ASH Clinical News September 2016 | Page 42

Written in Blood • 7 had an associated malignant hematologic disorder • 1 had a primary immunodeficiency Most patients achieved a transient initial response to first-line steroid therapy (n=24; 68.6%) and IVIg (n=22; 68.6%), before becoming refractory to treatment. Median follow-up for patients with multirefractory ITP was 84 months (range = 12-455 months) and 48 months (range = 12-369 months) for ITP controls. In the control population, the researchers found that the following characteristics were associated with a higher risk of developing multirefractory ITP during follow-up: • Bleeding symptoms at ITP onset (odds ratio [OR] = 3.54; 95% CI 1.12-11.22; p=0.032) • No response to steroid therapy (OR=0.38; 95% CI 0.20-0.72; p=0.003) Patients with multirefractory ITP were more likely to have secondary ITP (OR=4.84; 95% CI 1.31-17.86; p=0.018) and MGUS (OR=5.94; 95% CI 1.08-32.48; p=0.04). “This overrepresentation, and poor response to steroid therapy, suggest that the immunologic mechanism resulting in platelet destruction in these cases differs from the common form of ITP,” the authors wrote. The median duration of ITP prior to multirefractory transition was 78 months (range = 6-450 months), and patients had received a median of 10.5 treatments for ITP (range = 6-15 treatments). Almost all of the multirefractory ITP patients (n=34; 91.8%) did not achieve a prolonged response to rituximab, splenectomy, and the two Tpo-RAs at the maximum tolerated dose. At the end of follow-up for the multirefractory population, only 30 percent (n=11) had achieved a sustained response. Seven patients had a malignant hematologic disorder – three of whom achieved a sustained response with chemotherapy, one with smoldering myeloma who received lenalidomide then Tpo-RAs with no efficacy, and three who received no specific treatment other than rituximab. Among the 30 patients with no hematologic malignant disorder, 14 received at least one immunosuppressant or cytotoxic agent, but only one patient achieved a response. Ten patients received an immunosuppressant along with Tpo-RA; seven of these patients achieved a sustained response during a median follow-up of 15 months (range = 6-32 months). “ITP can precede the diagnosis of a malignant hematologic disorder, which suggests that, with multirefractory ITP, the diagnosis of primary ITP should be reconsidered to carefully exclude hematologic disorders,” the authors wrote. Based o n their findings, they suggest that multirefractory ITP can be divided into three categories: • Primary ITP • ITP associated with other autoimmune disorders Five patients (14%) in the study died due to intracranial hemorrhage (n=2), sepsis (n=1), breast cancer (n=1), and unknown reasons (n=1). All patients required several hospitalizations (median = 15; range = 6-100). Forty percent (n=15) presented with at least one bacterial infection and 24 percent (n=9) experienced thrombosis. “Uncontrolled bleeding and therapy-related complications were the two most challenging problems: 60 percent of patients needed platelet transfusion during follow-up, and 40 percent had at least one severe infection,” the authors added. “In the era of new ITP therapies, a minority of ITP patients still does not show response after several treatment lines and likely have severe disease, with high morbidity and risk of death,” Dr. Mahévas and colleagues concluded. “In the absence of guidelines, an individual approach with a combination of agents taking into account the risk/benefit balance of these treatments appears the best way to improve the outcome of patients with multirefractory ITP.” The study is limited by its retrospective design, as well as the wide variety of previous therapies that patients had received since this variance may have affected the interpretation of study outcomes. ● REFERENCE • ITP associated with other malignant hematologic disorders Mahévas M, Gerfaud-Valentin M, Moulis G, et al. Characteristics, outcome and response to therapy of multirefractory chronic immune thrombocytopenia. Blood. 2016 June 27. [Epub ahead of print] How I Treat A Compendium for the Practicing Hematologist, 2nd Edition A collection of top “How I Treat” articles from the Blood journal, reviewed and updated to reflect the most recent scientific and clinically relevant information. The compendium features 33 articles with clinical insights into the following: • lymphoma and lymphoid neoplasia • plasma cell disorders • myeloid neoplasia • acute leukemia • thrombosis and hemostasis ORDER NOW! PRICES ASH Member $50.00 Associate Member $45.00 Non-member $75.00 • thrombopenia and neutropenia • anemia and red cell disorders • immunodeficiency • treatment of hematological disease: medical complications hematology.org/store 40 ASH Clinical News September 2016