4 research outputs found

    Targeted Therapy of Myelofibrosis

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    Background. Myelofibrosis (primary myelofibrosis, post-essential trombocythemia myelofibrosis, post-polycythemia myelofibrosis) is the most complex and pressing problem among all Ph-negative myeloproliferative diseases. The present article summarizes the author’s experience of using new Janus kinase inhibitors in routine clinical practice, and compares the data with the results of other clinical research. Aim. To evaluate the use of ruxolitinib in patients with myelofibrosis. Materials & Methods. Our analysis includes 48 patients (21 men and 27 women) with histologically verified myelofibrosis (primary myelofibrosis in 36 cases, post-essential trombocythemia myelofibrosis in 10 cases, and post-polycythemia myelofibrosis in 2 cases) in a chronic stage. All patients received ruxolitinib. Median age at the start of therapy was 60 years (range from 35 to 79). Massive splenomegaly (≥ 10 cm below the costal margin) was found in 34 (71 %) of 48 patients. The initial dose of ruxolitinib was determined by the platelet level. The efficacy of the therapy was evaluated in accordance with ELN 2013 criteria. Results. Median duration of treatment was 18 months (range from 1 to 50 months). Symptoms of intoxication were relieved in 33 of 37 patients (89 %). The spleen size decreased in 64 % of patients. In 33 % of cases spleen size did not change, whereas an increase was observed in 3 % of patients. In the majority of patients hemoglobin level remained stable through the course of treatment. Three of 14 transfusion dependent patients did not require blood transfusions after 3 months of therapy. In patients with high thrombocyte levels prior to ruxolitinib therapy the mean level was approaching normal by the end of the 1st month of treatment. The median JAK2V617F mutant allele burden at the beginning treatment was 56.5 % (n = 20; 22.5–126.1 %). After 6 moths of treatment it accounted for 62.3 % (n = 11; 25.4–79.7 %) and in 12 months accounted for 47.4 % (n = 12; 14.2–102.2 %). By the time of the analysis 42 of 48 patients continued the ruxolitinib treatment (88 %). Death occurred in 4 patients. Overall 1-year (92 %) and 2-year (87 %) survival corresponds to the data of COMFORT-I, COMFORT-II and JUMP clinical trials. Conclusion. Ruxolitinib showed to be an effective treatment for myelofibrosis. The most pronounced and rapid effect ruxolitinib had on the spleen size and the symptoms of intoxication. The tolerability of ruxolitinib was satisfactory in the majority of patients. According to the author’s data, ruxolitinib had a small impact on the JAK2V617F mutant allele burden. The overall survival rate in patients with myelofibrosis, receiving ruxolitinib in the clinical setting was similar to that of in the clinical trials

    Dasatinib in First- and Second-Line Therapy of Chronic Myeloid Leukemia: Efficacy, Safety and Quality of Life

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    Background & Aims. The article presents results of two observational, prospective, multicenter studies “Quality of Life, Symptom Profile, and Adherence to Treatment in Adult Patients with Newly Diagnosed Chronic Phase Chronic Myeloid Leukemia Receiving Dasatinib” (2012–2015) and “Quality of Life and Symptom Profile in Imatinib-Resistant or Intolerant Patients with Chronic Myeloid Leukemia” (2011–2014). Methods. Data of 107 patients with chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase were involved in the real-world analysis — 32 newly diagnosed patients on first-line treatment with dasatinib or after yearly switch to dasatinib after imatinib treatment failure and 75 imatinib-resistant or intolerant patients on second-line treatment with dasatinib. Treatment effectiveness and safety of dasatinib were assessed during first and second-line dasatinib treatment using clinical outcomes as well as quality of life and symptom profile assessment. Results. The real-world data obtained during observational study in limited population of CML patients conform the results of clinical trials devoted to evaluation of treatment efficacy and safety of dasatinib treatment in first and second-line treatment and demonstrate the importance of patient-reported outcomes. Patient’s quality of life improved within 12 months of the first-line dasatinib therapy according to the following scales: role physical functioning, pain, vitality, social functioning and role emotional functioning. The most pronounced and clinically significant improvement was observed for the role emotional functioning (51.1 vs. 68.9). During the second-line dasatinib treatment, stabilization of quality of life parameters was registered for the following scales: vitality, social functioning, mental health, and pain. Significant improvement of the Integral Quality of Life Index was observed (p < 0.05). Positive dynamics of relevant symptoms was registered. The symptom severity decreased during both the first and second-line therapy. Conclusion. Quality of life and symptom assessment in CML patients contribute to a better disease control in accordance with the principles of risk-adaptive therapy

    Ibrutinib in the Treatment of Refractory Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia

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    Background & Aims. This paper presents the results of the observational study of ibrutinib in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), conducted in SP Botkin Municipal Clinical Hospital. The main objective was the analysis of complications of ibrutinib and identification of factors, influencing the dosage regimen; the secondary objective was the estimation of the total response to treatment, event-free and overall survival. Materials & Methods. The study included 96 patients with CLL with indications for ibrutinib therapy. The median age was 64,9 years (range 32–91 years), the study population consisted of 69 (72 %) men and 27 (28 %) women. The condition of 25 (26 %) patients according to the ECOG scale was of > 3 points. The disease of stage C were diagnosed in 36 (37 %) patients . Deletion of 17p/TP53 mutations were detected in 29 (33 %) of 87 patients. Seventy patients had refractory CLL. The median of the number of the lines of the previous therapy was 3 (range 1–9). Adverse events were assessed in accordance with the CTCAE criteria, version 4.0; the bleeding severity was evaluated using ITP-specific bleeding score; hematological complications were classified according to the recommendations of IWCLL-2008. Results. Ibrutinib was administered at a dosage of 420 mg per day daily until progression or intolerable toxicity. The median duration of ibrutinib therapy was 10.3 months. Ibrutinib was shown to have moderate toxicity, mostly of grade I or II. The bleeding was the most frequent complication. Of the hematological complications, thrombocytopenia was the most common (35 %); neutropenia grade III) developed in 26 % of patients. The treatment response was assessed in 92 patients. The overall response to treatment was 89 %. Complete remission, partial remission and partial remission with lymphocytosis were achieved in 4 (4 %), 57 (62 %), and 21 (23 %) patients, respectively. The event-free survival and overall survival by the month 10 was 90 % and 91 %, respectively. For this observation period, ECOG status and the number of the lines of therapy prior to ibrutinib had the prognostic value. Conclusion. Ibrutinib was shown to have high efficiency in relapsed/refractory forms of CLL. The nature of the ibrutinib toxicity is fundamentally different from that of the conventional chemotherapy. The frequency of ibrutinib therapy complications and patients’ non-compliance depends on the intensity of the previous treatment of CLL. Despite a short observation period, it can be concluded that ibrutinib had the greatest impact on the patient’s quality of life when administered for the first relapse. The low toxicity of ibrutinib is likely to allow the combination with other antitumor agents
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