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Efficacy and safety of ruxolitinib in ineffective erythropoiesis suppression as a pretransplantation treatment for pediatric patients with beta-thalassemia major.

BACKGROUND: Ineffective erythropoiesis (IE) is the most prominent feature of transfusion-dependent beta-thalassemia (TDT), which leads to extramedullary hemopoiesis. The rejection rate in allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is high in heavily transfused patients with TDT accompanied by prominent IE. Therefore, a pretransplantation treatment bridging to HSCT is often used to reduce allosensitization and IE. Ruxolitinib is a JAK-1/JAK-2 inhibitor and has showed its efficacy in suppressing IE and the immune system. A previously published study on RUX in adult patients with TDT has revealed that this treatment significantly reduces spleen size and is well tolerated.

PROCEDURE: Ten patients (5-14 years old) with TDT and an enlarged spleen were enrolled. The dose of ruxolitinib was adjusted for age: for patients <11 years: 40-100 mg/m2 total daily dose and for patients >11 years: 20-30 mg/m2 total daily dose. HSCT was performed in 8 of 10 patients.

RESULTS: After the first 3 months of ruxolitinib therapy, spleen volume decreased in 9 of 10 cases by 9.1%-67.5% (M = 35.4%) compared with the initial size (P = 0.003). The adverse events of ruxolitinib (infectious complications, moderate thrombocytopenia, and headache) were successfully managed by reducing the dose. The outcomes of HSCT were favorable in seven of eight cases.

CONCLUSION: Ruxolitinib is promising as a short-term pre-HSCT treatment for pediatric patients with TDT and pronounced IE.

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