4.3 Article

Cardiovascular Safety of Anagrelide Hydrochloride versus Hydroxyurea in Essential Thrombocythaemia

Journal

CARDIOVASCULAR TOXICOLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 3, Pages 236-247

Publisher

HUMANA PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1007/s12012-020-09615-0

Keywords

Cardiac safety; Anagrelide; Essential thrombocythaemia; Hydroxyurea; Platelet counts

Funding

  1. Shire International GmbH

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This study investigated the cardiac safety, efficacy, and tolerability of first-line treatment with anagrelide or hydroxyurea in high-risk ET patients. Both treatments controlled platelet counts without adverse cardiac effects, with majority of patients showing complete or partial responses. Long-term treatment with anagrelide did not affect cardiac function and confirmed the ET diagnosis through left ventricular ejection fraction assessment and central biopsy reading.
Essential thrombocythaemia (ET) is a rare myeloproliferative neoplasm. This multicentre, Phase 3b, randomised, open-label, non-inferiority study investigated the cardiac safety, efficacy and tolerability of first-line treatment with anagrelide or hydroxyurea in high-risk ET patients for up to 3 years. Eligible patients aged >= 18 years with a diagnosis of high-risk ET confirmed by bone marrow biopsy within 6 months of randomisation received anagrelide (n = 75) or hydroxyurea (n = 74), administered twice daily. Treatment dose for either compound was titrated to the lowest dose needed to achieve a response. Planned primary outcome measures were change in left ventricular ejection fraction from baseline over time and platelet count at Month 6. Planned secondary outcome measures were platelet count change from baseline at Months 3 and 36; percentage of patients with complete or partial response; time to complete or partial response; number of patients with thrombohaemorrhagic events; and changes in white blood cell count or red blood cell count over time. Neither treatment altered cardiac function. There were no significant differences in adverse events between treatment groups, and no reports of malignant transformation. The incidence of disease-related thrombotic or haemorrhagic events was numerically higher in anagrelide-treated patients. Both treatments controlled platelet counts at 6 months, with the majority of patients experiencing complete or partial responses. In conclusion, these results suggest that long-term treatment with anagrelide is not associated with adverse effects on cardiac function. This is one of the few studies using left ventricular ejection fraction assessment and central biopsy reading to confirm the diagnosis of ET.

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