| Literature DB >> 28677895 |
Heather A Leitch1, Ambica Parmar2, Richard A Wells3, Lisa Chodirker3, Nancy Zhu4, Thomas J Nevill5, Karen W L Yee6, Brian Leber7, Mary-Margaret Keating8, Mitchell Sabloff9, Eve St Hilaire10, Rajat Kumar11, Robert Delage12, Michelle Geddes13, John M Storring14, Andrea Kew8, April Shamy15, Mohamed Elemary16, Martha Lenis3, Alexandre Mamedov3, Jessica Ivo3, Janika Francis3, Liying Zhang3, Rena Buckstein3.
Abstract
Analyses suggest iron overload in red blood cell (RBC) transfusion-dependent (TD) patients with myleodysplastic syndrome (MDS) portends inferior overall survival (OS) that is attenuated by iron chelation therapy (ICT) but may be biassed by unbalanced patient-related factors. The Canadian MDS Registry prospectively measures frailty, comorbidity and disability. We analysed OS by receipt of ICT, adjusting for these patient-related factors. TD International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS) low and intermediate-1 risk MDS, at RBC TD, were included. Predictive factors for OS were determined. A matched pair analysis considering age, revised IPSS, TD severity, time from MDS diagnosis to TD, and receipt of disease-modifying agents was conducted. Of 239 patients, 83 received ICT; frailty, comorbidity and disability did not differ from non-ICT patients. Median OS from TD was superior in ICT patients (5·2 vs. 2·1 years; P < 0·0001). By multivariate analysis, not receiving ICT independently predicted inferior OS, (hazard ratio for death 2·0, P = 0·03). In matched pair analysis, OS remained superior for ICT patients (P = 0·02). In this prospective, non-randomized analysis, receiving ICT was associated with superior OS in lower IPSS risk MDS, adjusting for age, frailty, comorbidity, disability, revised IPSS, TD severity, time to TD and receiving disease-modifying agents. This provides additional evidence that ICT may confer clinical benefit.Entities:
Keywords: iron chelation therapy; myelodysplastic syndromes; patient-related factors; transfusion dependence
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28677895 DOI: 10.1111/bjh.14825
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Haematol ISSN: 0007-1048 Impact factor: 6.998