Bollig Claudia, Schell Lisa K, Rücker Gerta, Allert Roman, Motschall Edith, Niemeyer Charlotte M, Bassler Dirk, Meerpohl Joerg J
Cochrane Germany, Medical Center - Univ. of Freiburg, Faculty of Medicine, Univ. of Freiburg, Breisacher Straße 153, Freiburg, Germany, 79110.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017 Aug 15;8(8):CD007476. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007476.pub3.
Thalassaemia is a hereditary anaemia due to ineffective erythropoiesis. In particular, people with thalassaemia major develop secondary iron overload resulting from regular red blood cell transfusions. Iron chelation therapy is needed to prevent long-term complications.Both deferoxamine and deferiprone are effective; however, a review of the effectiveness and safety of the newer oral chelator deferasirox in people with thalassaemia is needed.
To assess the effectiveness and safety of oral deferasirox in people with thalassaemia and iron overload.
We searched the Cystic Fibrosis and Genetic Disorders Group's Haemoglobinopathies Trials Register: 12 August 2016.We also searched MEDLINE, Embase, the Cochrane Library, Biosis Previews, Web of Science Core Collection and three trial registries: ClinicalTrials.gov; the WHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform; and the Internet Portal of the German Clinical Trials Register: 06 and 07 August 2015.
Randomised controlled studies comparing deferasirox with no therapy or placebo or with another iron-chelating treatment.
Two authors independently assessed risk of bias and extracted data. We contacted study authors for additional information.
Sixteen studies involving 1807 randomised participants (range 23 to 586 participants) were included. Twelve two-arm studies compared deferasirox to placebo (two studies) or deferoxamine (seven studies) or deferiprone (one study) or the combination of deferasirox and deferoxamine to deferoxamine alone (one study). One study compared the combination of deferasirox and deferiprone to deferiprone in combination with deferoxamine. Three three-arm studies compared deferasirox to deferoxamine and deferiprone (two studies) or the combination of deferasirox and deferiprone to deferiprone and deferasirox monotherapy respectively (one study). One four-arm study compared two different doses of deferasirox to matching placebo groups.The two studies (a pharmacokinetic and a dose-escalation study) comparing deferasirox to placebo (n = 47) in people with transfusion-dependent thalassaemia showed that deferasirox leads to net iron excretion. In these studies, safety was acceptable and further investigation in phase II and phase III studies was warranted.Nine studies (1251 participants) provided data for deferasirox versus standard treatment with deferoxamine. Data suggest that a similar efficacy can be achieved depending on the ratio of doses of deferoxamine and deferasirox being compared. In the phase III study, similar or superior efficacy for the intermediate markers ferritin and