Caplacizumab improves clinical outcomes and is well tolerated across clinically relevant subgroups of patients with immune-mediated thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura
Katerina Pavenski , Marie Scully , Paul Coppo , Spero Cataland , Paul Knöbl , Flora Peyvandi , Johanna A. Kremer Hovinga , Javier de la Rubia , Umer Khan , Ana Paula Marques , Sriya Gunawardena , HERCULES Investigators
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
Immune-mediated thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (iTTP) may lead to microvascular thrombosis and mortality, despite patients receiving appropriate standard of care treatment (immunosuppressive therapy and therapeutic plasma exchange). Caplacizumab directly inhibits von Willebrand factor–platelet interaction and consequently prevents microthrombi formation.
Objectives
This study aimed to determine the efficacy and safety of caplacizumab in diverse, clinically relevant patient subgroups.
Methods
In this post hoc analysis of phase 3 HERCULES study (NCT02553317), patients were categorized by clinically relevant subgroups (prior iTTP history, iTTP severity at presentation, and initial immunosuppression regimen).
Results
In patients with previous acute iTTP episodes, less severe disease at presentation, or those who received a corticosteroid-only initial immunosuppression regimen, time to platelet count response was shorter with caplacizumab vs placebo. Across all subgroups, fewer patients experienced a composite outcome of iTTP-related death, exacerbation, or major thromboembolic event on caplacizumab vs placebo. Placebo-treated patients remained at risk of exacerbations and refractoriness on either initial immunosuppression regimen (ie, corticosteroids only or corticosteroids plus rituximab). In the corticosteroids plus rituximab group, no exacerbations were reported in caplacizumab-treated patients, but 8 of the 16 (50%) patients experienced exacerbations in the placebo group. Safety outcomes were consistent with the findings of the main HERCULES study.
Conclusion
Caplacizumab treatment of acute iTTP, in combination with therapeutic plasma exchange and immunosuppression, was safe and effective regardless of prior iTTP history, severity, or initial immunosuppression regimen and improved patient outcomes across clinically diverse subgroups. These findings emphasize the need for treatments with rapid onset of action that can reduce mortality and iTTP-related complications.