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Dive into the research topics where Christine K Bailey is active.

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Featured researches published by Christine K Bailey.


Blood | 2013

Safety and efficacy of eltrombopag for treatment of chronic immune thrombocytopenia: results of the long-term, open-label EXTEND study

Mansoor N. Saleh; James B. Bussel; Gregory Cheng; Oliver Meyer; Christine K Bailey; Michael Arning; Andres Brainsky

Patients with chronic immune thrombocytopenia may have bleeding resulting from low platelet counts. Eltrombopag increases and maintains hemostatic platelet counts; however, to date, outcome has been reported only for treatment lasting ≤ 6 months. This interim analysis of the ongoing open-label EXTEND (Eltrombopag eXTENded Dosing) study evaluates the safety and efficacy of eltrombopag in 299 patients treated up to 3 years. Splenectomized and nonsplenectomized patients achieved platelets ≥ 50 000/μL at least once (80% and 88%, respectively). Platelets ≥ 50 000/μL and 2 × baseline were maintained for a median of 73 of 104 and 109 of 156 cumulative study weeks, respectively. Bleeding symptoms (World Health Organization Grades 1-4) decreased from 56% of patients at baseline to 20% at 2 years and 11% at 3 years. One hundred (33%) patients were receiving concomitant treatments at study entry, 69 of whom attempted to reduce them; 65% (45 of 69) had a sustained reduction or permanently stopped ≥ 1 concomitant treatment. Thirty-eight patients (13%) experienced ≥ 1 adverse events leading to study withdrawal, including patients meeting protocol-defined withdrawal criteria (11 [4%] thromboembolic events, 5 [2%] exceeding liver enzyme thresholds). No new or increased incidence of safety issues was identified. Long-term treatment with eltrombopag was generally safe, well tolerated, and effective in maintaining platelet counts in the desired range.


The Lancet | 2015

Eltrombopag for children with chronic immune thrombocytopenia (PETIT2): a randomised, multicentre, placebo-controlled trial.

John D. Grainger; Franco Locatelli; Thirachit Chotsampancharoen; Elena Donyush; Bunchoo Pongtanakul; Patcharee Komvilaisak; Darintr Sosothikul; Guillermo Drelichman; Nongnuch Sirachainan; Susanne Holzhauer; Vladimir Lebedev; Richard Lemons; Dagmar Pospisilova; James B. Bussel; Kalpana Bakshi; Malini Iyengar; Geoffrey Chan; Karen Chagin; Dickens Theodore; Lisa Marcello; Christine K Bailey

