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Oral deferiprone for iron chelation in people with thalassaemia

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Oral deferiprone for iron chelation in people with thalassaemia

Sübutlu məlumatların xülasələri
15.01.2018 • Sonuncu dəyişiklik 15.01.2018
Editors

Deferiprone may be indicated for treating iron overload in people with thalassaemia major when desferrioxamine is contraindicated or inadequate.

The quality of evidence is downgraded by study quality (no RCT:s).

A Cochrane review included 17 studies with a total of 1061 subjects. Of these, 16 trials compared either deferiprone alone with desferrioxamine alone, or a combined therapy of deferiprone and desferrioxamine with either deferiprone alone or desferrioxamine alone; one compared different schedules of deferiprone.

Four trials reported mortality; each reported the death of one individual receiving deferiprone with or without desferrioxamine. One trial reported five further deaths in patients who withdrew from randomised treatment (deferiprone with or without desferrioxamine) and switched to desferrioxamine alone. Seven trials reported cardiac function or liver fibrosis as measures of end organ damage.

Earlier trials measuring the cardiac iron load indirectly by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) T2* signal had suggested deferiprone may reduce cardiac iron more quickly than desferrioxamine. However, a meta-analysis of two trials suggested that left ventricular ejection fraction was significantly reduced in patients who received desferrioxamine alone compared with combination therapy.   One trial, which planned five years of follow up, was stopped early due to the beneficial effects of combined treatment compared with deferiprone alone in terms of serum ferritin levels reduction.

The results of this and three other trials suggest an advantage of combined therapy over monotherapy to reduce iron stores as measured by serum ferritin. There is, however, no conclusive or consistent evidence for the improved efficacy of combined deferiprone and desferrioxamine therapy over monotherapy from direct or indirect measures of liver iron. Both deferiprone and desferrioxamine produce a significant reduction in iron stores in transfusion-dependent, iron-overloaded people. There is no evidence from randomised controlled trials to suggest that either has a greater reduction of clinically significant end organ damage.

Evidence of adverse events were observed in all treatment groups. Occurrence of any adverse event was significantly more likely with deferiprone than desferrioxamine in one trial, RR 2.24 (95% CI 1.19 to 4.23). Meta-analysis of a further two trials showed a significant increased risk of adverse events associated with combined deferiprone and desferrioxamine compared with desferrioxamine alone, RR 3.04 (95% CI 1.18 to 7.83). The most commonly reported adverse event was joint pain, which occurred significantly more frequently in patients receiving deferiprone than desferrioxamine, RR 2.64 (95% CI 1.21 to 5.77). Other common adverse events included gastrointestinal disturbances as well as neutropenia or leucopenia, or both.

Nine trials compared deferiprone with DFO or a combination of deferiprone and DFO and one compared different schedules of deferiprone. Both deferiprone and DFO produce a significant reduction in iron stores in transfusion-dependent, iron overloaded people. No trial reported long-term outcomes (mortality and end organ damage). Adverse events in one trial were significantly more likely with deferiprone than desferrioxamine, relative risk 2.24 (95% confidence interval 1.19 to 4.23). Almost all patients achieved good to excellent compliance with both deferiprone and DFO.

Ədəbiyyat

  1. Fisher SA, Brunskill SJ, Doree C et al. Oral deferiprone for iron chelation in people with thalassaemia. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2013;(8):CD004839. Roberts DJ, Brunskill SJ, Doree C, Williams S, Howard J, Hyde CJ. Oral deferiprone for iron chelation in people with thalassaemia. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2007 Jul 18;(3):CD004839.