ORLANDO – Oral hydroxyurea is as good as chronic red blood cell transfusions for prevention of primary stroke in children at high-risk for this devastating complication of sickle cell disease, results of the TWiTCH study show.
No child suffered a stroke with either hydroxyurea or monthly transfusions and transcranial doppler (TCD) velocities were maintained in both arms.
The study was stopped early, however, after noninferiority was shown for the primary end point of TCD mean velocities on the index side at 24 months, with a post-hoc analysis suggesting hydroxyurea may even be superior, study author Dr. Russell E. Ware, director of hematology at Cincinnati (Ohio) Children’s Hospital Medical Center, reported during the plenary session at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.
“Hydroxyurea therapy can substitute for chronic transfusions to maintain TCD velocities and help prevent primary stroke,” he said during a press briefing.
The final mean TCD velocities were 143 cm/second in the transfusion arm and 138 cm/sec in the hydroxyurea arm, resulting in P values of 8.82 x 10-16 for non-inferiority by intention-to-treat analysis and 0.023 for superiority in a post-hoc analysis.
Hydroxyurea also had the added benefit of improving iron overload status more than monthly transfusions based on a greater average change in serum ferritin (-1,085 ng/mL vs. -38 ng/mL; P less than .001) and liver iron concentrations (-1.9 mg/g vs. +2.4 mg/g; P = .001), according to their report.
Press briefing moderator Dr. Alexis Thompson, of the Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago, commented, “This truly is one of the abstracts that are being presenting at the meeting today that can be defined as practice changing. There are many families who have great difficulty accepting the reality, prior to the TWiTCH study, of their children having to be transfused lifelong.”
Strokes occur in up to 10% of children with sickle cell disease (SCD). Transfusions are effective for stroke prophylaxis in this setting, but have to be continued lifelong and can lead to iron overload and other complications.
Based on the participating sites, at least 80% of children with abnormal TCD velocities currently on blood transfusions to prevent stroke would be eligible for treatment with hydroxyurea, Dr. Ware said.
Hydroxyurea increases the amount of fetal hemoglobin and fetal red blood cells and was approved more than a decade ago to ameliorate the acute and chronic complications of SCD. Its use could provide dramatic cost savings for families since a transfusion costs about $1,000 to $2,000 every month, whereas hydroxyurea costs less than a dollar a day, Dr. Ware said in an interview.
TWiTCH (TCD with Transfusions Changing to Hydroxyurea) was conducted at 26 pediatric programs and used TCD to identify 121 children with SCD who were at elevated risk of stroke based on abnormally high cerebral artery flow velocities of at least 200 cm/sec. The children were evenly randomized to 24 months of treatment. TCD velocities were obtained every 12 weeks and reviewed centrally, with local investigators blinded to the results. All children had received transfusions for at least 12 months, but had not developed severe vasculopathy.
The transfusion arm was maintained at a target hemoglobin S level of less than 30% and chelation used to manage elevated liver concentrations. Transfusions were allowed in the hydroxyurea arm until a stable maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of hydroxyurea was reached, and were then replaced by serial phlebotomy to reduce iron overload. The MTD was reached after 6 months at an average dose of about 25 mg/kg/day.
The transfusion overlap with hydroxyurea was designed as a safety measure to avoid strokes if monthly transfusions were abruptly discontinued in the hydroxyurea arm before the children had time to achieve MTD.
“The fact that that overlap was about 6 months and the fact we had about 24 months of follow-up tracking the TCD velocities over time, we feel that doesn’t affect the end statistical analysis,” Dr. Ware said.
As for whether hydroxyurea is superior to monthly transfusions, he noted that the trial was not designed for superiority and superiority was seen in a post-hoc analysis. “What we can say with certainty is that it’s non-inferior to the standard treatment,” Dr. Ware said.
The final analysis was based on 42 patients randomized to the transfusion arm who completed all 24 months of treatment, 11 with truncated treatment, and 8 withdrawals, and 41 patients assigned to the hydroxyurea arm who completed all treatment, 13 with truncated treatment and 6 withdrawals.
Sickle cell-related serious adverse events were more common in the hydroxyurea arm than the transfusion arm (23 vs. 15), but none were related to the study drug or procedures.