0000000000773371
AUTHOR
Raffaella Pasquale
Clinical and Morphologic Predictors of Outcome in a Multicenter Cohort of ITP Patients Treated with Trombopoietin Analogues
Abstract Background: The role of bone marrow response in patients with immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) has gained paramount importance since the last 10 years, with the demonstrations that marrow megakaryocytes (MGK) are unable to properly compensate platelets peripheral destruction. TPO receptor agonists (TPOa), namely romiplostim (ROMI) and eltrombopag (EPAG), by stimulating megakaryopoiesis are able to induce a response in 74% to 94% of cases in clinical trials. However, real world use of these drugs has shown frequent changes in individual dose requirement, the possibility of treatment discontinuation, and their effectiveness outside registered indications; moreover, nothing is known abou…
Bone marrow characteristics predict outcome in a multicenter cohort of primary immune thrombocytopenia patients treated with thrombopoietin analogs
It is well established that immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) results from increased immune mediated platelet destruction (anti-platelets antibodies, autoreactive T cells, and reduction of regulatory T cells) along with impaired production in the bone marrow.1 The latter has been attributed to both cellular and humoral mediators that cause suppression of megakaryocyte production and maturation.2 Current standard first line therapy consists of corticosteroids, with or without intravenous Ig, achieving about 70-80% response rate. However, a consistent proportion of patients would relapse after corticosteroid discontinuation or tapering, and requires further therapy. ...