liver iron concentration (LIC) could only be achieved in the highly iron-overloaded subgroup at a mean ratio of 1 mg of deferasirox to 1.8 mg of deferoxamine corresponding to a mean dose of 28.2 mg per day and 51.6 mg per day respectively. The pooled effects across the different dosing ratios are: serum ferritin, mean difference (MD) 454.42 ng/mL (95% confidence interval (CI) 337.13 to 571.71) (moderate quality evidence); LIC evaluated by biopsy or SQUID, MD 2.37 mg Fe/g dry weight (95% CI 1.68 to 3.07) (moderate quality evidence) and responder analysis, LIC 1 to < 7 mg Fe/g dry weight, risk ratio (RR) 0.80 (95% CI 0.69 to 0.92) (moderate quality evidence). The substantial heterogeneity observed could be explained by the different dosing ratios. Data on mortality (low quality evidence) and on safety at the presumably required doses for effective chelation therapy are limited. Patient satisfaction was better with deferasirox among those who had previously received deferoxamine treatment, RR 2.20 (95% CI 1.89 to 2.57) (moderate quality evidence). The rate of discontinuations was similar for both drugs (low quality evidence).For the remaining comparisons in people with transfusion-dependent thalassaemia, the quality of the evidence for outcomes assessed was low to very low, mainly due to the very small number of participants included. Four studies (205 participants) compared deferasirox to deferiprone; one of which (41 participants) revealed a higher number of participants experiencing arthralgia in the deferiprone group, but due to the large number of different types of adverse events reported and compared this result is uncertain. One study (96 participants) compared deferasirox combined with deferiprone to deferiprone with deferoxamine. Participants treated with the combination of the oral iron chelators had a higher adherence compared to those treated with deferiprone and deferoxamine, but no participants discontinued the study. In the comparisons of deferasirox versus combined deferasirox and deferiprone and that of deferiprone versus combined deferasirox and deferiprone (one study, 40 participants), and deferasirox and deferoxamine versus deferoxamine alone (one study, 94 participants), only a few patient-relevant outcomes were reported and no significant differences were observed.One study (166 participants) included people with non-transfusion dependent thalassaemia and compared two different doses of deferasirox to placebo. Deferasirox treatment reduced serum ferritin, MD -306.74 ng/mL (95% CI -398.23 to -215.24) (moderate quality evidence) and LIC, MD -3.27 mg Fe/g dry weight (95% CI -4.44 to -2.09) (moderate quality evidence), while the number of participants experiencing adverse events and rate of discontinuations (low quality evidence) was similar in both groups. No participant died, but data on mortality were limited due to a follow-up period of only one year (moderate quality evidence).
