Table 2. Number (%) of Patients with Increases in Serum Creatinine or SGPT/ALT in Study 1, Study 3, and MDS Pool
| | Study 1 (Beta-thalassemia) | Study 3 (Sickle Cell Disease) | MDS Pool |
| Laboratory Parameter | Deferasirox
N=296n(%)
| Deferoxamine
N=290 n(%)
| Deferasirox
N=132n(%)
| Deferoxamine
N=63n(%)
| Deferasirox
N=627n(%)
|
| Serum Creatinine |
Creatinine increase >33% at 2 consecutive post-baseline visits
|
113 (38)
|
41 (14)
|
48 (36)
|
14 (22)
|
229 (37)
|
Creatinine increase >33% and >ULN at 2 consecutive post-baseline visits
|
7 (2)
|
1 (0)
|
3 (2)
|
2 (3)
|
126 (20)
|
| SGPT/ALT |
SGPT/ALT >5 x ULN at 2 post-baseline visits
|
25 (8)
|
7 (2)
|
2 (2)
|
0
|
9 (1)
|
SGPT/ALT >5 x ULN at 2 consecutive post-baseline visits
|
17 (6)
|
5 (2)
|
5 (4)
|
0
|
5 (1)
|
Abbreviations: ALT, alanine transaminase; MDS, myelodysplastic syndrome; SGPT, serum glutamic-pyruvic transaminase; ULN, upper limit of normal.
|
Non-Transfusion-Dependent Thalassemia Syndromes
In Study 5, 110 patients with NTDT received 1 year of treatment with deferasirox 5 or 10 mg/kg/day and 56 patients received placebo in a double-blind, randomized trial. In Study 6, 130 of the patients who completed Study 5 were treated with open-label deferasirox at 5, 10, or 20 mg/kg/day (depending on the baseline LIC) for 1 year
[see Clinical Studies (14)].Table 3 and 4 display the frequency of adverse reactions in patients with NTDT. Adverse reactions with a suspected relationship to study drug were included in Table 3 if they occurred at ≥ 5% of patients in Study 5.
Table 3. Adverse Reactions Occurring in Greater Than 5% Patients with NTDT
|
Any adverse reaction
|
Study5
| Study 6
|
Deferasirox
| Placebo
| Deferasirox |
N = 110 | N = 56 | N = 130 |
n (%) | n (%) | n (%) |
31 (28) | 9(16) | 27 (21)
|
Nausea
| 7 (6)
| 4(7)
| 2 (2)
a
|
Rash
| 7 (6)
| 1(2)
| 2 (2)
a
|
Diarrhea
| 5 (5)
| 1(2)
| 7 (5)
|
Abbreviation: NTDT, non-transfusion-dependent thalassemia.
aThe occurrence of nausea, and rash are included for Study 6. There were no additional adverse reactions with a suspected relationship to study drug occurring in >5% of patients in Study 6.
|
In Study 5, 1 patient in the placebo 10 mg/kg/day group experienced an ALT increase to greater than 5 times ULN and greater than 2 times baseline (Table 4). Three deferasirox-treated patients (all in the 10 mg/kg/day group) had 2 consecutive serum creatinine level increases greater than 33% from baseline and greater than ULN. Serum creatinine returned to normal in all 3 patients (in 1 spontaneously and in the other 2 after drug interruption). Two additional cases of ALT increase and 2 additional cases of serum creatinine increase were observed in the 1-year extension of Study 5. The number (%) of patients with NTDT with increase in serum creatinine or SGPT/ALT in Study 5 and Study 6 are presented in Table 4 below.
Table 4. Number (%) of Patients with NTDT with Increases in Serum Creatinine or SGPT/ALT
|
Laboratory Parameter
|
Study 5 | Study 6 |
| Deferasirox | Placebo | Deferasirox |
| N = 110 | N = 56 | N = 130
|
|
n (%) | n (%) | n (%)
|
Serum creatinine (> 33% increase from baseline and > ULN at ≥ 2 consecutive post-baseline values)
| 3 (3)
| 0
| 2 (2)
|
SGPT/ALT (> 5 x ULN and > 2 x baseline)
| 1(1)
| 1 (2)
| 2 (2)
|
Abbreviations: ALT, alanine transaminase; NTDT, non-transfusion-dependent thalassemia; SGPT, serum glutamic-pyruvic transaminase; ULN, upper limit of normal.
|
Proteinuria
In clinical studies, urine protein was measured monthly. Intermittent proteinuria (urine protein/creatinine ratio greater than 0.6 mg/mg) occurred in 18.6% of deferasirox-treated patients compared to 7.2% of deferoxamine-treated patients in Study 1
[
see Warnings and Precautions (5.1)]
.
