73 results on '"Roubert, B"'
Search Results
2. Deferasirox in iron-overloaded patients with transfusion-dependent myelodysplastic syndromes: Results from the large 1-year EPIC study.
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Gattermann N., Finelli C., Della Porta M., Fenaux P., Ganser A., Guerci-Bresler A., Schmid M., Taylor K., Vassilieff D., Habr D., Domokos G., Roubert B., Rose C., Agaoglu L., Alimena G., Alonso D., Ame S., Angelucci E., Arrizabalaga B., Athanasiou-Metaxa M., Augustson B., Aydinok Y., Baba A., Baccarani M., Beck J., Beris P., Beyne-Rauzy O., Birgens H., Bordessoule D., Borgna-Pignatti C., Bosly A., Bouabdallah K., Bowden D., Bowen D., Bron D., Cappellini M.D., Capra M., Cartron G., Cazzola M., Chalkias C., Chan L.L., Chancharunee S., Chapman C., Charoenkwan P., Chasapopoulou E., Cheze S., Chuansumrit A., Cianciulli P., Dauriac C., Delforge M., Dolken G., Dombret H., Duyster J., Economopoulos T., Ehninger G., Elalfy M., El-Beshlawy A., Enggaard L., Fillet G., Filosa A., Forni G., Galanello R., Gastl G., Giraudier S., Goldfarb A., Grigg A., Gumruk F., Ha S.Y., Haase D., Heinrich B., Hertzberg M., Ho J., Hsu H.-C., Huang S., Hunault-Berger M., Inusa B., Jaulmes D., Jensen J., Kattamis A., Kilinc Y., Kim K.-H., Kinsey S., Kjeldsen L., Koren A., Lai M.E., Lai Y., Lee J.-W., Lee K.-H., Lee S.-H., Legros L., Li C., Li C.-K., Li Q., Lin K.-H., Linkesch W., Lubbert M., Lutz D., Mohamed Thalha A.J., Mufti G., Muus P., Nobile F., Papadopoulos N., Perrotta S., Petrini M., Pfeilstocker M., Piga A., Poole J., Porter J.B., Pungolino E., Quarta G., Ravoet C., Jolimont Lobbes H.H., Remacha A.F., Roy L., Saglio G., Sanz G., Schmugge M., Schots H., Secchi G., Seymour J.F., Shah F., Shah H., Shen Z., Slama B., Sutcharitchan P., Taher A., Tamary H., Tesch H.-J., Thein S.L., Troncy J., Villegas A., Viprakasit V., Wainwright L., Wassmann B., Wettervald M., Will A., Wormann B., Wright J., Yeh S.-P., Yoon S.-S., Zoumbos N.C., Zweegman S., Gattermann N., Finelli C., Della Porta M., Fenaux P., Ganser A., Guerci-Bresler A., Schmid M., Taylor K., Vassilieff D., Habr D., Domokos G., Roubert B., Rose C., Agaoglu L., Alimena G., Alonso D., Ame S., Angelucci E., Arrizabalaga B., Athanasiou-Metaxa M., Augustson B., Aydinok Y., Baba A., Baccarani M., Beck J., Beris P., Beyne-Rauzy O., Birgens H., Bordessoule D., Borgna-Pignatti C., Bosly A., Bouabdallah K., Bowden D., Bowen D., Bron D., Cappellini M.D., Capra M., Cartron G., Cazzola M., Chalkias C., Chan L.L., Chancharunee S., Chapman C., Charoenkwan P., Chasapopoulou E., Cheze S., Chuansumrit A., Cianciulli P., Dauriac C., Delforge M., Dolken G., Dombret H., Duyster J., Economopoulos T., Ehninger G., Elalfy M., El-Beshlawy A., Enggaard L., Fillet G., Filosa A., Forni G., Galanello R., Gastl G., Giraudier S., Goldfarb A., Grigg A., Gumruk F., Ha S.Y., Haase D., Heinrich B., Hertzberg M., Ho J., Hsu H.-C., Huang S., Hunault-Berger M., Inusa B., Jaulmes D., Jensen J., Kattamis A., Kilinc Y., Kim K.-H., Kinsey S., Kjeldsen L., Koren A., Lai M.E., Lai Y., Lee J.-W., Lee K.-H., Lee S.-H., Legros L., Li C., Li C.-K., Li Q., Lin K.-H., Linkesch W., Lubbert M., Lutz D., Mohamed Thalha A.J., Mufti G., Muus P., Nobile F., Papadopoulos N., Perrotta S., Petrini M., Pfeilstocker M., Piga A., Poole J., Porter J.B., Pungolino E., Quarta G., Ravoet C., Jolimont Lobbes H.H., Remacha A.F., Roy L., Saglio G., Sanz G., Schmugge M., Schots H., Secchi G., Seymour J.F., Shah F., Shah H., Shen Z., Slama B., Sutcharitchan P., Taher A., Tamary H., Tesch H.-J., Thein S.L., Troncy J., Villegas A., Viprakasit V., Wainwright L., Wassmann B., Wettervald M., Will A., Wormann B., Wright J., Yeh S.-P., Yoon S.-S., Zoumbos N.C., and Zweegman S.
- Abstract
The prospective 1-year EPIC study enrolled 341 patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS); although baseline iron burden was >2500. ng/mL, ~50% were chelation-naive. Overall median serum ferritin decreased significantly at 1 year (p=0.002). Decreases occurred irrespective of whether patients were chelation-naive or previously chelated; changes were dependent on dose adjustments and ongoing iron intake. Sustained reductions in labile plasma iron were observed. Discontinuation rate (48.7%) and adverse event profile were consistent with previously reported deferasirox data in MDS. Alanine aminotransferase levels decreased significantly; change correlated significantly with reduction in serum ferritin (p<0.0001). This large dataset prospectively confirms the efficacy and well characterizes the safety profile of deferasirox in MDS. © 2010 Elsevier Ltd.
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- 2021
3. CKD ANAEMIA
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Macdougall, I D, Bock, A, Carrera, F, Eckardt, K-U, Gaillard, C, Van Wyck, D, Roubert, B, Nolen, J, and Roger, S D
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- 2014
4. CKD ANAEMIA
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Roger, S D, Bock, A, Carrera, F, Eckardt, K-U, Gaillard, C, Van Wyck, D, Roubert, B, Nolen, J, and Macdougall, I C
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- 2014
5. Minimal clinically important difference in quality of life scores for patients with heart failure and reduced ejection fraction
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Butler, J. Khan, M.S. Mori, C. Filippatos, G.S. Ponikowski, P. Comin-Colet, J. Roubert, B. Spertus, J.A. Anker, S.D.
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humanities - Abstract
Aims: While the associations of health-related quality of life scores in heart failure (HF) [e.g. the Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire (KCCQ)] with clinical outcomes are well established, their interpretation in the context of what magnitudes of change are clinically important to patients is less clear. The main objective of this study was to correlate the changes in the KCCQ and Patient Global Assessment (PGA) in patients with HF with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) to determine minimal clinically important difference (MCID). Methods and results: We analysed data from 459 patients of the FAIR-HF trial. Both KCCQ and PGA were assessed at 4 and 24 weeks after enrolment. An anchor-based approach was used to calculate MCID at week 4 and 24. PGA was chosen as the clinical anchor against which changes in the KCCQ scores were calibrated. For each category of change in PGA, the corresponding differences were calculated by the mean scores of various domains of KCCQ along with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). There was fair correlation between PGA and changes in overall summary scores (OSS) (r = 0.31; P < 0.001), clinical summary scores (CSS) (r = 0.36; P < 0.001) and physical limitation scores (PLS) (r = 0.31; P < 0.001) from baseline to week 4. KCCQ OSS, CSS and PLS MCID for ‘little improvement’ at week 4 were 3.6 (1.0–6.2), 4.5 (1.8–7.2) and 4.7 (1.4–8.0) points, respectively. OSS, CSS and PLS MCID for ‘little improvement’ at week 24 were 4.3 (0.2–8.4), 4.5 (0.5–8.5) and 4.0 (−0.9–9.0) points, respectively. Conclusion: The MCID threshold for KCCQ score was generally consistent and numerically lower than the threshold of 5-point change considered for clinical outcome prognosis and were stable between 4 and 24 weeks. This suggests that even changes smaller than the traditional 5-point improvements in KCCQ may be clinically meaningful. Also, these results can aid in the clinical interpretation of patient-reported outcomes, and better endpoint selection in future studies. © 2020 European Society of Cardiology
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- 2020
6. FIRST-IN-HUMAN SINGLE- AND MULTIPLE-ASCENDING DOSE STUDY OF THE ORAL FERROPORTIN INHIBITOR VIT-2763 IN HEALTHY SUBJECTS
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Richard, F., primary, van Lier, J. J., additional, Roubert, B., additional, Haboubi, T., additional, Göhring, U.-M., additional, and Dürrenberger, F., additional
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- 2019
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7. PF505 FIRST-IN-HUMAN SINGLE- AND MULTIPLE-ASCENDING DOSE STUDY OF THE ORAL FERROPORTIN INHIBITOR VIT-2763 IN HEALTHY SUBJECTS
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Richard, F., primary, van Lier, J.J., additional, Roubert, B., additional, Haboubi, T., additional, Göhring, U.-M., additional, and Dürrenberger, F., additional
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- 2019
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8. P140 Reduction in serum ferritin (SF) is associated with improvement in liver transaminase levels during treatment with deferasirox (Exjade®) in ironoverloaded patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS)
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Gattermann, N., Schmid, M., Guerci-Bresler, A., Della Porta, M., Taylor, K., Habr, D., Domokos, G., Roubert, B., and Fenaux, P.
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- 2009
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9. P141 Efficacy and safety of deferasirox (Exjade®) in chelation-naive and previously chelated patients with transfusion-dependent myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS)
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Schmid, M., Guerci-Bresler, A., Della Porta, M., Taylor, K., Habr, D., Domokos, G., Roubert, B., Rose, C., and Gattermann, N.
