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Prednisone vs high-dose dexamethasone in newly diagnosed adult primary immune thrombocytopenia: a randomized trial. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • A study compared the effectiveness of standard-dose prednisone (PDN) and high-dose dexamethasone (HD-DXM) as first-line treatments for newly diagnosed primary immune thrombocytopenia (pITP) in adults aged 18-80.
  • The trial involved 113 patients, with 52% receiving PDN and 48% receiving HD-DXM, showing initial response rates of 78.57% for PDN versus 93.88% for HD-DXM; however, the long-term responses favored PDN.
  • Both treatments were well tolerated, with overall survival at 100% after 48 months, highlighting that while HD-DXM may yield quicker initial results, PDN offers more sustained

Article Abstract

A debate exists regarding which type of corticosteroids (standard-dose prednisone [PDN] or high-dose dexamethasone [HD-DXM]) is the best first-line treatment for adult patients with newly diagnosed untreated primary immune thrombocytopenia (pITP). An ad hoc study compared PDN with HD-DXM in newly diagnosed untreated patients with pITP (aged ≥18 but ≤80 years, platelet count of ≤20 or >20 but <50 × 109/L, and bleeding score of ≥8). Patients were randomised to receive PDN 1 mg/kg per day from days 0 to 28 (Arm A) or HD-DXM 40 mg per day for 4 days, every 14 days, for 3 consecutive courses (Arm B). Fifty-nine of 113 patients (52.2%) were randomized to Arm A and 54 of 113 (47.8%) to Arm B. In evaluable patients, total initial responses (complete response [CR], partial response [PR], minimal response [MR]) were 44 of 56 (78.57%) in Arm A and 46 of 49 (93.88%) in Arm B at days 42 and 46, respectively (P = 0.0284). Total final responses (at day 180 from initial response) were 26 of 43 (60.47%) in Arm A and 23 of 39 (58.97%) in Arm B (P = 0.8907). Total persistent responses (at 12 months from initial response) were 25 of 31 (80.65%) in Arm A and 20 of 36 (55.56%) in Arm B (P = 0.0292). Seven relapses occurred. Median follow-up was 44.4 months. Overall survival was 100% at 48 months, overall disease-free survival was 81.11% at 48 months from day 180. PDN and pulsed HD-DXM were well tolerated; HD-DXM allows effective initial responses but less long lasting than PDN. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT00657410.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10966179PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/bloodadvances.2023010975DOI Listing

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