BACKGROUND The thrombopoietin receptor agonist eltrombopag has been shown to be safe, tolerable, and effective for adults with chronic immune thrombocytopenia. We aimed to investigate the safety and efficacy of eltrombopag for children with chronic immune thrombocytopenia. METHODS PETIT2 was a two part, randomised, multicentre, placebo-controlled study done at 38 centres in 12 countries (Argentina, Czech Republic, Germany, Hong Kong, Israel, Italy, Russia, Spain, Taiwan, Thailand, UK, and USA). Paediatric patients aged 1-17 years who had chronic immune thrombocytopenia and platelet counts less than 30 × 10(9) per L were randomly assigned (2:1) to receive eltrombopag or placebo. We stratified patients by age into three cohorts (patients aged 12-17 years, 6-11 years, and 1-5 years) before randomly entering them into a 13 week, double-blind period. Randomisation was done by the GlaxoSmithKline Registration and Medication Ordering System and both patients and study personnel were masked to treatment assignments. Patients who were allocated eltrombopag received tablets (except for those aged 1-5 years who received an oral suspension formulation) once per day for 13 weeks. Starting doses for patients aged 6-17 were based on bodyweight, and ethnic origin and ranged between 50 mg/day and 25 mg/day (starting dose for patients aged 1-5 years was 1·2 mg/kg/day or 0·8 mg/kg/day for east Asian patients). Patients who completed the double-blind period entered a 24 week open-label treatment period in which all patients received eltrombopag at either the starting dose (if they were formerly on placebo) or their established dose. The primary outcome was the proportion of patients achieving platelet counts of at least 50 × 10(9) per L in the absence of rescue therapy for 6 or more weeks from weeks 5 to 12 of the double-blind period. The intention-to-treat population included in the efficacy assessment consisted of all patients who were randomly assigned to one of the treatment groups, and the safety population included all patients who received at least one dose of study drug. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01520909. FINDINGS Beginning in March 15, 2012, 92 patients were enrolled, and the trial was completed on Jan 2, 2014. 63 patients were assigned to receive eltrombopag and 29 were assigned to receive placebo. In the double-blind period, three patients discontinued treatment because of adverse events: two patients in the eltrombopag group withdrew because of increased liver aminotransferases and one in the placebo group withdrew because of abdominal haemorrhage. 25 (40%) patients who received eltrombopag compared with one (3%) patient who received placebo achieved the primary outcome of platelet counts of at least 50 × 10(9) per L for 6 of the last 8 weeks of the double-blind period (odds ratio 18·0, 95% CI, 2·3-140·9; p=0·0004). Responses were similar in all cohorts (eltrombopag vs placebo: 39% vs 10% for patients aged 12-17 years, 42% vs 0% for patients aged 6-11 years, and 36% vs 0% for patients aged 1-5 years). Proportionately fewer patients who received eltrombopag (23 [37%] of 63 patients) had WHO grades 1-4 bleeding at the end of the double-blind period than did those who received placebo (16 [55%] of 29 patients); grades 2-4 bleeding were similar (three [5%] patients who received eltrombopag vs two [7%] patients who received placebo). During the 24-week open-label treatment period, 70 [80%] of 87 patients achieved platelet counts of 50 × 10(9) per L or more at least once. Adverse events that occurred more frequently with eltrombopag than with placebo included nasopharyngitis (11 [17%] patients), rhinitis (10 [16%] patients), upper respiratory tract infection (7 [11%] patients), and cough (7 [11%] patients). Serious adverse events occurred in five (8%) patients who received eltrombopag and four (14%) who received placebo. Safety was consistent between the open-label and double-blind periods. No deaths, malignancies, or thromboses occurred during the trial. INTERPRETATION Eltrombopag, which produced a sustained platelet response in 40% of patients with chronic immune thrombocytopenia, is a suitable therapeutic option for children with chronic symptomatic immune thrombocytopenia. We identified no new safety concerns and few patients discontinued treatment because of adverse events. FUNDING GlaxoSmithKline.


Clinical Therapeutics | 2009

Effects of food and antacids on the pharmacokinetics of eltrombopag in healthy adult subjects: Two single-dose, open-label, randomized-sequence, crossover studies

Daphne D. Williams; Bin Peng; Christine K Bailey; Mary Beth Wire; Yanli Deng; Jung Wook Park; David A. Collins; Shiva G. Kapsi; Julian Jenkins