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- 2009
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10. Deferasirox in iron-overloaded patients with transfusion-dependent myelodysplastic syndromes: Results from the large 1-year EPIC study
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Gattermann, N., Finelli, C., Porta, M. D., Fenaux, P., Ganser, A., Guerci Bresler, A., Schmid, M., Taylor, K., Vassilieff, D., Habr, D., Domokos, G., Roubert, B., Rose, C., Agaoglu, L., Alimena, G., Alonso, D., Ame, S., Angelucci, E., Businco, A., Arrizabalaga, B., Athanasiou Metaxa, M., Augustson, B., Aydinok, Y., Baba, A., Baccarani, M., Beck, J., Beris, P., Beyne Rauzy, O., Birgens, H., Bordessoule, D., Borgna, Caterina, Bosly, A., Bouabdallah, K., Bowden, D., Bowen, D., Bron, D., Cappellini, M. D., Capra, M., Cartron, G., Cazzola, M., Chalkias, C., Chan, L. L., Chancharunee, S., Chapman, C., Charoenkwan, P., Chasapopoulou, E., Cheze, S., Chuansumrit, A., Cianciulli, P., Dauriac, C., Delforge, M., Dölken, G., Dombret, H., Duyster, J., Economopoulos, T., Ehninger, G., Elalfy, M., El Beshlawy, A., Enggaard, L., Fillet, G., Filosa, A., Forni, G., Galanello, R., Gastl, G., Giraudier, S., Goldfarb, A., Grigg, A., Gumruk, F., S. Y., Ha, Haase, D., Heinrich, B., Hertzberg, M., Ho, J., Hsu, H. C., Huang, S., Hunault Berger, M., Inusa, B., Jaulmes, D., Jensen, J., Kattamis, A., Kilinc, Y., Kim, K. H., Kinsey, S., Kjeldsen, L., Koren, A., Lai, M. E., Lai, Y., Lee, J. W., Lee, K. H., Lee, S. H., Legros, L., Li, C., C. K., Li, Li, Q., Lin, K. H., Linkesch, W., Lübbert, M., Lutz, D., Mohamed Thalha, A. J., Mufti, G., Muus, P., Nobile, F., Papadopoulos, N., Perrotta, S., Petrini, M., Pfeilstöcker, M., Piga, A., Poole, J., Porter, J. B., Pungolino, E., Quarta, G., Ravoet, C., Jolimont Lobbes, H. H., Remacha, A. F., Roy, L., Saglio, G., Sanz, G., Schmugge, M., Schots, H., Secchi, G., Seymour, J. F., Shah, F., Shah, H., Shen, Z., Slama, B., Sutcharitchan, P., Taher, A., Tamary, H., Tesch, H. J., Thein, S. L., Troncy, J., Villegas, A., Viprakasit, V., Wainwright, L., Wassmann, B., Wettervald, M., Will, A., Wörmann, B., Wright, J., Yeh, S. P., Yoon, S. S., Zoumbos, N. S., Zweegman, S., Gattermann, N, Finelli, C, Porta, Md, Fenaux, P, Ganser, A, GUERCI BRESLER, A, Schmid, M, Taylor, K, Vassilieff, D, Habr, D, Domokos, G, Roubert, B, Rose, C, EPIC study, Investigator, Perrotta, Silverio, Gattermann N, Finelli C, Porta MD, Fenaux P, Ganser A, Guerci-Bresler A, Schmid M, Taylor K, Vassilieff D, Habr D, Domokos G, Roubert B, Rose C, Baccarani M, EPIC study investigators., and Çukurova Üniversitesi
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Male ,Pediatrics ,Cancer Research ,Blood transfusion ,Thalassemia ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Gastroenterology ,Benzoates ,Child ,Hematology ,biology ,Benzoic Acids ,Alanine Transaminase ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Blood Transfusion ,Preschool ,Female ,Ferritins ,Humans ,Iron Chelating Agents ,Iron Overload ,Middle Aged ,Myelodysplastic Syndromes ,Triazoles ,Young Adult ,Oncology ,Child, Preschool ,medicine.drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Myelodysplastic syndromes ,deferasirox ,iron chelation therapy ,labile plasma iron ,myelodysplastic syndromes ,serum ferritin ,Serum ferritin ,Deferasirox ,Iron chelation therapy ,Labile plasma iron ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Adverse effect ,iron-overloaded patients ,transfusion ,Labile plasmairon ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Discontinuation ,Iron chelationtherapy ,Alanine transaminase ,biology.protein ,business ,Myelodysplastic syndrome - Abstract
PubMedID: 20451251 The prospective 1-year EPIC study enrolled 341 patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS); although baseline iron burden was >2500. ng/mL, ~50% were chelation-naïve. Overall median serum ferritin decreased significantly at 1 year (p=0.002). Decreases occurred irrespective of whether patients were chelation-naïve or previously chelated; changes were dependent on dose adjustments and ongoing iron intake. Sustained reductions in labile plasma iron were observed. Discontinuation rate (48.7%) and adverse event profile were consistent with previously reported deferasirox data in MDS. Alanine aminotransferase levels decreased significantly; change correlated significantly with reduction in serum ferritin (p
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- 2010
11. 252Cardiovascular and renal outcomes in iron-deficient patients with HFrEF and renal dysfunction treated with i.v. ferric carboxymaltose: An individual patient data meta-analysis
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Ponikowski, P., primary, Filippatos, G., additional, Macdougall, I.C., additional, Bohm, M., additional, Comin Colet, J., additional, Roubert, B., additional, Van Veldhuisen, D.J., additional, and Anker, S.D., additional
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- 2017
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12. 253Effect of i.v. ferric carboxymaltose iron therapy on symptoms and functional status in iron-deficient patients with HFrEF and renal dysfunction: An individual patient data meta-analysis
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Ponikowski, P., primary, Filippatos, G., additional, Macdougall, I.C., additional, Bohm, M., additional, Comin Colet, J., additional, Roubert, B., additional, Van Veldhuisen, D.J., additional, and Anker, S.D., additional
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- 2017
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13. 251Cardiovascular hospitalisation and death by subgroup in iron-deficient patients with heart failure treated with intravenous ferric carboxymaltose: an individual patient meta-analysis
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Anker, S.D., primary, Boehm, M., additional, Comin-Colet, J., additional, Filippatos, G., additional, Roubert, B., additional, Van Veldhuisen, D.J., additional, and Ponikowski, P., additional
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- 2017
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14. Response of iron overload to deferasirox in rare transfusion-dependent anaemias: equivalent effects on serum ferritin and labile plasma iron for haemolytic or production anaemias
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Porter, Jb, Lin, Kh, Beris, P, Forni, Gl, Taher, A, Habr, D, Domokos, G, Roubert, B, Thein, Sl, EPIC study investigators including Agaoglu, L, Alimena, G, Alonso, D, Ame, S, Angelucci, E, Arrizabalaga, B, Athanasiou Metaxa, M, Augustson, B, Aydinok, Y, Baba, A, Baccarani, M, Beck, J, Beyne Rauzy, O, Birgens, H, Bordessoule, D, Borgna Pignatti, C, Bosly, A, Bouabdallah, K, Bowen, D, Bron, D, Cappellini, Md, Capra, M, Cartron, G, Cazzola, M, Chalkias, C, Chan, Ll, Chancharunee, S, Chapman, C, Charoenkwan, P, Chasapopoulou, E, Cheze, S, Chuansumrit, A, Cianciulli, P, Dauriac, C, Delforge, M, Dölken, G, Dombret, H, Duyster, J, Economopoulos, T, Ehninger, G, Elalfy, M, El Beshlawy, A, Enggaard, L, Fenaux, P, Fillet, G, Filosa, A, Galanello, R, Ganser, A, Gastl, G, Gattermann, N, Giraudier, S, Goldfarb, A, Grigg, A, Guerci Bresler, A, Gumruk, F, Ha, Sy, Haase, D, Heinrich, B, Hertzberg, M, Ho, J, Hsu, Hc, Huang, S, Hunault Berger, M, Inusa, B, Jalumes, D, Jensen, J, Kattamis, A, Kilinc, Y, Kim, Kh, Kinsey, S, Kjeldsen, L, Koren, A, Lai, Me, Lai, Y, Lee, Jw, Lee, Kh, Lee, Sh, Legros, L, Li, C, Li, Ck, Li, Q, Linkesch, W, Lübbert, M, Lutz, D, Mohamed Thalha AJ, Mufti, G, Muus, P, Nobile, F, Ozsahin, H, Papadopoulos, N, Perrotta, S, Petrini, M, Pfeilstöcker, M, Piga, Antonio Giulio, Poole, J, Pungolino, E, Quarta, G, Ravoet, C, Remacha, Af, Rose, C, Roy, L, Saglio, Giuseppe, Sanz, G, Schmid, M, Schmugge, M, Schots, H, Secchi, G, Seymour, Jf, Shah, F, Shah, H, Shen, Z, Slama, B, Sutcharitchan, P, Tamary, H, Taylor, K, Tesch, Hj, Troncy, J, Vassilieff, D, Villegas, A, Viprakasit, V, Wainwright, L, Wassmann, B, Wettervald, M, Will, A, Wörmann, B, Wright, J, Yeh, Sp, Yoon, Ss, Zoumbos, Nc, Zweegman, S., Ozsahin, Ayse Hulya, Porter, Jb, Lin, Kh, Beris, P, Forni, Gl, Taher, A, Habr, D, Domokos, G, Roubert, B, Thein, Sl, on behalf of the EPIC study, Investigator, and Perrotta, Silverio
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safety ,Male ,Iron Overload ,Adolescent ,iron chelation therapy ,Iron ,Iron Chelating Agents/therapeutic use ,Iron Chelating Agents ,Benzoates ,Anemia/drug therapy ,Humans ,Blood Transfusion ,Benzoates/therapeutic use ,Child ,Iron/blood ,ddc:616 ,ddc:618 ,iron overload ,rare anaemias ,serum ferritin ,Ferritins/blood ,Anemia ,Original Articles ,Triazoles ,Deferasirox ,Child, Preschool ,Ferritins ,rare anaemia ,Female ,Triazoles/therapeutic use - Abstract
Objectives: It is widely assumed that, at matched transfusional iron-loading rates, responses to chelation therapy are similar, irrespective of the underlying condition. However, data are limited for rare transfusiondependent anaemias, and it remains to be elucidated if response differs, depending on whether the anaemia has a primary haemolytic or production mechanism. Methods: The efficacy and safety of deferasirox (Exjade) in rare transfusion-dependent anaemias were evaluated over 1 yr, with change in serum ferritin as the primary efficacy endpoint. Initial deferasirox doses were 10–30 mg⁄ kg ⁄ d, depending on transfusion requirements; 34 patients had production anaemias, and 23 had haemolytic anaemias. Results: Patients with production anaemias or haemolytic anaemias had comparable transfusional iron-loading rates (0.31 vs. 0.30 mL red blood cells ⁄ kg ⁄ d), mean deferasirox dosing (19.3 vs. 19.0 mg⁄ kg ⁄ d) and baseline median serum ferritin (2926 vs. 2682 ng ⁄ mL). Baseline labile plasma iron (LPI) levels correlated significantly with the transfusional iron-loading rates and with serum ferritin levels in both cohorts. Reductions in median serum ferritin levels were initially faster in the production than the haemolytic anaemias, but at 1 yr, similar significant reductions of 940 and 617 ng ⁄mL were attained, respectively ()26.0% overall). Mean LPI decreased significantly in patients with production (P < 0.0001) and haemolytic (P = 0.037) anaemias after the first dose and was maintained at normal mean levels (
