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Hemoglobin
international journal for hemoglobin research
Volume 30, 2006 - Issue 2
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PROCEEDINGS 15th ICOCTaiwan, April 2005

Future Chelation Monotherapy and Combination Therapy Strategies in Thalassemia and Other Conditions. Comparison of Deferiprone, Deferoxamine, ICL670, GT56-252, L1NAll and Starch Deferoxamine Polymers

Pages 329-347 | Published online: 07 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Deferiprone (L1), and appropriate combinations with deferoxamine (DFO), can be used effectively for the treatment of thalassemia and other transfusional iron loading conditions. A number of experimental iron chelators such as deferasirox or ICL670 or Exjade (4-(3,5-bis (2‐hydroxyphenyl)-1,2,4-triazol-1-yl)-benzoic acid), deferitrin (4,5-dihydro-2-(2,4-dihydroxyphenyl)-4-methylthiazole-4 (S)-carboxylic acid) or GT56-252, 1-allyl-2-methyl-3-hydroxypyrid-4-one or L1NAll and starch DFO polymers, are under clinical evaluation. ICL670 is the most advanced in development and appears to be effective in reducing liver iron in some patients but is overall ineffective in causing negative iron balance. It is also suspected that it is not effective in cardiac iron removal. Combination therapies using L1, DFO and new iron chelating drugs may cause higher efficacy and lower toxicity by comparison to monotherapies. However, several limitations including the high cost of the new chelating drugs may not facilitate the availability of these new treatments to the vast majority of thalassemia patients, most of whom live in developing countries.

Notes

3. World Health Organisation. Community control of hereditary anaemias. WHO Bull 1983; 61 (1): 63–80

23. Kontoghiorghes, GJ. The design of orally active iron chelators for the treatment of thalassemia. Ph.D. thesis, University of Essex, Colchester UK. British Library Microfilm No. D66194/86. 1982

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