Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0034065 (
pulmonary embolism
)
14,979
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
(1) Current treatments for anaemia in patients receiving cancer chemotherapy include blood transfusion and epoetin alfa and beta. These epoetins correct anaemia in 40% to 65% of patients and reduce the number of patients who require transfusions during the second and third months of treatment by 12-35% in absolute terms. (2)
Darbepoetin alfa
is slightly more glycosylated than epoetin alfa and beta. It is no more effective than these two drugs in chronic renal failure.
Darbepoetin alfa
is now approved for the treatment of anaemia in patients who are receiving chemotherapy for non myeloid malignancies. (3) Two placebo-controlled dose-finding studies and two placebo-controlled trials involving nearly 1000 patients in total have shown that darbepoetin alfa decreases the number of transfused patients by 17-25% in absolute terms, and that it probably reduces fatigue. However, one-quarter of patients receiving darbepoetin were nonetheless transfused. (4) In the absence of reliable comparisons, there is no firm evidence that darbepoetin alfa is more effective than other epoetins. (5) According to relatively imprecise company reports, darbepoetin alfa increased the risk of thromboembolic events during clinical trials (6% versus 3%), including
pulmonary embolism
(1.3% versus 0%); the company also states that darbepoetin alfa does not increase the risk of arterial hypertension, a classical effect of epoetin that is mentioned in the summary of product characteristics (SPC). Placebo-controlled trials and dose-finding studies show no impact on the outcome of cancer, but follow-up is limited and a negative effect cannot be ruled out. The company states that no cases of erythroblastopenia have occurred among more than 70 000 treated patients. (6) According to the SPC, darbepoetin alfa can be given once a week. However, the optimal epoetin dosing schedule is unknown.
Epoetin
therapy takes several weeks to correct anaemia, whereas transfusion is immediately effective. (7) In practice, darbepoetin alfa seems a little easier to administer than epoetin alfa or beta, but the advantages and disadvantages of these drugs as compared with blood transfusion are not entirely clear.
...
PMID:Darbepoetin alfa: new indication/new dosage. No proven advantage in chemotherapy-induced anaemia. 1628 72