Combination therapy of hydroxycarbamide with anagrelide in patients with essential thrombocythemia in the evaluation of Xagrid(R) efficacy and long-term safety study

Luigi Gugliotta, Carlos Besses, Martin Griesshammer, Claire Harrison, Jean-Jacques Kiladjian, Ruth Coll, Jonathan Smith, Brihad Abhyankar, Gunnar Birgegård, Luigi Gugliotta, Carlos Besses, Martin Griesshammer, Claire Harrison, Jean-Jacques Kiladjian, Ruth Coll, Jonathan Smith, Brihad Abhyankar, Gunnar Birgegård

Abstract

Available information is limited regarding the use of cytoreductive combination therapy in high-risk patients with essential thrombocythemia. This analysis aims to evaluate the clinical relevance and patterns of cytoreductive combination treatment in European high-risk patients with essential thrombocythemia in the Evaluation of Xagrid(®) Efficacy and Long-term Safety study. Of 3643 patients, 347 (9.5%) received combination therapy. Data were recorded at each 6-month update. Of 347 patients who received combination therapy, 304 (87.6%) received hydroxycarbamide + anagrelide. Monotherapies received before this combination were hydroxycarbamide (n=167, 54.9%) and anagrelide (n=123, 40.5%). Median weekly doses of hydroxycarbamide and anagrelide were: 7000 and 10.5 mg when used as prior monotherapy; 3500 and 7.0 mg when used as add-on treatment. Overall, median platelet counts were 581 × 10(9)/L and 411 × 10(9)/L before and after starting hydroxycarbamide + anagrelide, respectively. In patients with paired data (n=153), the number of patients with platelet counts less than 400 × 10(9)/L increased from 33 (21.6%) to 74 (48.4%; P<0.0001), and with platelet counts less than 600 × 10(9)/L, from 82 (53.6%) to 132 (86.3%; P<0.0001). Hydroxycarbamide + anagrelide was discontinued in 158 patients: 76 (48.1%) stopped hydroxycarbamide, 59 (37.3%) stopped anagrelide, 19 (12.0%) stopped both and 4 (2.5%) had another therapy added. The most frequent reasons for discontinuation were intolerance/side-effects, lack of efficacy, and therapeutic strategy. Combination therapy, usually hydroxycarbamide + anagrelide, is used in approximately 10% of all high-risk patients with essential thrombocythemia and may be a useful approach in treating patients for whom monotherapy is unsatisfactory. (Clinicaltrials.gov identifier:NCT00567502).

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Number of patients receiving HC + anagrelide by country enrolled. HC: hydroxycarbamide. NB: All data values not reported are

Figure 2.

Summary of platelet response rates…

Figure 2.

Summary of platelet response rates prior to and during combination therapy for patients…

Figure 2.
Summary of platelet response rates prior to and during combination therapy for patients on HC + anagrelide. HC: hydroxycarbamide.
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Summary of platelet response rates prior to and during combination therapy for patients on HC + anagrelide. HC: hydroxycarbamide.

Source: PubMed

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