- Published
- 2011
15. Iron chelation therapy with deferasirox in patients with aplastic anemia: a subgroup analysis of 116 patients from the EPIC trial
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Lee, Jw, Yoon, Ss, Shen, Zx, Ganser, A, Hsu, Hc, Habr, D, Domokos, G, Roubert, B, Porter, Jb, Agaoglu, L, Alimena, G, Alonso, D, Ame, S, Angelucci, E, Arrizabalaga, B, Athanasiou Metaxa, M, Augustson, B, Aydinok, Y, Baba, A, Baccarani, M, Beck, J, Beris, P, Beyne Rauzy, O, Birgens, H, Bordessoule, D, Borgna, Caterina, Bosly, A, Bouabdallah, K, Bowden, D, Bowen, D, Bron, D, Cappellini, Md, Capra, M, Cartron, G, Cazzola, M, Chalkias, C, Chan, Ll, Chancharunee, S, Chapman, C, Charoenkwan, P, Chasapopoulou, E, Cheze, S, Chuansumrit, A, Cianciulli, P, Dauriac, C, Delforge, M, Dölken, G, Dombret, H, Duyster, J, Economopoulos, T, Ehninger, G, Elalfy, M, El Beshlawy, A, Enggaard, L, Fenaux, P, Fillet, G, Filosa, A, Forni, G, Galanello, R, Gastl, G, Gattermann, N, Giraudier, S, Goldfarb, A, Grigg, A, Guerci Bresler, A, Gumruk, F, Ha, Sy, Haase, D, Heinrich, B, Hertzberg, M, Ho, J, Huang, S, Hunault Berger, M, Inusa, B, Jaulmes, D, Jensen, J, Kattamis, A, Kilinc, Y, Kim, Kh, Kinsey, S, Kjeldsen, L, Koren, A, Lai, Me, Lai, Y, Lee, Kh, Lee, Sh, Legros, L, Li, C, Li, Ck, Li, Q, Lin, Kh, Linkesch, W, Lübbert, M, Lutz, D, Mohamed Thalha AJ, Mufti, G, Muus, P, Nobile, F, Papadopoulos, N, Perrotta, S, Petrini, M, Pfeilstöcker, M, Piga, A, Poole, J, Pungolino, E, Quarta, G, Ravoet, C, Remacha, Af, Rose, C, Roy, L, Saglio, G, Sanz, G, Schmid, M, Schmugge, M, Schots, H, Secchi, G, Seymour, Jf, Shah, F, Shah, H, Shen, Z, Slama, B, Sutcharitchan, P, Taher, A, Tamary, H, Taylor, K, Tesch, Hj, Thein, Sl, Troncy, J, Vassilieff, D, Villegas, A, Viprakasit, V, Wainwright, L, Wassmann, B, Wettervald, M, Will, A, Wörmann, B, Wright, J, Yeh, Sp, Zoumbos, Nc, Zweegman, S., Lee, Jw, Yoon, S, Shen, Zx, Ganser, A, Hsu, Hc, Habr, D, Domokos, G, Roubert, B, Porter, Jb, EPIC study, Investigator, and Perrotta, Silverio
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Male ,Biochemistry ,Gastroenterology ,Benzoates ,beta-thalassemia ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,overloaded patients ,oxidative stress ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,pathophysiology ,Beta thalassemia ,complications ,epidemiology ,labile plasma iron ,myelodysplastic syndromes ,serum ferritin ,transfusion-dependent anemias ,Anemia, Aplastic ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,Tolerability ,Creatinine ,Iron chelation ,Female ,medicine.drug ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,aplastic anemia ,Adolescent ,Anemia ,Immunology ,Iron Chelating Agents ,Young Adult ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Aplastic anemia ,therapy ,business.industry ,Myelodysplastic syndromes ,Deferasirox ,deferasirox ,Cell Biology ,Triazoles ,medicine.disease ,Chelation Therapy ,Surgery ,chemistry ,Ferritins ,business - Abstract
The prospective 1-year Evaluation of Patients' Iron Chelation with Exjade (EPIC) study enrolled a large cohort of 116 patients with aplastic anemia; the present analyses evaluated the efficacy and safety of deferasirox in this patient population. After 1 year, median serum ferritin decreased significantly from 3254 ng/mL at baseline to 1854 ng/mL (P < .001). Decreases occurred in chelation-naive (3229-1520 ng/mL; P < .001, last-observation-carried-forward analysis), and previously chelated (3263-2585 ng/mL; P = .21, last-observation-carried-forward analysis) patients and were reflective of dose adjustments and ongoing iron intake. Baseline labile plasma iron levels were within normal range despite high serum ferritin levels. The most common drug-related adverse events were nausea (22%) and diarrhea (16%). Serum creatinine increases more than 33% above baseline and the upper limit of normal occurred in 29 patients (25%), but there were no progressive increases; concomitant use of cyclosporine had a significant impact on serum creatinine levels. The decrease in mean alanine aminotransferase levels at 1 year correlated significantly with reduction in serum ferritin (r = 0.40, P < .001). Mean absolute neutrophil and platelet counts remained stable during treatment, and there were no drug-related cytopenias. This prospective dataset confirms the efficacy and well characterizes the tolerability profile of deferasirox in a large population of patients with aplastic anemia. This study was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT00171821.
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- 2010
16. EPIC study investigators. Iron chelation therapy with deferasirox in patients with aplastic anemia: a subgroup analysis of 116 patients from the EPIC trial
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Lee JW, Yoon SS, Shen ZX, Ganser A, Hsu HC, Habr D, Domokos G, Roubert B, Porter JB, BACCARANI, MICHELE, Lee JW, Yoon SS, Shen ZX, Ganser A, Hsu HC, Habr D, Domokos G, Roubert B, Porter JB, and Baccarani M.
- Published
- 2010
17. Rationale and design of the CONFIRM-HF study: a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study to assess the effects of intravenous ferric carboxymaltose on functional capacity in patients with chronic heart failure and iron deficiency
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Ponikowski, P. van Veldhuisen, D.J. Comin-Colet, J. Ertl, G. Komajda, M. Mareev, V. McDonagh, T.A. Parkhomenko, A. Tavazzi, L. Levesque, V. Mori, C. Roubert, B. Filippatos, G. Ruschitzka, F. Anker, S.D.
- Abstract
Background: Iron deficiency (ID) is a common co-morbidity associated with chronic heart failure (CHF), which has unfavourable clinical and prognostic consequences. In Ferinject Assessment in Patients with IRon Deficiency and Chronic Heart Failure (FAIR-HF), the treatment with i.v. ferric carboxymaltose (FCM) improved symptoms and quality of life over a 24 week period. Ferric CarboxymaltOse evaluatioN on perFormance in patients with IRon deficiency in coMbination with chronic Heart Failure (CONFIRM-HF) was designed to test a simplifieddosage scheme of FCM during a longer follow-up period. Methods: CONFIRM-HF, a double-blind, multi-centre, prospective, randomized, two-arm study, enrolled ambulatory patients with symptomatic CHF [New York Heart Association (NYHA) class II/III] with left ventricular ejection fraction ≤45%, BNP >100 pg/mL, or NT-proBNP >400 pg/mL, presence of ID [defined as ferritin
- Published
- 2014
18. Deferasirox for up to 3 years leads to continued improvement of myocardial T2* in patients with β-thalassemia major
- Author
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Pennell, D.J. Porter, J.B. Cappellini, M.D. Chan, L.L. El-Beshlawy, A. Aydinok, Y. Ibrahim, H. Li, C.-K. Viprakasit, V. Elalfy, M.S. Kattamis, A. Smith, G. Habr, D. Domokos, G. Roubert, B. Taher, A.
- Abstract
Background Prospective data on cardiac iron removal are limited beyond one year and longer-term studies are, therefore, important. Design and Methods Seventy-one patients in the EPIC cardiac substudy elected to continue into the 3rd year, allowing cardiac iron removal to be analyzed over three years. Results Mean deferasirox dose during year 3 was 33.6±9.8 mg/kg per day. Myocardial T2*, assessed by cardiovascular magnetic resonance, significantly increased from 12.0 ms ±39.1% at baseline to 17.1 ms ±62.0% at end of study (P5 to
- Published
- 2012
19. Response of iron overload to deferasirox in rare transfusion-dependent anaemias: equivalent effects on serum ferritin and labile plasma iron for haemolytic or production anaemias
- Author
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Porter, J B, Lin, K H, Beris, P, Forni, G L, Taher, A, Habr, D, Domokos, G, Roubert, B, Thein, S L, University of Zurich, and Porter, J B
- Subjects
10036 Medical Clinic ,2720 Hematology ,610 Medicine & health - Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Response of iron overload to deferasirox in rare transfusion-dependent anaemias: equivalent effects on serum ferritin and labile plasma iron for haemolytic or production anaemias
- Author
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Porter, J. B., Lin, K. H., Beris, P., Forni, G. L., Taher, A., Habr, D., Domokos, G., Roubert, B., Thein, S. L., and Borgna, Caterina
- Subjects
safety ,rare anaemias, iron overload, iron chelation therapy, serum ferritin, safety ,iron chelation therapy ,serum ferritin ,rare anaemias ,iron overload - Published
- 2011
21. Continued improvement in myocardial T2* over two years of deferasirox therapy in β-thalassemia major patients with cardiac iron overload
- Author
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Pennell, D.J. Porter, J.B. Cappellini, M.D. Chan, L.L. El-Beshlawy, A. Aydinok, Y. Ibrahim, H. Li, C.-K. Viprakasit, V. Elalfy, M.S. Kattamis, A. Smith, G. Habr, D. Domokos, G. Roubert, B. Taher, A.
