Haematologica (Mar 2020)

Eltrombopag for the treatment of inherited thrombocytopenias: a phase II clinical trial

  • Carlo Zaninetti,
  • Paolo Gresele,
  • Antonella Bertomoro,
  • Catherine Klersy,
  • Erica De Candia,
  • Dino Veneri,
  • Serena Barozzi,
  • Tiziana Fierro,
  • Maria Adele Alberelli,
  • Valeria Musella,
  • Patrizia Noris,
  • Fabrizio Fabris,
  • Carlo L. Balduini,
  • Alessandro Pecci

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2019.223966
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 105, no. 3

Abstract

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Patients with inherited thrombocytopenias often require platelet transfusions to raise their platelet count before surgery or other invasive procedures; moreover, subjects with clinically significant spontaneous bleeding may benefit from an enduring improvement of thrombocytopenia. The hypothesis that thrombopoietin-mimetics can increase platelet count in inherited thrombocytopenias is appealing, but evidence is scarce. We conducted a prospective, phase II clinical trial to investigate the efficacy of the oral thrombopoietin-mimetic eltrombopag in different forms of inherited thrombocytopenia. We enrolled 24 patients affected by MYH9-related disease, ANKRD26-related thrombocytopenia, X-linked thrombocytopenia/ Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, monoallelic Bernard-Soulier syndrome, or ITGB3-related thrombocytopenia. The average pre-treatment platelet count was 40.4 ×109/L. Patients received a 3- to 6-week course of eltrombopag in a dose-escalated manner. Of 23 patients evaluable for response, 11 (47.8%) achieved a major response (platelet count >100 ×109/L), ten (43.5%) had a minor response (platelet count at least twice the baseline value), and two patients (8.7%) did not respond. The average increase of platelet count compared to baseline was 64.5 ×109/L (P