with beta-thalassemia. A Phase 3, placebo-controlled 1-year study with starting dose of 1.0 up to 1.25 mg/kg every 21 days achieved >= 33% reduction in red cell transfusion volume in 21.4% of adult transfusion-dependent beta-, HbE/beta-thalassemia patients on luspatercept vs. 4.5% on placebo over a fixed 12-week period, and 41.1% of patients in luspatercept vs. 2.7% placebo in any 24-week period. Luspatercept allowed >= 1.0 and >= 1.5 g/dL increase in hemoglobin from baseline in 77% and 52.1% of adult non-transfusion-dependent beta-, HbE/beta-thalassemia patients vs. 0% placebo over a 12-week interval. Although not significant, a greater improvement in patient-reported outcomes was observed with luspatercept. Luspatercept had a manageable safety profile with notable adverse effects of venous thromboembolism in 3.6% of transfusion-dependent beta-thalassemia vs. 0.9% of placebo and extramedullary hematopoiesis in 6% of non-transfusion-dependent beta-thalassemia vs. 2% of placebo. The pediatric study started patients' enrollment

    Rare severe mycotic infections in children receiving empirical caspofungin treatment for febrile neutropenia

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    Empirical antifungal therapy is most often given to patients with leukemia. However breakthrough fungal infections under antifungal therapy are not uncommon. Four children, with hematologic malignant disease developed mycotic breakthrough infections while on empirical caspofungin treatment for a median of 14 (range 11–19) days. Trichosporon asahii was detected in the blood culture of two patients and Geotrichum capitatum in the other two (one patient also had positive cerebrospinal fluid culture). Because the patients’ clinical situation worsened, voriconazole was empirically added for two patients three and five days before the agent was detected. The first sterile blood culture was obtained 3–7 days of voriconazole treatment. All patients reached clear cultures but one patient died. One patient with central nervous system infection with G. capitatum had severe neurological sequelae. Very severe fungal infections can occur during empirical caspofungin therapy. Therefore, patients should be followed closely. Keywords: Geotrichum capitatum, Trichosporon asahii, Invazive fungal infection, Febrile neutropeni
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