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48-Month Update On Survival and AML Transformation In a 600-Patient Registry Of Lower-Risk MDS Patients

▪ Packed red blood cell transfusion is often required for the treatment of anemia in patients (pts) with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). Transfusion requirement is associated with poorer clinical outcomes and reduced overall survival (OS) in MDS. We prospectively collected data on clinical outcomes...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Blood 2013-11, Vol.122 (21), p.2775-2775
Main Authors: Lyons, Roger M., Marek, Billie J., Paley, Carole S., Esposito, Jason, McNamara, Katie, Garbo, Lawrence, DiBella, Nicholas, Garcia-Manero, Guillermo
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:▪ Packed red blood cell transfusion is often required for the treatment of anemia in patients (pts) with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). Transfusion requirement is associated with poorer clinical outcomes and reduced overall survival (OS) in MDS. We prospectively collected data on clinical outcomes in chelated and non-chelated, transfused, lower-risk MDS pts. OS, leukemic transformation, and clinical events are reported for these groups at 48 mos on study. This 5-year, non-interventional registry enrolled 599 pts from 107 US centers. Pts were ≥18 years old with lower-risk MDS (WHO, FAB classification, and/or IPSS) and transfusional iron overload (serum ferritin ≥1000 μg/L and/or ≥20 packed red blood cell units and/or ≥6 units every 12 weeks). The chelated group included all pts who had ever used iron chelation; sub-analysis was performed on pts with ≥6 mos chelation. Assessments were every 6 mos for 5 years or until death and included demographics, survival, disease status, comorbidities, causes of death, and MDS therapy. We present results for non-chelated pts and those chelated ≥6 mos. Baseline demographics and IPSS risk status were similar between groups, although transfusion burden appeared higher in chelated pts (Table 1). At 48 mos, 120 pts continued on registry and 479 had discontinued (379 died [63.3%]; 64 lost to follow-up [10.7%]; 25 other [4.2%]; and 11 completed the study [1.8%]). In all, 269 pts (44.9%) received chelation therapy; 202 had ≥6 mos lifetime chelation. The percentage of pts who had ever received MDS therapy was lower among non-chelated (88.2%) vs chelated ≥6 mos pts (93.6%; P=0.0425). At enrollment, cardiac and vascular comorbid conditions were higher and endocrine conditions trended higher in non-chelated vs chelated ≥6 mos pts (52.1% vs 30.7% [P0.05 all comparisons). Presence of cardiovascular comorbidities was associated with a significantly shorter mean (SE) OS (89.1 [5.83] mos vs 85.2 [4.43] mos; P
ISSN:0006-4971
1528-0020
DOI:10.1182/blood.V122.21.2775.2775