Long-term treatment with romiplostim in patients with chronic immune thrombocytopenia: safety and efficacy. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Romiplostim was effective, safe, and well-tolerated over 6-12 months of continuous treatment in Phase 3 trials in patients with immune thrombocytopenia (ITP). This report describes up to 5 years of weekly treatment with romiplostim in 292 adult ITP patients in a long-term, single-arm, open-label study. Outcome measures included adverse events (including bleeding, thrombosis, malignancy, and reticulin/fibrosis), platelet response (platelet count >50 × 10(9) per litre), and the proportion of patients requiring rescue treatments. Treatment-related serious adverse events were infrequent and did not increase with longer treatment. No new classes of adverse events emerged. Thrombotic events occurred in 6.5% of patients and were not associated with platelet count. Median platelet counts of 50-200 × 10(9) per litre were maintained with stable doses of romiplostim (mean 5-8 μg/kg; generally self-administered at home) throughout the study. A platelet response was achieved at least once by 95% of patients, with a platelet response maintained by all patients on a median 92% of study visits. There was a low rate of bleeding and infrequent need for rescue treatments. In conclusion, this study demonstrated that romiplostim was safe and well-tolerated over 614 patient-years of exposure in ITP patients, and that efficacy was maintained with stable dosing for up to 5 years of continuous treatment.

publication date

  • February 22, 2013

Research

keywords

  • Purpura, Thrombocytopenic, Idiopathic
  • Receptors, Fc
  • Recombinant Fusion Proteins
  • Thrombopoietin

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 84876198697

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1111/bjh.12260

PubMed ID

  • 23432528

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 161

issue

  • 3