Identifying haemophilia patients with inhibitors for clinical trials is difficult due to the limited number of patients available. Registries are therefore being established as an additional means of data collection. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of different recombinant activated factor VII (rFVIIa; NovoSeven dose ranges and dosing schedules on the incidence of re-bleeding in haemophilia patients with inhibitors. In this retrospective, uncontrolled study, data on the bleeding patterns of adult haemophilia patients with high responding inhibitors were analysed. Only data from the Czech Republic, obtained by the HemoRec registry, were used. This study analysed 'real-life' clinical data and focused on the collection of the same parameters in different patients: time from bleeding onset to first injection, effect of first injection, number of re-bleedings, total number of injections and total amount of haemostatic drug used. Fifteen patients met the inclusion criteria and were included into the study (128 bleeding episodes). Patients treated within 2 h of bleeding onset experienced less re-bleeding than patients treated after 2 h of bleeding onset (5.2% vs. 13.7%, respectively). In addition, patients who were treated after 2 h of bleeding onset experienced fewer re-bleedings when high-dose rFVIIa was used (15.8% and 0%; <120 microg kg(-1) and >250 microg kg(-1), respectively). Initial high-dose rFVIIa was also associated with a decline in total rFVIIa consumption. This registry has provided a unique insight into the bleeding patterns of inhibitor patients, highlighting the importance of early treatment initiation and appropriate starting dose.
We have confirmed the high incidence of DNMT3A mutations in patients with AML with IR cytogenetics. Patients with DNMT3A mutations relapse more often and have inferior OS when only patients achieving CR are analyzed. 'Double-mutated' patients have a very poor prognosis.
The objective of this retrospective study was to evaluate results from voriconazole therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) in haematological patients in routine clinical practice. Between 2005 and 2010, 1228 blood samples were obtained from 264 haematological patients (median 3 samples/patient; range 1-27) receiving voriconazole for targeted/preemptive treatment of invasive aspergillosis (IA) (46.3% of samples), empirical therapy (12.9%) or prophylaxis (40.8%). A high-pressure liquid chromatography assay was used to analyse voriconazole concentrations. Clinical and laboratory data were analysed retrospectively. The median of the detected voriconazole plasma concentration was 1.00 μg ml(-1) (range <0.20-13.47 μg ml(-1)). Significant inter- and intra-patients variability of measured concentrations (81.9% and 50.5%) were identified. With the exception of omeprazole administration, there was no relevant relationship between measured voriconazole concentrations and drug dose, route administration, age, gender, CYP2C19*2 genotype, gastrointestinal tract abnormality, administration via nasogastric tube, serum creatinine, and liver enzymes. However, per patient analysis identified significant role of individual voriconazole dose and drug form change on measured plasma concentration. Measured voriconazole concentrations did not correlate with the treatment outcome of patients with IA. We only identified a limited number of adverse events related to voriconazole therapy; however, the median plasma concentration was not different from concentrations measured in samples without reported toxicity. Our retrospective study has suggested that routine monitoring of voriconazole plasma concentrations has probably only a limited role in daily haematological practice.
HDAC-induced cutaneous reactions in 53% of subjects. The skin changes were found to be dose related and most cleared spontaneously without requiring treatment. A clinical grading of cutaneous toxicity has been proposed to allow better comparison of cutaneous adverse effects in different reports.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.