- Abstract
Background The efficacy of cardiac iron chelation in transfusion-dependent patients has been demonstrated in one-year prospective trials. Since normalization of cardiac T2* takes several years, the efficacy and safety of deferasirox was assessed for two years in patients with β-thalassemia major in the cardiac sub-study of the EPIC trial. Design and Methods Eligible patients with myocardial T2* greater than 5 to less than 20 ms received deferasirox, with the primary endpoint being the change in T2* from baseline to two years. Results Baseline myocardial T2* was severe (>5 to
- Published
- 2011
22. Deferasirox in iron-overloaded patients with transfusion-dependent myelodysplastic syndromes: Results from the large 1-year EPIC study
- Author
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Gattermann, N. Finelli, C. Della Porta, M. Fenaux, P. Ganser, A. Guerci-Bresler, A. Schmid, M. Taylor, K. Vassilieff, D. Habr, D. Domokos, G. Roubert, B. Rose, C. Agaoglu, L. Alimena, G. Alonso, D. Ame, S. Angelucci, E. Arrizabalaga, B. Athanasiou-Metaxa, M. Augustson, B. Aydinok, Y. Baba, A. Baccarani, M. Beck, J. Beris, P. Beyne-Rauzy, O. Birgens, H. Bordessoule, D. Borgna-Pignatti, C. Bosly, A. Bouabdallah, K. Bowden, D. Bowen, D. Bron, D. Cappellini, M.D. Capra, M. Cartron, G. Cazzola, M. Chalkias, C. Chan, L.L. Chancharunee, S. Chapman, C. Charoenkwan, P. Chasapopoulou, E. Cheze, S. Chuansumrit, A. Cianciulli, P. Dauriac, C. Delforge, M. Dölken, G. Dombret, H. Duyster, J. Economopoulos, T. Ehninger, G. Elalfy, M. El-Beshlawy, A. Enggaard, L. Fillet, G. Filosa, A. Forni, G. Galanello, R. Gastl, G. Giraudier, S. Goldfarb, A. Grigg, A. Gumruk, F. Ha, S.Y. Haase, D. Heinrich, B. Hertzberg, M. Ho, J. Hsu, H.-C. Huang, S. Hunault-Berger, M. Inusa, B. Jaulmes, D. Jensen, J. Kattamis, A. Kilinc, Y. Kim, K.-H. Kinsey, S. Kjeldsen, L. Koren, A. Lai, M.E. Lai, Y. Lee, J.-W. Lee, K.-H. Lee, S.-H. Legros, L. Li, C. Li, C.-K. Li, Q. Lin, K.-H. Linkesch, W. Lübbert, M. Lutz, D. Mohamed Thalha, A.J. Mufti, G. Muus, P. Nobile, F. Papadopoulos, N. Perrotta, S. Petrini, M. Pfeilstöcker, M. Piga, A. Poole, J. Porter, J.B. Pungolino, E. Quarta, G. Ravoet, C. Jolimont Lobbes, H.H. Remacha, A.F. Roy, L. Saglio, G. Sanz, G. Schmugge, M. Schots, H. Secchi, G. Seymour, J.F. Shah, F. Shah, H. Shen, Z. Slama, B. Sutcharitchan, P. Taher, A. Tamary, H. Tesch, H.-J. Thein, S.L. Troncy, J. Villegas, A. Viprakasit, V. Wainwright, L. Wassmann, B. Wettervald, M. Will, A. Wörmann, B. Wright, J. Yeh, S.-P. Yoon, S.-S. Zoumbos, N.C. Zweegman, S.
- Abstract
The prospective 1-year EPIC study enrolled 341 patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS); although baseline iron burden was >2500. ng/mL, ∼50% were chelation-naïve. Overall median serum ferritin decreased significantly at 1 year (p=0.002). Decreases occurred irrespective of whether patients were chelation-naïve or previously chelated; changes were dependent on dose adjustments and ongoing iron intake. Sustained reductions in labile plasma iron were observed. Discontinuation rate (48.7%) and adverse event profile were consistent with previously reported deferasirox data in MDS. Alanine aminotransferase levels decreased significantly; change correlated significantly with reduction in serum ferritin (p
- Published
- 2010
23. EFFICACY AND SAFETY OF DEFERASIROX IN PATIENTS WITH BASELINE LIVER IRON CONCENTRATION (LIC) < 7 OR=7 MG FE/G DW: RESULTS OF EPIC LIVER MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING (MRI) SUBSTUDY
- Author
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Porter, J., Elalfy, M., Aydinok, Y., Chan, L. L., Lee, S. H., Sutcharitchan, P., Taher, A., Habr, D., Roubert, B., El-Beshlawy, A., and Ege Üniversitesi
- Subjects
health services administration ,population characteristics ,geographic locations - Abstract
15th Annual Meeting of the European-Hematology-Association -- JUN 10-13, 2010 -- Barcelona, SPAIN, WOS: 000279051302452, European Hematol Assoc
- Published
- 2010
24. Tailoring iron chelation by iron intake and serum ferritin: The prospective EPIC study of deferasirox in 1744 patients with transfusion-dependent anemias
- Author
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Cappellini, M.D. Porter, J. El-Beshlawy, A. Li, C.-K. Seymour, J.F. Elalfy, M. Gattermann, N. Giraudier, S. Lee, J.-W. Chan, L.L. Lin, K.-H. Rose, C. Taher, A. Thein, S.L. Viprakasit, V. Habr, D. Domokos, G. Roubert, B. Kattamis, A.
- Abstract
Background: Following a clinical evaluation of deferasirox (Exjade®) it was concluded that, in addition to baseline body iron burden, ongoing transfusional iron intake should be considered when selecting doses. The 1-year EPIC study, the largest ever investigation conducted for an iron chelator, is the first to evaluate whether fixed starting doses of deferasirox, based on transfusional iron intake, with dose titration guided by serum ferritin trends and safety markers, provides clinically acceptable chelation in patients (aged ≥2 years) with transfusional hemosiderosis from various types of anemia. Design and Methods: The recommended initial dose was 20 mg/kg/day for patients receiving 2-4 packed red blood cell units/month and 10 or 30 mg/kg/day was recommended for patients receiving less or more frequent transfusions, respectively. Dose adjustments were based on 3-month serum ferritin trends and continuous assessment of safety markers. The primary efficacy end-point was change in serum ferritin after 52 weeks compared with baseline. Results: The 1744 patients enrolled had the following conditions; thalassemia (n=1115), myelodysplastic syndromes (n=341), aplastic anemia (n=116), sickle cell disease (n=80), rare anemias (n=43) and other transfused anemias (n=49). Overall, there was a significant reduction in serum ferritin from baseline (-264 ng/mL; P5%) adverse events were gastrointestinal disturbances (28%) and skin rash (10%). Conclusions: Analysis of this large, prospectively collected data set confirms the response to chelation ther- apy across various anemias, supporting initial deferasirox doses based on transfusional iron intake, with subsequent dose titration guided by trends in serum ferritin and safety markers (clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT00171821). © 2010 Ferrata Storti Foundation.
- Published
- 2010
25. DEFERASIROX EFFECTIVELY REMOVES CARDIAC IRON IN beta-THALASSAEMIA PATIENTS WITH MYOCARDIAL SIDEROSIS PREVIOUSLY CHELATED WITH DEFEROXAMINE MONOTHERAPY OR DEFEROXAMINE-DEFERIPRONE THERAPY
- Author
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Pennell, D., Porter, J., Cappellini, M., Chan, L. L., El-Beshlawy, A., Aydinok, Y., Ibrahim, H., Li, C. K., Viprakasit, V., Elalfy, M., Kattamis, A., Smith, G., Habr, D., Roubert, B., Taher, A., and Ege Üniversitesi
- Abstract
WOS: 000279051302434
- Published
- 2010
26. Iron chelation therapy with deferasirox in patients with aplastic anemia: a subgroup analysis of 116 patients from the EPIC trial
- Author
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Lee, J W, Yoon, S S, Shen, Z X, Ganser, A, Hsu, H C, Habr, D, Domokos, G, Roubert, B, Porter, J B, et al, Schmugge, M, and University of Zurich
- Subjects
1307 Cell Biology ,2403 Immunology ,1303 Biochemistry ,10036 Medical Clinic ,2720 Hematology ,610 Medicine & health - Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Efficacy of deferasirox in reducing and preventing cardiac iron overload in β-thalassemia
- Author
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Pennell, D.J. Porter, J.B. Cappellini, M.D. El-Beshlawy, A. Chan, L.L. Aydinok, Y. Elalfy, M.S. Sutcharitchan, P. Li, C.-K. Ibrahim, H. Viprakasit, V. Kattamis, A. Smith, G. Habr, D. Domokos, G. Roubert, B. Taher, A.
- Abstract
Cardiac iron overload causes most deaths in β-thalassemia major. The efficacy of deferasirox in reducing or preventing cardiac iron overload was assessed in 192 patients with β-thalassemia in a 1-year prospective, multicenter study. The cardiac iron reduction arm (n = 114) included patients with magnetic resonance myocardial T2* from 5 to 20 ms (indicating cardiac siderosis), left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) of 56% or more, serum ferritin more than 2500 ng/mL, liver iron concentration more than 10 mg Fe/g dry weight, and more than 50 transfused blood units. The prevention arm (n = 78) included otherwise eligible patients whose myocardial T2* was 20 ms or more. The primary end point was the change in myocardial T2* at 1 year. In the cardiac iron reduction arm, the mean deferasirox dose was 32.6 mg/kg per day. Myocardial T2* (geometric mean ± coefficient of variation) improved from a baseline of 11.2 ms (± 40.5%) to 12.9 ms (± 49.5%) (+16%; P < .001). LVEF (mean ± SD) was unchanged: 67.4 (± 5.7%) to 67.0 (± 6.0%) (-0.3%; P = .53). In the prevention arm, baseline myocardial T2* was unchanged from baseline of 32.0 ms (± 25.6%) to 32.5 ms (± 25.1%) (±2%; P = .57) and LVEF increased from baseline 67.7 (± 4.7%) to 69.6 (± 4.5%) (+1.8%; P < .001). This prospective study shows that deferasirox is effective in removing and preventing myocardial iron accumulation. This study is registered at http:// clinicaltrials.gov as NCT00171821. © 2010 by The American Society of Hematology.
