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Red Blood Cell Transfusion Thresholds and QOL in MDS (EnhanceRBC)

S

Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Red Blood Cell (RBC) Transfusions
Quality of Life
Myelodysplastic Syndromes (MDS)

Treatments

Other: Red Blood Cell Transfusions

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02099669
OCCMDS-005

Details and patient eligibility

About

Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are bone marrow malignancies characterized by poor bone marrow function that may progress to acute myeloid leukemia. Many patients become red blood cell transfusion-dependent. Transfusion dependence is associated with inferior quality of life (QOL). However, the relationship between the degree of anemia and QOL is less clear. A commonly used transfusion strategy is to target the hemoglobin (Hb) in the range of 80-90 g/L (normal hemoglobin > 120-130g/L). The question is: would a higher hemoglobin target lead to improvement in QOL despite the negative impact transfusion dependence may have on QOL (due to associated time commitments, expense, transfusion reactions etc). Several groups have prospectively shown that targeting hemoglobin levels of greater than 120 g/L (with hematopoietic growth factors (HGFs) and/or blood transfusions) or incremental increases of 15-20 g/L (with HGFs alone) were associated with improved QOL. The investigators MDS program has been conducting prospective assessments of QOL since 2007 in all registered and consented patients using a variety of validated questionnaires. Preliminary analysis (in 236 patients) revealed that, compared with an age-matched healthy general population, MDS patients have inferior QOL. Transfusion dependence and anemia were independently predictive of poor functioning, fatigue and decreased health utility. Furthermore, a hemoglobin level of ≥100 g/L seemed to be the key threshold for improvement in function and symptom scores. The investigators hypothesize that the target hemoglobins in transfusion dependent MDS patients are too low and this may account for their inferior quality of life. Our goal is to compare the effect on QOL of a restrictive strategy (which is the current standard of care), with a liberal transfusion strategy in a large randomized controlled trial of transfusion dependent MDS outpatients. Before embarking on such an endeavor, the investigators must first prove feasibility in a smaller pilot randomized controlled trial.

Full description

Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are bone marrow malignancies characterized by poor bone marrow function that may progress to acute myeloid leukemia. Many patients become red blood cell transfusion-dependent. Transfusion dependence is associated with inferior quality of life (QOL). However, the relationship between the degree of anemia and QOL is less clear. A commonly used transfusion strategy is to target the hemoglobin (Hb) in the range of 80-90 g/L (normal hemoglobin > 120-130g/L). The question is: would a higher hemoglobin target lead to improvement in QOL despite the negative impact transfusion dependence may have on QOL (due to associated time commitments, expense, transfusion reactions etc). Several groups have prospectively shown that targeting hemoglobin levels of greater than 120 g/L (with hematopoietic growth factors (HGFs) and/or blood transfusions) or incremental increases of 15-20 g/L (with HGFs alone) were associated with improved QOL. The investigators MDS program has been conducting prospective assessments of QOL since 2007 in all registered and consented patients using a variety of validated questionnaires. Preliminary analysis (in 236 patients) revealed that, compared with an age-matched healthy general population, MDS patients have inferior QOL. Transfusion dependence and anemia were independently predictive of poor functioning, fatigue and decreased health utility. Furthermore, a hemoglobin level of ≥100 g/L seemed to be the key threshold for improvement in function and symptom scores. The investigators hypothesize that the target hemoglobins in transfusion dependent MDS patients are too low and this may account for their inferior quality of life. Our goal is to compare the effect on QOL of a restrictive strategy (which is the current standard of care), with a liberal transfusion strategy in a large randomized controlled trial of transfusion dependent MDS outpatients. Before embarking on such an endeavor, the investigators must first prove feasibility in a smaller pilot randomized controlled trial.

Enrollment

30 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • All patients with MDS ≥18 years of age
  • Transfusion dependent: at least 1 transfusion per month in the last 8 weeks
  • Hb <100g/L pre transfusion
  • Life expectancy > 6 months

Exclusion criteria

  • Unstable cardiac disease (Canadian Cardiovascular Society (CCS) III/IV angina or New York Heart Association (NYHA) III/IV congestive heart failure) requiring the transfusion target range to remain >85-100 g/L at all times
  • ECOG ≥3
  • Patients with red cell antibodies against high frequency antigens or multiple antibodies (would potentially delay finding blood)
  • Patients on ESA's or disease modifying agents (like azacitidine) for their MDS

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

30 participants in 2 patient groups

Liberal transfusion strategy
Experimental group
Description:
Intervention: Red Blood Cell transfusions. Transfuse pRBC at a higher threshold- maintain Hb level between 110 and 120 g/L: to achieve this, 2 units of pRBCs are transfused when Hb level is \< 105 g/L and 1 unit of RBCs when Hb level is 105-110 g/L. Transfusions administered more frequently.
Treatment:
Other: Red Blood Cell Transfusions
Restrictive transfusion strategy
Active Comparator group
Description:
Intervention: Red Blood Cell transfusions. Transfuse pRBC at standard of care thresholds- maintain Hb level between 85 and 100 g/L: to achieve this, 2 units of packed red blood cells (pRBCs) will be transfused when the Hb level is \< 80 g/L and 1 unit of pRBCs when Hb level is 80-85 g/L: standard administration
Treatment:
Other: Red Blood Cell Transfusions

Trial contacts and locations

3

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Central trial contact

Jennifer Gallagher; Geetha Yogendron

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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