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Original Article
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Volume 328:1226-1229 April 29, 1993 Number 17
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Combination Chemotherapy in Refractory Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura
Michael Figueroa, Jane Gehlsen, Denis Hammond, Sharon Ondreyco, Lawrence Piro, Talisman Pomeroy, Frederick Williams, and Robert McMillan

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ABSTRACT

Background Chronic idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura is a destructive thrombocytopenia caused by an autoantibody. About 80 percent of patients with chronic idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura have remissions after either corticosteroid therapy or splenectomy. Some patients with resistant disease respond to other agents, but a substantial group are refractory to therapy.

Methods We used combination chemotherapy to treat 10 patients with refractory immune thrombocytopenia. An average of 6.8 (range, 3 to 10) previous therapies, including corticosteroids and splenectomy, had been unsuccessful in these patients. The patients received from three to eight cycles of therapy consisting of cyclophosphamide and prednisone combined with either vincristine (one patient), vincristine and procarbazine (four patients), or etoposide (six patients, including one patient who received four cycles each containing procarbazine and etoposide).

Results Among the 10 patients, 6 had complete responses (platelet count, >180,000 per cubic millimeter); of these, 4 patients had responses that persisted for more than 11, 30, 54, or 126 months, 1 had a relapse 9 months after therapy but had a remission with further therapy and remained in remission for 48 months before dying of an unrelated illness, and another relapsed just before her fifth course of therapy. Two patients had partial responses (platelet count, >50,000 per cubic millimeter); the platelet counts in one remained stable for more than nine months after the end of therapy, and the other patient relapsed. The remaining two patients had no response. Complete responses were associated with a disappearance or marked decrease in the level of platelet-associated autoantibody.

Conclusions Combination chemotherapy is beneficial in some patients in whom immune thrombocytopenia is refractory to corticosteroids and splenectomy.


Source Information

From the Department of Molecular and Experimental Medicine, the Scripps Research Institute, 10666 N. Torrey Pines Rd., La Jolla, CA 92037, where reprint requests should be addressed to Dr. McMillan.

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N Engl J Med 1993; 329:1046-1048, Sep 30, 1993. Correspondence

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