- Published
- 2010
28. CONTINUED IMPROVEMENT IN CARDIAC T2*WITH DEFERASIROX TREATMENT OVER 2 YEARS: RESULTS FROM THE EXTENSION OF EPIC CARDIAC SUBSTUDY IN BETA-THALASSAEMIA PATIENTS WITH MYOCARDIAL SIDEROSIS
- Author
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Pennell, D., Porter, J., Cappellini, M., Chan, L. L., El-Beshlawy, A., Aydinok, Y., Ibrahim, H., Li, C. K., Viprakasit, V., Elalfy, M., Kattamis, A., Smith, G., Habr, D., Roubert, B., Taher, A., and Ege Üniversitesi
- Subjects
health services administration ,population characteristics ,geographic locations - Abstract
15th Annual Meeting of the European-Hematology-Association -- JUN 10-13, 2010 -- Barcelona, SPAIN, WOS: 000279051300497, European Hematol Assoc
- Published
- 2010
29. Tailoring iron chelation by iron intake and serum ferritin: the prospective EPIC study of deferasirox in 1744 patients with transfusion-dependent anemias
- Author
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Cappellini, M. D., Porter, J., El Beshlawy, A., C. K., Li, Seymour, J. F., Elalfy, M., Gattermann, N., Giraudier, S., Lee, J. W., Chan, L. L., Lin, K. H., Rose, C., Taher, A., Thein, S. L., Viprakasit, V., Habr, D., Domokos, G., Roubert, B., Kattamis, A., Agaoglu, L., Alimena, G., Alonso, D., Ame, S., Angelucci, E., Businco, A., Arrizabalaga, B., Athanasiou Metaxa, M., Augustson, B., Aydinok, Y., Baba, A., Baccarani, M., Beck, J., Beris, P., Beyne Rauzy, O., Birgens, H., Bordessoule, D., Borgna, Caterina, Bosly, A., Bouabdallah, K., Bowden, D., Bowen, D., Bron, D., Capra, M., Cartron, G., Cazzola, M., Chalkias, C., Chancharunee, S., Chapman, C., Charoenkwan, P., Chasapopoulou, E., Cheze, S., Chuansumrit, A., Cianciulli, P., Dauriac, C., Delforge, M., Dölken, G., Dombret, H., Duyster, J., Economopoulos, T., Ehninger, G., Enggaard, L., Fillet, G., Filosa, A., Forni, G., Galanello, R., Gastl, G., Goldfarb, A., Grigg, A., Gumruk, F., S. Y., Ha, Haase, D., Heinrich, B., Hertzberg, M., Ho, J., Hsu, H. C., Huang, S., Hunault Berger, M., Inusa, B., Jaulmes, D., Jensen, J., Kilinc, Y., Kim, K. H., Kinsey, S., Kjeldsen, L., Koren, A., Lai, M. E., Lai, Y., Lee, K. H., Lee, S. H., Legros, L., Li, C., Li, Q., Linkesch, W., Lübbert, M., Lutz, D., Mohamed Thalha, A. J., Mufti, G., Muus, P., Nobile, F., Papadopoulos, N., Perrotta, S., Petrini, M., Pfeilstöcker, M., Piga, A., Poole, J., Porter, J. B., Pungolino, E., Quarta, G., Ravoet, C., Jolimont Lobbes, H. H., Remacha, A. F., Roy, L., Saglio, G., Sanz, G., Schmugge, M., Schots, H., Secchi, G., Shah, F., Shah, H., Shen, Z., Slama, B., Sutcharitchan, P., Tamary, H., Tesch, H. J., Troncy, J., Villegas, A., Wainwright, L., Wassmann, B., Wettervald, M., Will, A., Wörmann, B., Wright, J., Yeh, S. P., Yoon, S. S., Zoumbos, N. S., and Zweegman, S.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Blood transfusion ,Iron Overload ,Adolescent ,Anemia ,Thalassemia ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Iron chelation therapy ,Transfusion medicine ,Transfusion-dependent anemias ,Hemosiderosis ,Iron Chelating Agents ,Gastroenterology ,Benzoates ,Young Adult ,IRON CHELATION ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Blood Transfusion ,Tissue Distribution ,SERUM FERRITIN ,Chelation therapy ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Myelodysplastic syndromes ,Deferasirox ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,Triazoles ,medicine.disease ,DEFERASOROX ,Deferoxamine ,Child, Preschool ,Ferritins ,Female ,Original Article ,business ,TRANSFUSION-DEPENDENT ANEMIAS ,Iron, Dietary ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Following a clinical evaluation of deferasirox (Exjade) it was concluded that, in addition to baseline body iron burden, ongoing transfusional iron intake should be considered when selecting doses. The 1-year EPIC study, the largest ever investigation conducted for an iron chelator, is the first to evaluate whether fixed starting doses of deferasirox, based on transfusional iron intake, with dose titration guided by serum ferritin trends and safety markers, provides clinically acceptable chelation in patients (agedor=2 years) with transfusional hemosiderosis from various types of anemia.The recommended initial dose was 20 mg/kg/day for patients receiving 2-4 packed red blood cell units/month and 10 or 30 mg/kg/day was recommended for patients receiving less or more frequent transfusions, respectively. Dose adjustments were based on 3-month serum ferritin trends and continuous assessment of safety markers. The primary efficacy end-point was change in serum ferritin after 52 weeks compared with baseline.The 1744 patients enrolled had the following conditions; thalassemia (n=1115), myelodysplastic syndromes (n=341), aplastic anemia (n=116), sickle cell disease (n=80), rare anemias (n=43) and other transfused anemias (n=49). Overall, there was a significant reduction in serum ferritin from baseline (-264 ng/mL; P0.0001), reflecting dosage adjustments and ongoing iron intake. The most common (5%) adverse events were gastrointestinal disturbances (28%) and skin rash (10%). Conclusions Analysis of this large, prospectively collected data set confirms the response to chelation therapy across various anemias, supporting initial deferasirox doses based on transfusional iron intake, with subsequent dose titration guided by trends in serum ferritin and safety markers (clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT00171821).
- Published
- 2009
30. Clinical efficacy and safety evaluation of tailoring iron chelation practice in thalassaemia patients from Asia-Pacific: A subanalysis of the EPIC study of deferasirox.
- Author
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Roubert B., Domokos G., Xue H.-L., Lin K.-H., Bowden D.K., Viprakasit V., Ibrahim H., Ha S.-Y., Ho P.J., Li C.-K., Chan L.-L., Chiu C.-F., Sutcharitchan P., Habr D., Roubert B., Domokos G., Xue H.-L., Lin K.-H., Bowden D.K., Viprakasit V., Ibrahim H., Ha S.-Y., Ho P.J., Li C.-K., Chan L.-L., Chiu C.-F., Sutcharitchan P., and Habr D.
- Abstract
Although thalassaemia is highly prevalent in the Asia-Pacific region, clinical data on efficacy and safety profiles of deferasirox in patients from this region are rather limited. Recently, data from the multicentre Evaluation of Patients' Iron Chelation with Exjade (EPIC) study in 1744 patients with different anaemias has provided an opportunity to analyse 1115 thalassaemia patients, of whom 444 patients were from five countries in the Asia-Pacific region (AP) for whom thalassaemia management and choice of iron chelators were similar. Compared to the rest of the world (ROW), baseline clinical data showed that the AP group appeared to be more loaded with iron (3745.0 vs. 2822.0 ng/ml) and had a higher proportion on deferoxamine monotherapy prior to the study (82.9 vs. 58.9%). Using a starting deferasirox dose based on transfusional iron intake and tailoring it to individual patient response, clinical efficacy based on serum ferritin reduction in AP and ROW thalassaemia patients was similar. Interestingly, the AP group developed a higher incidence of drug-related skin rash compared to ROW (18.0 vs. 7.2%), which may indicate different pharmacogenetic backgrounds in the two populations. Our analysis confirms that, with appropriate adjustment of dose, deferasirox can be clinically effective across different regions, with manageable side effects. © The Japanese Society of Hematology 2011.
- Published
- 2012
31. Improved patient satisfaction, adherence and health-related quality of life with deferasirox (Exjade) in beta-thalassemia patients previously receiving other iron chelation therapies.
- Author
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Rofail D., Gater A., Cappellini M.D., Baladi J.-F., Porter J.B., Athanasiou-Metaxa M., Bowden D.K., Troncy J., Habr D., Domokos G., Roubert B., Rofail D., Gater A., Cappellini M.D., Baladi J.-F., Porter J.B., Athanasiou-Metaxa M., Bowden D.K., Troncy J., Habr D., Domokos G., and Roubert B.
- 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 beta-thalassemia. Conventional ICT (deferoxamine, Desferal, DFO) requires a burdensome regimen (subcutaneous delivery 5-7 times a week) that has been shown to negatively impact pts' health-related quality of life (HRQL) and adherence to therapy. Adherence to ICT affects survival and therefore a well-tolerated and effective ICT regimen is required. The once-daily oral chelator, deferasirox (Exjade) offers 24-hour ICT, 7 days a week and is potentially less burdensome to pts. Method(s): As part of a larger single-arm, multicenter, open-label trial investigating the efficacy and safety of deferasirox (EPIC study), 217 beta-thalassemia pts >16 years of age were included in this subanalysis. Findings reported here investigate differences in satisfaction, adherence and HRQoL following treatment with deferasirox, in beta-thalassemia patients with prior experience of DFO monotherapy, or DFO in combination with deferiprone (Ferriprox, L1). All pts were asked at baseline and week 52 (end of study [EOS]) to complete the 19-item Satisfaction with ICT questionnaire (SICT) and the 36-item Short Form health survey (SF-36). Mean change scores between baseline and EOS on the four domains of the SICT (Perceived Effectiveness of ICT, Side Effects of ICT, Acceptance of ICT, and Burden of ICT) and the eight domains (Physical Functioning, Role-Physical, Bodily Pain, General Health, Vitality, Social Functioning, Role-Emotional, and Mental Health) and two summary scores (Physical and Mental Component Scores) of the SF-36 were calculated for patients who completed the respective instruments at both timepoints. Higher scores on the SICT and SF-36 represent greater HRQL, satisfaction with, and adherence to treatment. Adherence to deferasirox was assessed
- Published
- 2010
32. Hematologic responses to deferasirox therapy in transfusion-dependent patients with myelodysplastic syndromes
- Author
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Gattermann, N., primary, Finelli, C., additional, Della Porta, M., additional, Fenaux, P., additional, Stadler, M., additional, Guerci-Bresler, A., additional, Schmid, M., additional, Taylor, K., additional, Vassilieff, D., additional, Habr, D., additional, Marcellari, A., additional, Roubert, B., additional, and Rose, C., additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Deferasirox for up to 3 years leads to continued improvement of myocardial T2* in patients with -thalassemia major
- Author
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Pennell, D. J., primary, Porter, J. B., additional, Cappellini, M. D., additional, Chan, L. L., additional, El-Beshlawy, A., additional, Aydinok, Y., additional, Ibrahim, H., additional, Li, C.-K., additional, Viprakasit, V., additional, Elalfy, M. S., additional, Kattamis, A., additional, Smith, G., additional, Habr, D., additional, Domokos, G., additional, Roubert, B., additional, and Taher, A., additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. 340 Improvement in haematologic parameters in patients with MDS treated with the iron chelator deferasirox (Exjade®): An EPIC study post-hoc analysis
- Author
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Gattermann, N., primary, Finelli, C., additional, Porta, M. Della, additional, Fenaux, P., additional, Stadler, M., additional, Guerci-Bresler, A., additional, Schmid, M., additional, Taylor, K., additional, Vassilieff, D., additional, Habr, D., additional, Marcellari, A., additional, Roubert, B., additional, and Rose, C., additional
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Continued improvement in myocardial T2* over two years of deferasirox therapy in -thalassemia major patients with cardiac iron overload
- Author
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Pennell, D. J., primary, Porter, J. B., additional, Cappellini, M. D., additional, Chan, L. L., additional, El-Beshlawy, A., additional, Aydinok, Y., additional, Ibrahim, H., additional, Li, C.-K., additional, Viprakasit, V., additional, Elalfy, M. S., additional, Kattamis, A., additional, Smith, G., additional, Habr, D., additional, Domokos, G., additional, Roubert, B., additional, and Taher, A., additional
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. An individual patient data meta-analysis of outcomes in 4 randomized double-blind trials of iron-deficient patients with HFrEF and renal dysfunction treated with IV ferric carboxymaltose
- Author
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Piotr Ponikowski, Macdougall, I. C., Bohm, M., Colet, J. Comin, Filippatos, G., Roubert, B., Veldhuisen, D. J., and Anker, S. D.
