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Thalidomide for the Management of Bleeding Episodes in Patients with Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia: Effects on Epistaxis Severity Score and Quality of Life

Journal

TURKISH JOURNAL OF HEMATOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 1, Pages 43-47

Publisher

GALENOS YAYINCILIK
DOI: 10.4274/tjh.galenos.2018.2018.0190

Keywords

Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia; Thalidomide; Epistaxis; Quality of life

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Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) is a rare autosomal dominantly inherited disorder characterized by bleeding episodes. These episodes tend to happen spontaneously and reduce the quality of life. Patients are often unresponsive to local measures. With the pathophysiological role of angiogenesis in HHT, antiangiogenic drugs including thalidomide are used to control bleeding episodes. In our study, we evaluated 6 patients with HHT, calculating their Epistaxis Severity Score (ESS) and performing a quality of life assessment with the 36-Item Short Form Health Survey Questionnaire (SF-36), and we studied the alterations of these evaluations with thalidomide treatment. Three patients were male and three were female. Mean age was 60.50 years. No side effects were observed during the treatment period. Improvements of certain SF-36 dimensions including physical functioning, physical component summary, and mental component summary and of the ESS were observed after treatment. Thalidomide may be effective to control bleeding episodes with a reasonable tolerance profile in patients with HHT.

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