4.5 Article

Efficacy of Moderately Dosed Etoposide in Macrophage Activation Syndrome-Hemophagocytic Lymphohistiocytosis

Journal

JOURNAL OF RHEUMATOLOGY
Volume 48, Issue 10, Pages 1596-1602

Publisher

J RHEUMATOL PUBL CO
DOI: 10.3899/jrheum.200941

Keywords

Key Indexing Terms; etoposide; hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis; juvenile idiopathic arthritis; macrophage activation syndrome; systemic lupus erythematosus

Categories

Funding

  1. Swedish Children's Cancer Foundation
  2. Swedish Cancer Foundation
  3. Swedish Research Council
  4. Cancer and Allergy Foundation of Sweden
  5. Region Stockholm (ALF-project)
  6. Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research

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Moderately dosed etoposide demonstrated effectiveness in treating severe MAS-HLH, with all children responding well and surviving at latest follow-up. Some children showed improvement in neurological symptoms after treatment.
Objective. Macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) constitutes 1 subtype of the hyperinflammatory syndrome hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH), and the term MAS-HLH was recently proposed for HLH with underlying autoimmune/autoinflammatory conditions. The mortality of MAS-HLH has been estimated at 5-10%. Here we report our experiences with moderately dosed etoposide in severe MAS-HLH; the objective was to effectively reduce severe hyperinflammatory activity with limited side effects. Methods. In addition to conventional antiinflammatory treatment, moderately dosed etoposide was administered to 7 children affected by rapidly progressing MAS-HLH with central nervous system (n = 5) and/ or pulmonary (n = 5) involvement. Three had underlying systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (sJIA), 2 had atypical sJIA (no arthritis at diagnosis), and 2 had systemic lupus erythematosus. We performed lymphocyte cytotoxicity analyses in all 7 and genetic analyses in 6. Results. All children promptly responded to moderately dosed etoposide (50-100 mg/m(2Y) once weekly), added to conventional MAS-HLH treatment that was considered insufficient. The mean accumulated etoposide dose was 671 mg/m(2) (range 300-1050 mg/m(2)) as compared to 1500 mg/m(2) recommended in the first 8 weeks of the HLH-94/HLH-2004 protocols. One child developed neutropenic fever and another neutropenic sepsis (neutrophils 0.3 x 10(9)/L at therapy onset). Five of 7 children had low percentages (< 5%) of circulating natural killer (NK) cells prior to or in association with diagnosis; NK cell activity was pathologically low in 2 of 5 children studied. Disease-causing variants in HLH-associated genes were not found. All children were alive at latest follow-up (2-9 yrs after onset); neurological symptoms had normalized in 4 of 5 affected children. Conclusion. Moderately dosed etoposide may be beneficial in severe and/or refractory MAS-HLH.

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