37. Cardiovascular hospitalisation and death by subgroup in iron-deficient patients with heart failure treated with intravenous ferric carboxymaltose: an individual patient meta-analysis
- Author
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Anker, S. D., Boehm, M., Comin-Colet, J., Filippatos, G., Roubert, B., Veldhuisen, D. J., and Piotr Ponikowski
38. Cardiovascular and renal outcomes in iron-deficient patients with HFrEF and renal dysfunction treated with i.v. ferric carboxymaltose: An individual patient data meta-analysis
- Author
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Piotr Ponikowski, Filippatos, G., Macdougall, I. C., Bohm, M., Colet, J. C., Roubert, B., Veldhuisen, D. J., and Anker, S. D.
39. A randomized, controlled, open label non-inferiority trial of intravenous ferric carboxymaltose versus iron sucrose in patients with iron deficiency anemia in China.
- Author
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Jin J, Ran Z, Noseda E, Roubert B, Marty M, Mezzacasa A, and Göring UM
- Subjects
- Humans, Ferric Oxide, Saccharated therapeutic use, Ferritins therapeutic use, Hemoglobins metabolism, Hemoglobins therapeutic use, Iron therapeutic use, Anemia, Iron-Deficiency drug therapy, Ferric Compounds, Maltose analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
Iron deficiency (ID) and ID anemia (IDA) pose significant public health concerns in China. Although iron sucrose (IS) treatment is well-established in the country, ferric carboxymaltose (FCM) offers the advantage of higher doses and fewer infusions. This open label, randomized, controlled, non-inferiority trial was conducted at multiple sites in China to compare the outcomes of FCM (maximum of 2 doses, 500 or 1000 mg iron) and IS (up to 11 infusions, 200 mg iron) treatments in subjects with IDA. The primary endpoint was the achievement of hemoglobin (Hb) response (an increase of ⩾2 g/dL from baseline) within 8 weeks, whereas secondary endpoints included changes in Hb, transferrin saturation, and serum ferritin levels. Among the 371 randomized subjects, a similar percentage of subjects treated with FCM and IS achieved Hb-response (FCM 99.4%, IS 98.3%), thereby confirming the non-inferiority of FCM compared with IS (difference 1.12 (-2.15, 4.71; 95% confidence interval (CI))). Furthermore, a significantly higher proportion of FCM-treated subjects achieved early Hb-response at Week 2 (FCM 85.2%, IS 73.2%; difference 12.1 (3.31, 20.65; 95% CI)). Additionally, the increase in TSAT and serum ferritin levels from baseline was significantly greater at all time points for FCM-treated subjects. The safety profiles of FCM and IS were comparable, with the exception of transient hypophosphatemia and pyrexia, which are consistent with FCM's known safety profile. In conclusion, FCM proves to be an efficacious treatment for IDA, providing faster Hb-response and correction of ID with fewer administrations than IS., (© 2023. Higher Education Press.)
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- 2024
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40. Efficacy of ferric carboxymaltose in heart failure with iron deficiency: an individual patient data meta-analysis.
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Ponikowski P, Mentz RJ, Hernandez AF, Butler J, Khan MS, van Veldhuisen DJ, Roubert B, Blackman N, Friede T, Jankowska EA, and Anker SD
- Subjects
- Humans, Stroke Volume, Ventricular Function, Left, Ferric Compounds therapeutic use, Anemia, Iron-Deficiency drug therapy, Anemia, Iron-Deficiency complications, Iron Deficiencies, Heart Failure complications, Heart Failure drug therapy
- Abstract
Background and Aims: Whereas a beneficial effect of intravenous ferric carboxymaltose (FCM) on symptoms and exercise capacity among patients with iron deficiency and heart failure (HF) has been consistently demonstrated, the effects of treatment on clinical events remain the subject of research. This meta-analysis aimed to characterize the effects of FCM therapy on hospitalizations and mortality., Methods: Patient-level data from randomized, placebo-controlled FCM trials including adults with HF and iron deficiency with ≥52 weeks follow-up were analysed. The co-primary efficacy endpoints were (i) composite of total/recurrent cardiovascular hospitalizations and cardiovascular death and (ii) composite of total HF hospitalizations and cardiovascular death, through 52 weeks. Key secondary endpoints included individual composite endpoint components. Event rates were analysed using a negative binomial model. Treatment-emergent adverse events were also examined., Results: Three FCM trials with a total of 4501 patients were included. Ferric carboxymaltose was associated with a significantly reduced risk of co-primary endpoint 1 (rate ratio 0.86; 95% confidence interval 0.75-0.98; P = .029; Cochran Q: 0.008), with a trend towards a reduction of co-primary endpoint 2 (rate ratio 0.87; 95% confidence interval 0.75-1.01; P = .076; Cochran Q: 0.024). Treatment effects appeared to result from reduced hospitalization rates, not improved survival. Treatment appeared to have a good safety profile and was well tolerated., Conclusions: In iron-deficient patients with HF with reduced left ventricular ejection fraction, intravenous FCM was associated with significantly reduced risk of hospital admissions for HF and cardiovascular causes, with no apparent effect on mortality., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology.)
- Published
- 2023
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41. Minimal Clinically Important Differences in 6-Minute Walk Test in Patients With HFrEF and Iron Deficiency.
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Khan MS, Anker SD, Friede T, Jankowska EA, Metra M, Piña IL, Coats AJ, Rosano G, Roubert B, Goehring UM, Dorigotti F, Comin-Colet J, Vanveldhuisen DJ, Filippatos GS, Ponikowski P, and Butler J
- Subjects
- Humans, Walk Test, Stroke Volume, Minimal Clinically Important Difference, Heart Failure diagnosis, Heart Failure complications, Iron Deficiencies
- Abstract
Background: The 6-minute walk test (6MWT) is widely used to measure exercise capacity; however, the magnitude of change that is clinically meaningful for individuals is not well established in heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF)., Objective: To calculate the minimal clinically important difference (MCID) for change in exercise capacity in the 6MWT in iron-deficient populations with HFrEF., Methods: In this pooled secondary analysis of the FAIR-HF and CONFIRM-HF trials, mean changes in the 6MWT from baseline to weeks 12 and 24 were calculated and calibrated against the Patient Global Assessment (PGA) tool (clinical anchor) to derive MCIDs in improvement and deterioration., Results: Of 760 patients included in the 2 trials, 6MWT and PGA data were available for 680 (89%) and 656 (86%) patients at weeks 12 and 24, respectively. The mean 6MWT distance at baseline was 281 ± 103 meters. There was a modest correlation between changes in 6MWT and PGA from baseline to week 12 (r = 0.31; P < 0.0001) and week 24 (r = 0.43; P < 0.0001). Respective estimates (95% confidence intervals) of MCID in 6MWT at weeks 12 and 24 were 14 meters (5;23) and 15 meters (3;27) for a "little improvement" (vs no change), 20 meters (10;30) and 24 meters (12;36) for moderate improvement vs a "little improvement,", -11 meters (-32;9.2) and -31 meters (-53;-8) for a "little deterioration" (vs no change), and -84 meters (-144;-24) and -69 meters (-118;-20) for "moderate deterioration" vs a "little deterioration"., Conclusions: The MCID for improvement in exercise capacity in the 6MWT was 14 meters-15 meters in patients with HFrEF and iron deficiency. These MCIDs can aid clinical interpretation of study data., Competing Interests: Conflicts of Interest SDA has received research grants and personal fees from Vifor Int and Abbott Vascular (IIT/Trial steering committee work), personal fees from Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim and Impulse Dynamics (Trial steering committee work), Novartis, Cardiac Dimensions and Occlutech (Adivsory committee work), and Servier (Registry Steering Committee). TF reports support for statistical consultancies and personal fees from Vifor for the present manuscript, consulting fees for statistical consultancies and personal fees from Bayer, CSL Behring, Galapagos, Minoryx, Vifor, Novartis, and LivaNova outside of the current work; payment for educational events from Fresenius Kabi outside of the current work; personal fees from Novartis, Eli Lilly, Bayer, BiosenseWebster, Janssen, Roche, and Enanta for participation on a Data Safety Monitoring Board. EAJ has received research grants and personal fees from Vifor Pharma (co-PI of the AFFIRM trial); personal fees from Bayer, Novartis, Abbott, Boehringer Ingelheim, Pfizer, Servier, AstraZeneca, Berlin Chemie, Cardiac Dimensions, Fresenius, Respicardia, Takeda, Swixx Biopharma, and Gedeon Richter; treasurer of the Executive Committee for the Heart Failure Association. MM has received personal fees from Vifor Pharma (Executive Committee member), Amgen (Executive Committee member and National PI), AstraZeneca, Abbott vascular, Bayer (participation in Advisory Boards), Boehringer Ingelheim (advisory board member), Servier (participation in Advisory Boards and speeches at sponsored symposia), Edwards Therapeutics (speeches at sponsored symposia), Actelion (DMC Member), LivaNova (Executive Committee member), and Windtree Therapeutics (Executive Committee member and Advisory Board). ILP reports personal fees from Boehringer Ingelheim outside of the submitted work. AJSC reports personal fees from AstraZeneca, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Menarini, Novartis, Nutricia, Servier, Vifor, Abbott, Actimed, Arena, Cardiac Dimensions, Corvia, CVRx, Enopace, ESN Cleer, Faraday, Gore, Impulse Dynamics, and Respicardia outside of the submitted work. BR, UMG and FD are full-time employees of Vifor Pharma. JCC reports unrestricted grants from Vifor Pharma and Novartis; consulting fees from Vifor Pharma, AstraZenica and Boehringer Ingelheim; and honoraria for conference activities from Vifor Pharma, AstraZenica and Boehringer Ingelheim. GSF reports grants from the European Commission; payment or honoraria for lectures, presentations, speakers bureaus, manuscript writing or educational events from Bayer and Boehringer Ingelheim; participation on a data safety monitoring board or advisory board from Bayer and Boehringer Ingelheim; leadership or fiduciary role in the Heart Failure Association; and other financial or nonfinancial interests as a committee member for Medtronic, Vifor Pharma, Amgen, Servier, and Novartis. PP reports participation in clinical trials for and grants and personal fees from Vifor Pharma during the conduct of the study; participation in clinical trials for and personal fees from Amgen, Bayer, Novartis, AbbottVascular, Boehringer Ingelheim, Pfizer, Servier, Astra Zeneca, Cibiem, BMS, and Impulse Dynamics outside of the submitted work; participation in clinical trials for Cardiac Dimensions outside of the submitted work; and personal fees from Berlin Chemie outside of the submitted work. JB reports personal consulting fees from Abbott, Adrenomed, Amgen, Applied Therapeutics, Array, AstraZeneca, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, CVRx, G3 Pharma, Impulse Dynamics, Innolife, Janssen, LivaNova, Luitpold, Medtronic, Merck, Novartis, NovoNordisk, Relypsa, Sequana Medical, and Vifor Pharma, and payment for lectures, presentations, speakers’ bureaus, manuscript writing, and educational events from AstraZeneca, Eli-Lilly, Janssen, and Novartis. DJVV, GR and MSK have no conflicts of interest relating to the performance of this research or in the evaluation and publication process of the manuscript., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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42. Minimal clinically important difference in quality of life scores for patients with heart failure and reduced ejection fraction.
