Prospective study of rabbit antithymocyte globulin and cyclosporine for aplastic anemia from the EBMT Severe Aplastic Anaemia Working Party.

  • Judith C Marsh
  • Andrea Bacigalupo
  • Hubert Schrezenmeier
  • Andre Tichelli
  • Antonio M Risitano
  • Jakob R Passweg
  • Sally B Killick
  • Alan J Warren
  • Theodora Foukaneli
  • Mahmoud Aljurf
  • H A Al-Zahrani
  • Philippe Schafhausen
  • Alexander Roth
  • Anke Franzke
  • Tim H Brummendorf
  • Carlo Dufour
  • Rosi Oneto
  • Philip Sedgwick
  • Alain Barrois
  • Shahram Kordasti
  • Modupe O Elebute
  • Ghulam J Mufti
  • Gerard Socie
  • European Blood
  • Marrow Transplant Group Severe Aplastic Anaemia Working Party

Related Research units

Abstract

Rabbit antithymocyte globulin (rATG; thymoglobulin, Genzyme) in combination with cyclosporine, as first-line immunosuppressive therapy, was evaluated prospectively in a multicenter, European, phase 2 pilot study, in 35 patients with aplastic anemia. Results were compared with 105 age- and disease severity-matched patients from the European Blood and Marrow Transplant registry, treated with horse ATG (hATG; lymphoglobulin) and cyclosporine. The primary end point was response at 6 months. At 3 months, no patients had achieved a complete response to rATG. Partial response occurred in 11 (34%). At 6 months, complete response rate was 3% and partial response rate 37%. There were 10 deaths after rATG (28.5%) and 1 after subsequent HSCT. Infections were the main cause of death in 9 of 10 patients. The best response rate was 60% for rATG and 67% for hATG. For rATG, overall survival at 2 years was 68%, compared with 86% for hATG (P = .009). Transplant-free survival was 52% for rATG and 76% for hATG (P = .002). On multivariate analysis, rATG (hazard ratio = 3.9, P = .003) and age more than 37 years (hazard ratio = 4.7, P = .0008) were independent adverse risk factors for survival. This study was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as NCT00471848.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
Article number23
ISSN0006-4971
Publication statusPublished - 2012
pubmed 22544699