Ibrutinib (PCI 32765) Rapidly Improves Platelet Counts in CLL/SLL Patients and Has Minimal Effects On Platelet Aggregation
No less an expert than Dr. Mohammed Farooqui from the NIH did the study titled Ibrutinib (PCI 32765) Rapidly Improves Platelet Counts in Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia / Small Lymphocytic Lymphoma (CLL/SLL) Patients and Has Minimal Effects On Platelet Aggregation without any pharma support that looked at not only at platelet counts, but also how well they actually function or aggregate, a critical step in clot formation, and other measures of their activity. He found what yours truly had suggested in my last post.
Although grade 1 or 2 (mild or moderate and not dangerous or disabling) bruising is a known adverse event seen with an ibrutinib, Dr. Farooqui found in looking at 25 volunteers in the NIH trial who were taking 420 mg a day that " This preliminary report does not identify any significant ibrutinib effect on platelet function." Equally important, platelet counts rapidly improved. He concludes by saying something very similar to what I gathered from the old literature that I referenced in my last post: A rough day: Bloody nose times two and a tender rash minutes before my CLL and MDS lectures in Chicago. I quote the last line of the ASH abstract: "The apparent functional tolerance of BTK inhibition in platelets is likely attributable to redundancy in the affected signaling pathways." What I said was "there are also clearly redundant pathways and signaling to get a healthy thrombus going in response to an arterial injury." Like minded, except Dr. Farooqui has the lab data to support his finding.
Here's another thing I really liked about his abstract beside the reassurance on the platelet issue.
"This work was supported by the Intramural Research Program of NHLBI, NIH. We thank our patients for participating in these research studies."
They not only funded the research themselves because they thought it was important, but they thanked the patients. That is so rare and so welcome. I would have to call Dr. Mohammed Farooqui and his team at the NIH (including my old friend, Dr. Wiestner) mensches (Yiddish for a good people).
Labels: ASH 2012, bleeding, Dr. Adrian Wiestner, Dr. Mohammed Farooqui, ibrutinib, PCI- 32765, platelet function, platelets