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A multicenter study of romiplostim for chemotherapy-induced thrombocytopenia in solid tumor s and hematologic malignancies
Authors:Hanny Al-Samkari  Aric D. Parnes  Katayoon Goodarzi  James I. Weitzman  Jean M. Connors  David J. Kuter
Affiliation:1.Division of Hematology Oncology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA;2.Har vard Medical School, Boston, MA;3.Hematology Division, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, MA;4.Department of Medical Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA;5.Division of Hematology Oncology, Newton-Wellesley Hospital, Newton, MA, USA
Abstract:
Chemotherapy-induced thrombocytopenia (CIT) frequently complicates cancer treatment causing chemotherapy treatment delays, dose reductions, and discontinuation. There is no US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved agent available to manage CIT. This study retrospectively evaluated patients with CIT treated on institutional romiplostim treatment pathways at four US centers. The primary outcome was achievement of a romiplostim response (median on-romiplostim platelet count ≥75x109/L and ≥30x109/L above baseline). Secondary outcomes included time to platelet count ≥100x109/L and rates of the following: platelet count <100×109/L, platelet count <75x109/L, platelet count <50x109/L, thrombocytosis, chemotherapy dose reduction/treatment delay, platelet transfusion, bleeding, and thromboembolism. Multivariable regression was used to identify predictors of romiplostim non-response and compare weekly dosing with intracycle/intermittent dosing. A total of 173 patients (153 solid tumor, 20 lymphoma or myeloma) were treated, with 170 (98%) receiving a median of four (range: 1-36) additional chemotherapy cycles on romiplostim. Romiplostim was effective in solid tumor patients: 71% of patients achieved a romiplostim response, 79% avoided chemotherapy dose reductions/treatment delays, and 89% avoided platelet transfusions. Median per-patient platelet count on romiplostim was significantly higher than baseline (116x109/L vs. 60x109/L; P<0.001). Bone marrow (BM) tumor invasion, prior pelvic irradiation, and prior temozolomide exposure predicted romiplostim non-response. Bleeding rates were lower than historical CIT cohorts and thrombosis rates were not elevated. Weekly dosing was superior to intracycle dosing with higher response rates and less chemotherapy dose reductions/treatment delays/bleeding; intracycle dosing had an incidence rate ratio (IRR) for dose reduction/treatment delay of 3.00 (95%CI: 1.30-6.91; P=0.010) and an IRR for bleeding of 4.84 (95%CI: 1.18-19.89, P=0.029) compared with weekly dosing. Blunted response (10% response rate) was seen in non-myeloid hematologic malignancy patients with BM involvement. In conclusion, romiplostim was safe and effective for CIT in most solid tumor patients.
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