Other Adverse Reactions
In the population of more than 5,000 patients with transfusional iron overload, who have been treated with deferasirox during clinical trials, adverse reactions occurring in 0.1% to 1% of patients included gastritis, edema, sleep disorder, pigmentation disorder, dizziness, anxiety, maculopathy, cholelithiasis, pyrexia, fatigue, laryngeal pain, cataract, hearing loss, GI hemorrhage, gastric ulcer (including multiple ulcers), duodenal ulcer, renal tubular disorder (Fanconi syndrome), and acute pancreatitis (with and without underlying biliary conditions). Adverse reactions occurring in 0.01% to 0.1% of patients included optic neuritis, esophagitis, erythema multiforme, and drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (DRESS). Adverse reactions, which most frequently led to dose interruption or dose adjustment during clinical trials were rash, GI disorders, infections, increased serum creatinine, and increased serum transaminases.
Pooled Analysis of Pediatric Clinical Trial Data
A nested case control analysis was conducted within a deferasirox tablets for oral suspension pediatric-pooled clinical trial dataset to evaluate the effects of dose and serum ferritin level, separately and combined, on kidney function. Among 1213 children (aged 2 to 15 years) with transfusion-dependent thalassemia, 162 cases of acute kidney injury (eGFR
<90 mL/min/1.73 m
2) and 621 matched-controls with normal kidney function (eGFR
> 120 mL/min/1.73 m
2) were identified. The primary findings were:
- A 26% increased risk of acute kidney injury was observed with each 5 mg/kg increase in daily deferasirox tablets for oral suspension dosage equivalent to 3.5 mg/kg deferasirox, starting at 20 mg/kg/day equivalent to 14 mg/kg/day deferasirox (95% confidence interval (CI): 1.08-1.48).
- A 25% increased risk for acute kidney injury was observed with each 250 mcg/L decrease in serum ferritin starting at 1,250 mcg/L (95% CI: 1.01-1.56).
- Among pediatric patients with a serum ferritin < 1,000 mcg/L, those who received deferasirox tablets for oral suspension dosage > 30 mg/kg/day, equivalent to 21 mg/kg/day deferasirox compared to those who received lower dosages, had a higher risk for acute kidney injury(Odds ratio(OR) = 4.47, 95% CI: 1.25-15.95), consistent with overchelation.
In addition, a cohort-based analysis of ARs was conducted in the deferasirox tablets for oral suspension pediatric pooled clinical trial data. Pediatric patients who received deferasirox tablets for oral suspension dose > 25 mg/kg/day equivalent to 17.5 mg/kg/day deferasirox when their serum ferritin was < 1,000 mcg/L (n = 158), had a 6-fold greater rate of renal adverse reactions (Incidence Rate Ratio (IRR) = 6.00, 95% CI: 1.75-21.36), and a 2-fold greater rate of dose interruptions (IRR = 2.06, 95% CI: 1.33-3.17) compared to the time-period prior to meeting these simultaneous criteria. Adverse reactions of special interest (cytopenia, renal, hearing, and GI disorders) occurred 1.9-fold more frequently when these simultaneous criteria were met, compared to preceding time-periods (IRR = 1.91, 95% CI: 1.05-3.48)
[see Warnings and Precautions (5.6)].
Additional pediatric use information is approved for Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation's JADENU (desferasirox) tablets. However, due to Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation's marketing exclusivity rights, this drug product is not labeled with that information.
Table 5. Absolute Change in LIC at Week 52 in Patients with NTDT
|
Deferasirox Tablets for Oral Suspension Starting Dose
a
|
|
Placebo
|
5 mg/kg/day
|
10 mg/kg/day
|
20 mg/kg/day
|
Study 5b
|
|
|
|
|
Number of Patients
| n = 54
| n = 51
| n = 54
| -
|
Mean LIC at Baseline (mg Fe/g dw)
| 16.1
| 13.4
| 14.4
| -
|
Mean Change (mg Fe/g dw)
| +0.4
| -2.0
| -3.8
| -
|
(95% Confidence Interval)
| (-0.6, +1.3)
| (-2.9, -1.0)
| (-4.8, -2.9)
| -
|
Study 6
|
|
|
|
|
Number of Patients
| -
| n = 8
| n = 77
| n = 43
|
Mean LIC at Baseline (mg Fe/g dw)
| -
| 5.6
| 8.8
| 23.5
|
Mean Change (mg Fe/g dw)
| -
| -1.5
| -2.8
| -9.1
|
(95% Confidence Interval)
| -
| (-3.7, +0.7)
| (-3.4, -2.2)
| (-11.0, -7.3)
|
Abbreviation: LIC, liver iron concentration; NTDT, non-transfusion-dependent thalassemia.
aRandomized dose in Study 5 or assigned starting dose in Study 6.
bLeast square mean change for Study 5
|