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Butler J, Khan MS, Mori C, Filippatos GS, Ponikowski P, Comin-Colet J, Roubert B, Spertus JA, and Anker SD
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Health Status, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Minimal Clinically Important Difference, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Heart Failure physiopathology, Heart Failure therapy, Patient Reported Outcome Measures, Quality of Life, Stroke Volume physiology
- Abstract
Aims: While the associations of health-related quality of life scores in heart failure (HF) [e.g. the Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire (KCCQ)] with clinical outcomes are well established, their interpretation in the context of what magnitudes of change are clinically important to patients is less clear. The main objective of this study was to correlate the changes in the KCCQ and Patient Global Assessment (PGA) in patients with HF with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) to determine minimal clinically important difference (MCID)., Methods and Results: We analysed data from 459 patients of the FAIR-HF trial. Both KCCQ and PGA were assessed at 4 and 24 weeks after enrolment. An anchor-based approach was used to calculate MCID at week 4 and 24. PGA was chosen as the clinical anchor against which changes in the KCCQ scores were calibrated. For each category of change in PGA, the corresponding differences were calculated by the mean scores of various domains of KCCQ along with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). There was fair correlation between PGA and changes in overall summary scores (OSS) (r = 0.31; P < 0.001), clinical summary scores (CSS) (r = 0.36; P < 0.001) and physical limitation scores (PLS) (r = 0.31; P < 0.001) from baseline to week 4. KCCQ OSS, CSS and PLS MCID for 'little improvement' at week 4 were 3.6 (1.0-6.2), 4.5 (1.8-7.2) and 4.7 (1.4-8.0) points, respectively. OSS, CSS and PLS MCID for 'little improvement' at week 24 were 4.3 (0.2-8.4), 4.5 (0.5-8.5) and 4.0 (-0.9-9.0) points, respectively., Conclusion: The MCID threshold for KCCQ score was generally consistent and numerically lower than the threshold of 5-point change considered for clinical outcome prognosis and were stable between 4 and 24 weeks. This suggests that even changes smaller than the traditional 5-point improvements in KCCQ may be clinically meaningful. Also, these results can aid in the clinical interpretation of patient-reported outcomes, and better endpoint selection in future studies., (© 2020 European Society of Cardiology.)
- Published
- 2020
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43. Pharmacokinetic, Pharmacodynamic, and Safety Profiles of Ferric Carboxymaltose in Chinese Patients with Iron-deficiency Anemia.
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Ding Y, Zhu X, Li X, Zhang H, Wu M, Liu J, Palmen M, Roubert B, and Li C
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- Administration, Intravenous, Adult, Asian People, Female, Ferric Compounds adverse effects, Humans, Male, Maltose adverse effects, Maltose pharmacokinetics, Maltose pharmacology, Anemia, Iron-Deficiency blood, Ferric Compounds pharmacokinetics, Ferric Compounds pharmacology, Ferritins blood, Iron blood, Maltose analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
Purpose: Iron deficiency (ID) is one of the most commonly known nutritional deficiencies and is considered the primary cause of anemia (iron-deficiency anemia). Ferric carboxymaltose (FCM), an intravenous iron preparation, has been widely used for >10 years for iron-deficiency anemia treatment worldwide because of its many advantages., Methods: This single-center, open-label, single dose escalation study in Chinese subjects was designed to assess the pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic parameters and safety of FCM in this population. The first 12 subjects received a 500-mg dose; after assessing safety data from the first 6 subjects in this cohort, another 12 subjects were assigned to the 1000-mg dose cohort., Findings: After an infusion of FCM over 15 min, a rapid dose-dependent increase in total serum iron levels was observed with a median T
max of 30 min following the start of the infusion for both cohorts. The Cmax and AUC for the 1000-mg dose were ~1.8-fold (p = 0.2929) and 2.3-fold (p = 0.0318) those associated with the 500-mg dose, respectively. Mean terminal t1/2 values were 12.3 and 10.5 h for the 2 cohorts. The renal elimination of FCM was negligible (<0.1%). Increase in mean serum iron levels and ferritin concentrations showed dose dependency. Iron-binding capacity was transiently well utilized after dosing, as indicated by transferrin saturation >88% with 500-mg FCM and >90% with 1000-mg FCM. Hemoglobin levels did not show significant changes during the 7-day observation period, whereas mean reticulocyte counts significantly increased in both cohorts, suggesting activation of the hematopoietic system. FCM was well tolerated in these Chinese subjects. No new or unexpected treatment-emergent adverse events were attributable to FCM., Implications: The pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic and safety profiles in Chinese subjects seemed comparable to those in white and Japanese populations. ChinaDrugTrials.org.cn identifier: CTR20160863., (Copyright © 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2020
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44. Oral ferroportin inhibitor VIT-2763: First-in-human, phase 1 study in healthy volunteers.
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Richard F, van Lier JJ, Roubert B, Haboubi T, Göhring UM, and Dürrenberger F
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Benzimidazoles pharmacology, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Drug Administration Schedule, Healthy Volunteers, Hepcidins blood, Humans, Iron blood, Iron Overload drug therapy, Oxazoles pharmacology, Pyridines pharmacology, Benzimidazoles therapeutic use, Cation Transport Proteins antagonists & inhibitors, Oxazoles therapeutic use, Pyridines therapeutic use, Thalassemia drug therapy
- Abstract
Restriction of iron availability by ferroportin inhibition is a novel approach to treating non-transfusion-dependent thalassemia (β-thalassemia intermedia). This first-in-human, Phase I study (https://www.clinicaltrialsregister.eu; EudraCT no. 2017-003395-31) assessed the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of single- and multiple-ascending doses (SAD and MAD) of the oral ferroportin inhibitor, VIT-2763, in healthy volunteers. Participants received VIT-2763 5/15/60/120/240 mg or placebo in the SAD phase and VIT-2763 60/120 mg once daily, VIT-2763 60/120 mg twice daily, or placebo for 7 days in the MAD phase. Seventy-two participants completed treatment. VIT-2763 was well tolerated and demonstrated a similar safety profile to the placebo. There were no serious or severe adverse events, or discontinuations due to adverse events. VIT-2763 absorption was relatively fast, with detectable levels 15 to 30 minutes post-dose. Following multiple dosing there was no apparent change in absorption and accumulation was minimal. Mean elimination half-life was 1.9 to 5.3 hours following single dosing, and 2.1 to 3.8 hours on Day 1 and 2.6 to 5.3 hours on Day 7, following repeated dosing. There was a temporary decrease in mean serum iron levels with VIT-2763 single doses ≥60 mg and all multiple doses; mean calculated transferrin saturation (only assessed following multiple dosing) also temporarily decreased. A shift in mean serum hepcidin peaks followed administration of all iron-lowering doses of VIT-2763. This effect was less pronounced after 7 days of multiple dosing (aside from with 120 mg once daily). These results support the initiation of clinical studies in patients with non-transfusion-dependent thalassemia and documented iron overload due to ineffective erythropoiesis., (© 2019 The Authors. American Journal of Hematology published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2020
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45. Effects of ferric carboxymaltose on hospitalisations and mortality rates in iron-deficient heart failure patients: an individual patient data meta-analysis.
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Anker SD, Kirwan BA, van Veldhuisen DJ, Filippatos G, Comin-Colet J, Ruschitzka F, Lüscher TF, Arutyunov GP, Motro M, Mori C, Roubert B, Pocock SJ, and Ponikowski P
- Subjects
- Anemia, Iron-Deficiency blood, Anemia, Iron-Deficiency drug therapy, Anemia, Iron-Deficiency etiology, Global Health, Humans, Iron blood, Maltose therapeutic use, Survival Rate trends, Ferric Compounds therapeutic use, Heart Failure blood, Heart Failure complications, Heart Failure mortality, Hospitalization trends, Iron Deficiencies, Maltose analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
Aims: Iron deficiency (ID) is a common co-morbidity in patients with heart failure (HF) and has been suggested to be associated with poor prognosis. Recently completed double-blind randomised controlled trials (RCTs) studying HF patients with ID have shown improvements in functional capacity, symptoms and quality of life when treated with i.v. ferric carboxymaltose (FCM). This individual patient data meta-analysis investigates the effect of FCM vs. placebo on recurrent hospitalisations and mortality in HF patients with ID., Methods and Results: Individual patient data were extracted from four RCTs comparing FCM with placebo in patients with systolic HF and ID. The main outcome measures were recurrent cardiovascular (CV) hospitalisations and CV mortality. Other outcomes included cause-specific hospitalisations and death. The main analyses of recurrent events were backed up by time-to-first-event analyses. In total, 839 patients, of whom 504 were randomised to FCM, were included. Compared with those taking placebo, patients on FCM had lower rates of recurrent CV hospitalisations and CV mortality [rate ratio 0.59, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.40-0.88; P = 0.009]. Treatment with FCM also reduced recurrent HF hospitalisations and CV mortality (rate ratio 0.53, 95% CI 0.33-0.86; P = 0.011) and recurrent CV hospitalisations and all-cause mortality (rate ratio 0.60, 95% CI 0.41-0.88; P = 0.009). Time-to-first-event analyses showed similar findings, with somewhat attenuated treatment effects. The administration of i.v. FCM was not associated with an increased risk for adverse events., Conclusions: Treatment with i.v. FCM was associated with a reduction in recurrent CV hospitalisations in systolic HF patients with ID., (© 2017 The Authors. European Journal of Heart Failure published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Cardiology.)
- Published
- 2018
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46. Effect of Ferric Carboxymaltose on Exercise Capacity in Patients With Chronic Heart Failure and Iron Deficiency.
