HemaSphere (Apr 2025)

Caplacizumab treatment in elderly patients with iTTP: Experience from the Spanish TTP Registry

  • Inés Gómez‐Seguí,
  • Joan Cid,
  • Miquel Lozano,
  • Maria Eva Mingot‐Castellano,
  • Cristina Pascual‐Izquierdo,
  • Luz Maria Gonzalez del Castillo,
  • Julia Maria Vidan Estevez,
  • Faustino Garcia‐Candel,
  • Moraima Jiménez Balarezo,
  • David Valcarcel,
  • Clara Cuellar Perez‐Avila,
  • Maria Arraiz Ramirez,
  • Sunil Lakhwani,
  • Maria Gemma Moreno Jimenez,
  • Ana Yurena Oliva Hernandez,
  • Jose Maria Garcia Gala,
  • Jorge Martinez Nieto,
  • Rosa Goterris,
  • Marta Fernández Docampo,
  • Clara Sopeña Pell‐Ilderton,
  • Javier de laRubia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/hem3.70109
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 4
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Immune thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (iTTP) typically affects middle‐aged individuals, although it sometimes appears in older patients. Caplacizumab is approved for the treatment of iTTP, but information on the safety and efficacy of this drug in elderly patients is not available. We aimed to analyze the management and outcomes of iTTP patients registered in the Spanish TTP Registry and receiving caplacizumab at any time during the acute episode, focusing on patients ≥60 years (n = 29) and comparing them with patients <60 years (n = 70). Severe bleeding motivated caplacizumab's initiation delay in one patient ≥60 years. Patients receiving anticoagulation or antiplatelet therapy at diagnosis were more common in older patients (10% vs. 1%; p = 0.074), as well as the occurrence of bleeding motivating caplacizumab discontinuation (17% vs. 1%, respectively; p = 0.008). Caplacizumab seemed to be efficient in the treatment of iTTP in older patients, reducing refractoriness and death to 3% and exacerbation to 10%, similar to younger patients. The higher risk of bleeding in this older population warrants the need for close monitoring during treatment and to further explore the best management of thrombotic and bleeding risk.