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Deferasirox offers an important treatment option for people with thalassaemia and secondary iron overload. Based on the available data, deferasirox does not seem to be superior to deferoxamine at the usually recommended ratio of 1 mg of deferasirox to 2 mg of deferoxamine. However, similar efficacy seems to be achievable depending on the dose and ratio of deferasirox compared to deferoxamine. Whether this will result in similar efficacy and will translate to similar benefits in the long term, as has been shown for deferoxamine, needs to be confirmed. Data from randomised controlled trials on rare toxicities and long-term safety are still limited. However, after a detailed discussion of the potential benefits and risks, deferasirox could be offered as the first-line option to individuals who show a strong preference for deferasirox, and may be a reasonable treatment option for people showing an intolerance or poor adherence to deferoxamine.
地中海贫血是一种由于红细胞生成无效导致的遗传性贫血。特别是重型地中海贫血患者,因定期输注红细胞会继发铁过载。需要进行铁螯合治疗以预防长期并发症。去铁胺和去铁酮均有效;然而,需要对新型口服螯合剂地拉罗司对地中海贫血患者的有效性和安全性进行综述。
评估口服地拉罗司对地中海贫血和铁过载患者的有效性和安全性。
我们检索了囊性纤维化和遗传疾病组的血红蛋白病试验注册库:2016年8月12日。我们还检索了MEDLINE、Embase、Cochrane图书馆、生物学文摘数据库、科学引文索引核心合集以及三个试验注册库:ClinicalTrials.gov;世界卫生组织国际临床试验注册平台;以及德国临床试验注册库互联网门户:2015年8月6日和7日。
比较地拉罗司与无治疗或安慰剂或与另一种铁螯合治疗的随机对照研究。
两位作者独立评估偏倚风险并提取数据。我们联系研究作者以获取更多信息。
纳入了16项研究,涉及1807名随机参与者(范围为23至586名参与者)。12项双臂研究比较了地拉罗司与安慰剂(2项研究)或去铁胺(7项研究)或去铁酮(1项研究),或地拉罗司与去铁胺联合用药与单独使用去铁胺(1项研究)。1项研究比较了地拉罗司与去铁酮联合用药与去铁酮与去铁胺联合用药。3项三臂研究比较了地拉罗司与去铁胺和去铁酮(2项研究),或地拉罗司与去铁酮联合用药分别与去铁酮和地拉罗司单药治疗(1项研究)。1项四臂研究比较了两种不同剂量的地拉罗司与匹配的安慰剂组。两项研究(一项药代动力学研究和一项剂量递增研究)比较了地拉罗司与输血依赖型地中海贫血患者的安慰剂(n = 47),结果显示地拉罗司可导致铁净排泄。在这些研究中,可以接受安全性,并且有必要在II期和III期研究中进一步研究。9项研究(1251名参与者)提供了地拉罗司与去铁胺标准治疗对比的数据。数据表明,根据所比较的去铁胺和地拉罗司剂量比例,可以实现相似的疗效。在III期研究中,对于中间标志物铁蛋白和肝脏铁浓度(LIC),仅在高铁过载亚组中以平均1 mg地拉罗司与1.8 mg去铁胺的比例(分别对应平均每日剂量28.2 mg和51.6 mg)才能实现相似或更好的疗效。不同给药比例的汇总效应为:血清铁蛋白,平均差值(MD)454.42 ng/mL(95%置信区间(CI)337.13至571.71)(中等质量证据);通过活检或超导量子干涉仪评估的LIC,MD 2.37 mg Fe/g干重(95% CI 1.68至3.07)(中等质量证据)和反应者分析,LIC为1至<7 mg Fe/g干重,风险比(RR)0.80(95% CI 0.69至0.92)(中等质量证据)。观察到的显著异质性可以通过不同的给药比例来解释。关于死亡率(低质量证据)和有效螯合治疗所需假定剂量的安全性数据有限。在地拉罗司治疗组中,先前接受过去铁胺治疗的患者的患者满意度更高,RR 2.20(95% CI 1.89至2.57)(中等质量证据)。两种药物的停药率相似(低质量证据)。对于输血依赖型地中海贫血患者的其余比较,评估结果的证据质量低至极低,主要是因为纳入的参与者数量非常少。4项研究(205名参与者)比较了地拉罗司与去铁酮;其中一项研究(41名参与者)显示去铁酮组中经历关节痛的参与者数量更多,但由于报告和比较的不良事件类型众多,该结果不确定。1项研究(96名参与者)比较了地拉罗司与去铁酮联合用药与去铁酮与去铁胺联合用药。与接受去铁酮和去铁胺治疗的参与者相比,接受口服铁螯合剂联合治疗的参与者依从性更高,但没有参与者退出研究。在地拉罗司与地拉罗司与去铁酮联合用药的比较以及去铁酮与地拉罗司与去铁酮联合用药的比较(1项研究,40名参与者),以及地拉罗司与去铁胺与单独使用去铁胺的比较(1项研究,94名参与者)中,仅报告了少数与患者相关的结果,未观察到显著差异。1项研究(166名参与者)纳入了非输血依赖型地中海贫血患者,并比较了两种不同剂量的地拉罗司与安慰剂。地拉罗司治疗降低了血清铁蛋白,MD -306.74 ng/mL(95% CI -398.23至-215.24)(中等质量证据)和LIC,MD -3.27 mg Fe/g干重(95% CI -4.44至-2.09)(中等质量证据),而两组中经历不良事件的参与者数量和停药率(低质量证据)相似。没有参与者死亡,但由于随访期仅为一年,死亡率数据有限(中等质量证据)。
地拉罗司为地中海贫血和继发性铁过载患者提供了一种重要的治疗选择。根据现有数据,在地拉罗司与去铁胺通常推荐的1 mg地拉罗司比2 mg去铁胺的比例下,地拉罗司似乎并不优于去铁胺。然而,根据地拉罗司与去铁胺的剂量和比例,似乎可以实现相似的疗效。这是否会导致相似的疗效并在长期内转化为相似的益处,正如去铁胺所显示的那样,仍需得到证实。关于罕见毒性和长期安全性的随机对照试验数据仍然有限。然而,在详细讨论潜在益处和风险后,地拉罗司可以作为一线选择提供给对地拉罗司有强烈偏好者,并且对于对去铁胺不耐受或依从性差的人可能是一种合理的治疗选择。