| Literature DB >> 31515250 |
Abdulraheem Yacoub1, John Mascarenhas2, Heidi Kosiorek3, Josef T Prchal4,5, Dmitry Berenzon6, Maria R Baer7, Ellen Ritchie8, Richard T Silver8, Craig Kessler9, Elliott Winton10, Maria Chiara Finazzi11, Alessandro Rambaldi11,12, Alessandro M Vannucchi13,14, David Leibowitz15, Damiano Rondelli16, Murat O Arcasoy17, Rosalind Catchatourian18, Joseph Vadakara19, Vittorio Rosti20, Elizabeth Hexner21, Marina Kremyanskaya2, Lonette Sandy2, Joseph Tripodi22,23, Vesna Najfeld22,23, Noushin Farnoud24, Elli Papaemmanuil25,26,27, Mohamed Salama28, Rona Singer-Weinberg29, Raajit Rampal24, Judith D Goldberg30,31, Tiziano Barbui32, Ruben Mesa33, Amylou C Dueck3, Ronald Hoffman2.
Abstract
Prior studies have reported high response rates with recombinant interferon-α (rIFN-α) therapy in patients with essential thrombocythemia (ET) and polycythemia vera (PV). To further define the role of rIFN-α, we investigated the outcomes of pegylated-rIFN-α2a (PEG) therapy in ET and PV patients previously treated with hydroxyurea (HU). The Myeloproliferative Disorders Research Consortium (MPD-RC)-111 study was an investigator-initiated, international, multicenter, phase 2 trial evaluating the ability of PEG therapy to induce complete (CR) and partial (PR) hematologic responses in patients with high-risk ET or PV who were either refractory or intolerant to HU. The study included 65 patients with ET and 50 patients with PV. The overall response rates (ORRs; CR/PR) at 12 months were 69.2% (43.1% and 26.2%) in ET patients and 60% (22% and 38%) in PV patients. CR rates were higher in CALR-mutated ET patients (56.5% vs 28.0%; P = .01), compared with those in subjects lacking a CALR mutation. The median absolute reduction in JAK2V617F variant allele fraction was -6% (range, -84% to 47%) in patients achieving a CR vs +4% (range, -18% to 56%) in patients with PR or nonresponse (NR). Therapy was associated with a significant rate of adverse events (AEs); most were manageable, and PEG discontinuation related to AEs occurred in only 13.9% of subjects. We conclude that PEG is an effective therapy for patients with ET or PV who were previously refractory and/or intolerant of HU. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01259856.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31515250 PMCID: PMC6839950 DOI: 10.1182/blood.2019000428
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 25.476