| Literature DB >> 22924125 |
John Porter1, Donald K Bowden, Marina Economou, Jacques Troncy, Arnold Ganser, Dany Habr, Nicolas Martin, Adam Gater, Diana Rofail, Linda Abetz-Webb, Helen Lau, Maria Domenica Cappellini.
Abstract
Treatment of iron overload using deferoxamine (DFO) is associated with significant deficits in patients' health-related quality of life (HRQOL) and low treatment satisfaction. The current article presents patient-reported HRQOL, satisfaction, adherence, and persistence data from β-thalassemia (n = 274) and myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) patients (n = 168) patients participating in the Evaluation of Patients' Iron Chelation with Exjade (EPIC) study (NCT00171821); a large-scale 1-year, phase IIIb study investigating the efficacy and safety of the once-daily oral iron chelator, deferasirox. HRQOL and satisfaction, adherence, and persistence to iron chelation therapy (ICT) data were collected at baseline and end of study using the Medical Outcomes Short-Form 36-item Health Survey (SF-36v2) and the Satisfaction with ICT Questionnaire (SICT). Compared to age-matched norms, β-thalassemia and MDS patients reported lower SF-36 domain scores at baseline. Low levels of treatment satisfaction, adherence, and persistence were also observed. HRQOL improved following treatment with deferasirox, particularly among β-thalassemia patients. Furthermore, patients reported high levels of satisfaction with deferasirox at end of study and greater ICT adherence, and persistence. Findings suggest deferasirox improves HRQOL, treatment satisfaction, adherence, and persistence with ICT in β-thalassemia and MDS patients. Improving such outcomes is an important long-term goal for patients with iron overload.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22924125 PMCID: PMC3424665 DOI: 10.1155/2012/297641
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anemia ISSN: 2090-1267
Demographic and clinical characteristics of β-thalassemia and MDS patients.
|
| MDS ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Mean age (SD) | 26 (11.5) | 68 (10.3) |
| Males, | 127 (46.4) | 96 (57.1) |
| Age groups, | ||
| <6 yrs | 17 (6.2) | 0 (0) |
| 6 to <12 yrs | 25 (9.1) | 0 (0) |
| 12 to <16 yrs | 15 (5.5) | 0 (0) |
| 16 to <50 yrs | 213 (77.7) | 4 (2.4) |
| 50 to <65 yrs | 4 (1.5) | 55 (32.7) |
| ≥65 yrs | 0 (0) | 109 (64.9) |
| Prior chelation therapy, | ||
| No | 4 (1.5) | 81 (48.2) |
| Yes | 270 (98.5) | 87 (51.8) |
| Prior chelation therapy, | ||
| None | 4 (1.5) | 81 (48.2) |
| DFO only | 184 (66.4) | 63 (37.5) |
| Deferiprone only | 2 (0.7) | 9 (5.4) |
| DFO and deferiprone∗ | 84 (30.3) | 14 (8.3) |
| Other ICT | 3 (1.1) | 1 (0.6) |
∗Patients may have received both DFO and deferiprone as prior chelation therapies, but these may not have been in combination.
Figure 1Mean SF-36 domain scores for β-thalassemia population versus disease-related and general population references at baseline and EOS. Data illustrated in the above figure are representative of the mean and 95% confidence interval estimates of the mean as calculated using the formula: 1.96 ∗ standard deviation . Reference data for ICT patients were based on Payne et al. [3] (where 82% of patients in this study were thalassemia patients); UK norms from Jenkinson et al. [42] and direct email communications from Dr. Jenkinson on Oct 24, 2011 with age-specific norms.
Figure 2Mean SF-36 domain scores for MDS population versus MDS and general population references at baseline and EOS. Data illustrated in the above figure are representative of the mean and 95% confidence interval estimates of the mean as calculated using the formula: 1.96 ∗ standard deviation . Transfusion-dependent MDS patient reference data reported by Jansen et al. [17]; UK norms from Jenkinson et al. [42] and direct email communications from Dr. Jenkinson on Oct 24, 2011 with age-specific norms.
Mean (SD) SF-36 domain and summary scores among MDS patients according to prior ICT history.
| Baseline mean (SD) | EOS mean (SD) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Reference MDS population | Age-matched UK norms: mean (SD) | Prior ICT ( | ICT Naïve ( | Prior ICT ( | ICT Naïve ( | |
| Physical functioning | 48.1 | 77.42 | 53.60 | 44.56 | 47.43 | 48.79 |
| (30.6) | (25.38) | (21.35) | (17.94) | (24.39) | (23.29) | |
| Role-physical | 39.2 | 78.16 | 36.39 | 26.43 | 30.21 | 29.66 |
| (42.5) | (28.11) | (39.21) | (36.85) | (40.90) | (35.60) | |
| Bodily pain | 66.6 | 71.52 | 65.61 | 64.69 | 63.23 | 59.77 |
| (31.2) | (26.46) | (27.43) | (27.16) | (28.53) | (31.85) | |
| General health | 41.5 | 66.24 | 42.70 | 40.72 | 37.78 | 41.55 |
| (21.3) | (22.57) | (18.94) | (20.00) | (20.01) | (15.92) | |
| Vitality | 50.6 | 57.79 | 43.25 | 37.35 | 42.89 | 40.20 |
| (25.3) | (21.28) | (19.02) | (15.92) | (24.10) | (16.81) | |
| Social functioning | 67.0 | 81.08 | 68.55 | 71.07 | 62.18 | 63.21 |
| (29.6) | (26.14) | (29.75) | (23.24) | (25.57) | (21.21) | |
| Role-emotional | 59.0 | 84.11 | 57.18 | 61.90 | 41.23 | 51.96 |
| (41.4) | (24.41) | (44.05) | (41.34) | (43.45) | (45.83) | |
| Mental health | 72.3 | 73.84 | 66.78 | 69.06 | 60.07 | 64.47 |
| (20.9) | (19.35) | (22.34) | (18.54) | (22.85) | (23.01) | |
| Physical component summary | 35.7 | 44.47 | 36.97 | 33.10 | 36.21 | 35.11 |
| (11.7) | (12.32) | (8.48) | (8.31) | (8.70) | (10.80) | |
| Mental component summary | 48.9 | 52.28 | 46.32 | 48.49 | 42.14 | 45.27 |
| (12.6) | (9.89) | (12.02) | (10.04) | (11.61) | (11.97) | |
Transfusion-dependent MDS patient reference data reported by Jansen et al. [17]; UK norms from Jenkinson et al. [42] and direct email communications from Dr. Jenkinson on Oct 24, 2011 with age-specific norms.
Figure 3Mean SICT domain scores at baseline and EOS for overall β-Thalassemia population.
Figure 4Mean SICT domain scores at baseline and EOS for MDS population with prior history of ICT.