Horse antithymocyte globulin as salvage therapy after rabbit antithymocyte globulin for severe aplastic anemia

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Abstract

The effectiveness of salvage therapy for aplastic anemia patients unresponsive to initial rabbit antithymocyte globulin (r-ATG) or cyclophosphamide is not known. We investigated the administration of standard horse ATG (h-ATG) plus cyclosporine (CsA) in patients who were refractory to initial r-ATG/CsA (n=19) or cyclophosphamide/CsA (n=6) (registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT00944749). The primary endpoint was hematologic response at 3 months and was defined as no longer meeting the criteria for severe aplastic anemia. Of the 19 patients who received r-ATG as initial therapy, 4 (21%) achieved a hematologic response by 3 months, and of the 6 patients who received cyclophosphamide, only 1 (17%) responded by 6 months. Among the responders there were no cases of relapse, and in nonresponders 2 patients evolved to monosomy 7. The overall survival for the cohort at 3 years was 68% (95% CI, 50-91%). These results suggest that only a minority can be successfully salvaged after receiving as first therapy either r-ATG or cyclophosphamide. Although h-ATG may be utilized in the salvage setting, the overall response rate probably will be lower than when h-ATG is used as initial treatment. © Published 2014.

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Scheinberg, P., Townsley, D., Dumitriu, B., Scheinberg, P., Weinstein, B., Rios, O., … Young, N. S. (2014). Horse antithymocyte globulin as salvage therapy after rabbit antithymocyte globulin for severe aplastic anemia. American Journal of Hematology, 89(5), 467–469. https://doi.org/10.1002/ajh.23669

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