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van Veldhuisen DJ, Ponikowski P, van der Meer P, Metra M, Böhm M, Doletsky A, Voors AA, Macdougall IC, Anker SD, Roubert B, Zakin L, and Cohen-Solal A
- Subjects
- Aged, Biomarkers blood, Female, Ferritins blood, Humans, Iron Deficiencies, Male, Maltose administration & dosage, Middle Aged, Oxygen blood, Quality of Life, Stroke Volume drug effects, Transferrin metabolism, Exercise Tolerance drug effects, Ferric Compounds administration & dosage, Heart Failure blood, Heart Failure drug therapy, Heart Failure physiopathology, Maltose analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
Background: Iron deficiency is common in patients with heart failure (HF) and is associated with reduced exercise capacity and poor outcomes. Whether correction of iron deficiency with (intravenous) ferric carboxymaltose (FCM) affects peak oxygen consumption [peak VO
2 ], an objective measure of exercise intolerance in HF, has not been examined., Methods: We studied patients with systolic HF (left ventricular ejection fraction ≤45%) and mild to moderate symptoms despite optimal HF medication. Patients were randomized 1:1 to treatment with FCM for 24 weeks or standard of care. The primary end point was the change in peak VO2 from baseline to 24 weeks. Secondary end points included the effect on hematinic and cardiac biomarkers, quality of life, and safety. For the primary analysis, patients who died had a value of 0 imputed for 24-week peak VO2 . Additional sensitivity analyses were performed to determine the impact of imputation of missing peak VO2 data., Results: A total of 172 patients with HF were studied and received FCM (n=86) or standard of care (control group, n=86). At baseline, the groups were well matched; mean age was 64 years, 75% were male, mean left ventricular ejection fraction was 32%, and peak VO2 was 13.5 mL/min/kg. FCM significantly increased serum ferritin and transferrin saturation. At 24 weeks, peak VO2 had decreased in the control group (least square means -1.19±0.389 mL/min/kg) but was maintained on FCM (-0.16±0.387 mL/min/kg; P =0.020 between groups). In a sensitivity analysis, in which missing data were not imputed, peak VO2 at 24 weeks decreased by -0.63±0.375 mL/min/kg in the control group and by -0.16±0.373 mL/min/kg in the FCM group; P =0.23 between groups). Patients' global assessment and functional class as assessed by the New York Heart Association improved on FCM versus standard of care., Conclusions: Treatment with intravenous FCM in patients with HF and iron deficiency improves iron stores. Although a favorable effect on peak VO2 was observed on FCM, compared with standard of care in the primary analysis, this effect was highly sensitive to the imputation strategy for peak VO2 among patients who died. Whether FCM is associated with an improved outcome in these high-risk patients needs further study., Clinical Trial Registration: URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT01394562., (© 2017 The Authors.)- Published
- 2017
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47. Ferric carboxymaltose in patients with restless legs syndrome and nonanemic iron deficiency: A randomized trial.
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Trenkwalder C, Winkelmann J, Oertel W, Virgin G, Roubert B, and Mezzacasa A
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Ferritins blood, Humans, Iron Metabolism Disorders blood, Male, Maltose therapeutic use, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Restless Legs Syndrome blood, Single-Blind Method, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Ferric Compounds therapeutic use, Hematinics therapeutic use, Iron Metabolism Disorders drug therapy, Maltose analogs & derivatives, Restless Legs Syndrome drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: Compromised iron status is important in restless legs syndrome pathophysiology. We compared the efficacy and tolerability of ferric carboxymaltose (single intravenous dose) versus placebo for restless legs syndrome treatment in iron-deficient nonanemic patients., Methods: Patients with moderate to severe restless legs syndrome and serum ferritin < 75 μg/L (or serum ferritin 75-300 μg/L and transferrin saturation < 20%) were randomized to ferric carboxymaltose (1000 mg iron) or placebo. Mean change difference between ferric carboxymaltose and placebo in International Restless Legs Syndrome Severity Scale score from baseline to week 4 was the primary end point; week 12 was a secondary end point., Results: Ferric carboxymaltose treatment (n = 59) led to nonsignificant improvement over placebo (n = 51) in International Restless Legs Syndrome Severity Scale score at week 4 (difference [95% confidence interval], -2.5 [-5.93 to 1.02], P = 0.163), reaching significance by week 12 (-4.66 [-8.59 to -0.73], P = 0.021)., Conclusions: In patients who responded to treatment, ferric carboxymaltose may require more time to stabilize restless legs syndrome than previously assumed. © 2017 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society., (© 2017 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.)
- Published
- 2017
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48. Beneficial effects of long-term intravenous iron therapy with ferric carboxymaltose in patients with symptomatic heart failure and iron deficiency†.
- Author
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Ponikowski P, van Veldhuisen DJ, Comin-Colet J, Ertl G, Komajda M, Mareev V, McDonagh T, Parkhomenko A, Tavazzi L, Levesque V, Mori C, Roubert B, Filippatos G, Ruschitzka F, and Anker SD
- Subjects
- Aged, Double-Blind Method, Female, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Humans, Injections, Intravenous, Long-Term Care, Male, Maltose administration & dosage, Quality of Life, Treatment Outcome, Cardiotonic Agents administration & dosage, Ferric Compounds administration & dosage, Heart Failure drug therapy, Iron Deficiencies, Maltose analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
Aim: The aim of this study was to evaluate the benefits and safety of long-term i.v. iron therapy in iron-deficient patients with heart failure (HF)., Methods and Results: CONFIRM-HF was a multi-centre, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial that enrolled 304 ambulatory symptomatic HF patients with left ventricular ejection fraction ≤45%, elevated natriuretic peptides, and iron deficiency (ferritin <100 ng/mL or 100-300 ng/mL if transferrin saturation <20%). Patients were randomized 1 : 1 to treatment with i.v. iron, as ferric carboxymaltose (FCM, n = 152) or placebo (saline, n = 152) for 52 weeks. The primary end-point was the change in 6-min-walk-test (6MWT) distance from baseline to Week 24. Secondary end-points included changes in New York Heart Association (NYHA) class, Patient Global Assessment (PGA), 6MWT distance, health-related quality of life (QoL), Fatigue Score at Weeks 6, 12, 24, 36, and 52 and the effect of FCM on the rate of hospitalization for worsening HF. Treatment with FCM significantly prolonged 6MWT distance at Week 24 (difference FCM vs. placebo: 33 ± 11 m, P = 0.002). The treatment effect of FCM was consistent in all subgroups and was sustained to Week 52 (difference FCM vs. placebo: 36 ± 11 m, P < 0.001). Throughout the study, an improvement in NYHA class, PGA, QoL, and Fatigue Score in patients treated with FCM was detected with statistical significance observed from Week 24 onwards. Treatment with FCM was associated with a significant reduction in the risk of hospitalizations for worsening HF [hazard ratio (95% confidence interval): 0.39 (0.19-0.82), P = 0.009]. The number of deaths (FCM: 12, placebo: 14 deaths) and the incidence of adverse events were comparable between both groups., Conclusion: Treatment of symptomatic, iron-deficient HF patients with FCM over a 1-year period resulted in sustainable improvement in functional capacity, symptoms, and QoL and may be associated with risk reduction of hospitalization for worsening HF (ClinicalTrials.gov number NCT01453608)., (© The Author 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology.)
- Published
- 2015
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49. Intravenous iron alone resolves anemia in patients with functional iron deficiency and lymphoid malignancies undergoing chemotherapy.
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Hedenus M, Karlsson T, Ludwig H, Rzychon B, Felder M, Roubert B, and Birgegård G
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Anemia chemically induced, Anemia drug therapy, Anemia, Iron-Deficiency chemically induced, Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Female, Ferric Compounds administration & dosage, Hemoglobins analysis, Humans, Injections, Intravenous, Leukemia, Lymphocytic, Chronic, B-Cell drug therapy, Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin drug therapy, Male, Maltose administration & dosage, Maltose therapeutic use, Middle Aged, Multiple Myeloma drug therapy, Treatment Outcome, Anemia, Iron-Deficiency drug therapy, Antineoplastic Agents adverse effects, Ferric Compounds therapeutic use, Maltose analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
This randomized trial evaluated ferric carboxymaltose without erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESA) for correction of anemia in cancer patients with functional iron deficiency. Patients on treatment for indolent lymphoid malignancies, who had anemia [hemoglobin (Hb) 8.5-10.5 g/dL] and functional iron deficiency [transferrin saturation (TSAT) ≤ 20%, ferritin >30 ng/mL (women) or >40 ng/mL (men)], were randomized to ferric carboxymaltose (1,000 mg iron) or control. Primary end point was the mean change in Hb from baseline to weeks 4, 6 and 8 without transfusions or ESA. Difficulties with patient recruitment led to premature termination of the study. Seventeen patients (8 ferric carboxymaltose and 9 control) were included in the analysis. In the ferric carboxymaltose arm, mean Hb increase was significantly higher versus control at week 8 (p = 0.021). All ferric carboxymaltose-treated patients achieved an Hb increase >1 g/dL (control 6/9; p = 0.087), and mean TSAT was >20% from week 2 onwards. No treatment-related adverse events were reported. In conclusion, ferric carboxymaltose without ESA effectively increased Hb and iron status in this small patient population.
- Published
- 2014
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50. FIND-CKD: a randomized trial of intravenous ferric carboxymaltose versus oral iron in patients with chronic kidney disease and iron deficiency anaemia.
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Macdougall IC, Bock AH, Carrera F, Eckardt KU, Gaillard C, Van Wyck D, Roubert B, Nolen JG, and Roger SD
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Aged, Anemia, Iron-Deficiency blood, Anemia, Iron-Deficiency etiology, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Hemoglobins metabolism, Humans, Injections, Intravenous, Male, Maltose administration & dosage, Prospective Studies, Renal Dialysis, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic blood, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic complications, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Anemia, Iron-Deficiency drug therapy, Ferric Compounds administration & dosage, Ferritins blood, Iron administration & dosage, Maltose analogs & derivatives, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: The optimal iron therapy regimen in patients with non-dialysis-dependent chronic kidney disease (CKD) is unknown., Methods: Ferinject® assessment in patients with Iron deficiency anaemia and Non-Dialysis-dependent Chronic Kidney Disease (FIND-CKD) was a 56-week, open-label, multicentre, prospective and randomized study of 626 patients with non-dialysis-dependent CKD, anaemia and iron deficiency not receiving erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs). Patients were randomized (1:1:2) to intravenous (IV) ferric carboxymaltose (FCM), targeting a higher (400-600 µg/L) or lower (100-200 µg/L) ferritin or oral iron therapy. The primary end point was time to initiation of other anaemia management (ESA, other iron therapy or blood transfusion) or haemoglobin (Hb) trigger of two consecutive values <10 g/dL during Weeks 8-52., Results: The primary end point occurred in 36 patients (23.5%), 49 patients (32.2%) and 98 patients (31.8%) in the high-ferritin FCM, low-ferritin FCM and oral iron groups, respectively [hazard ratio (HR): 0.65; 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.44-0.95; P = 0.026 for high-ferritin FCM versus oral iron]. The increase in Hb was greater with high-ferritin FCM versus oral iron (P = 0.014) and a greater proportion of patients achieved an Hb increase ≥1 g/dL with high-ferritin FCM versus oral iron (HR: 2.04; 95% CI: 1.52-2.72; P < 0.001). Rates of adverse events and serious adverse events were similar in all groups., Conclusions: Compared with oral iron, IV FCM targeting a ferritin of 400-600 µg/L quickly reached and maintained Hb level, and delayed and/or reduced the need for other anaemia management including ESAs. Within the limitations of this trial, no renal toxicity was observed, with no difference in cardiovascular or infectious events., Clinicaltrialsgov Number: NCT00994318., (© The Author 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of ERA-EDTA.)
- Published
- 2014
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