BACKGROUND Eltrombopag is the first orally self-administered, small-molecule, nonpeptide thrombopoietin receptor agonist for the treatment of chronic idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura. OBJECTIVE The aim of these studies was to assess the effect of food and antacids on the pharmacokinetic and safety profiles of eltrombopag. METHODS Two independent, single-dose, open-label, randomized-sequence, crossover studies of oral eltrombopag were conducted in healthy adult volunteers. The first study (study A) compared eltrombopag 50 mg (tablets or capsules) administered in the fasted state or tablets with a high-fat, high-calcium breakfast. The second study (study B) investigated eltrombopag tablets (75 mg) administered in the fasted state; immediately after a low-fat, low-calcium meal or a high-fat, low-calcium meal; 1 hour before a high-fat, low-calcium meal; or with an antacid containing aluminum hydroxide and magnesium carbonate. Vital signs were recorded and electrocardiogram and clinical laboratory tests were performed at screening, within 24 hours before and within 48 hours after each dose of study medication. Symptom assessment was performed and adverse events (AEs) were assessed previous to study drug administration through follow-up in terms of severity and relationship to study medication. RESULTS In study A, 18 male subjects (mean age, 23.0 years; weight, 70.3 kg; white race, 94.4%) who received a high-fat, high-calcium breakfast had reduced bioavailability of eltrombopag in terms of AUC(0-infinity)) by 59% (geometric mean ratio [GMR], 0.41; 90% CI, 0.36-0.46) and C(max) by 65% (GMR, 0.35; 90% CI, 0.30-0.41) compared with subjects in a fasted state. In study B, the bioavailability in 26 subjects (14 male, 12 female; mean age, 35.6 years; weight, 76.0 kg; white race, 65.4%) was not significantly changed when administered with food that was low in calcium, despite the fat content (GMRs ranged from 0.87-1.03 for AUC(0-infinity) and 0.85-1.01 for C(max) across the 3 studied meals). Mean plasma AUC(0-infinity)) and C(max) values decreased by approximately 70% (GMR, 0.30; 90% CI, 0.24-0.36 for AUC(0-infinity)) and 0.24-0.38 for C(max)) when administered with a metal cation-containing antacid. No serious AEs were reported and all AEs were rated as mild to moderate in intensity. The most frequently reported AE was headache (study A, 6.3%; study B, 12.0%-29.2%). CONCLUSIONS Concomitant administration of eltrombopag with high-calcium food or an antacid containing aluminum and magnesium was associated with significantly reduced systemic exposure, whereas low-calcium meals were not. A single dose of eltrombopag was generally well tolerated in these healthy volunteers.


American Journal of Hematology | 2015

Evaluation of bone marrow reticulin in patients with chronic immune thrombocytopenia treated with eltrombopag: Data from the EXTEND study

Russell K. Brynes; Attilio Orazi; Dickens Theodore; Paul Burgess; Christine K Bailey; Maung Thein; Kalpana Bakshi

Thrombopoietin receptor agonists, which raise platelet counts in patients with chronic immune thrombocytopenia, may be associated with increases in bone marrow (BM) reticulin. Patients with chronic immune thrombocytopenia participating in the Eltrombopag Extended Dosing (EXTEND) study underwent BM biopsies to identify clinically relevant BM fibrosis‐related increases. Specimens were centrally reviewed by 2 hematopathologists. Two hundred thirty‐two biopsy specimens were collected from 117 patients treated for ≤5.5 years. Moderate to marked reticulin fibrosis was found in 2 patients. After withdrawing from the study, the biopsy of 1 patient reverted to normal. There were no other pathologic changes identified among on‐treatment specimens, and no pattern of abnormal reticulin deposition associated with eltrombopag treatment was evident. Am. J. Hematol. 90:598–601, 2015.


The Lancet Haematology | 2015

Eltrombopag for the treatment of children with persistent and chronic immune thrombocytopenia (PETIT): a randomised, multicentre, placebo-controlled study

James B. Bussel; Purificación García de Miguel; Jenny M. Despotovic; John D. Grainger; Julián Sevilla; Victor S. Blanchette; Lakshmanan Krishnamurti; Philip Connor; Michèle David; Koh Boayue; Dana C. Matthews; Michele P. Lambert; Lisa Marcello; Malini Iyengar; Geoffrey Chan; Karen Chagin; Dickens Theodore; Christine K Bailey; Kalpana Bakshi


Blood | 2010

EXTEND Study Update: Safety and Efficacy of Eltrombopag In Adults with Chronic Immune Thrombocytopenia (ITP) From June 2006 to February 2010

Mansoor N. Saleh; Gregory Cheng; James B. Bussel; Huiping Sun; Bhabita Mayer; Christine K Bailey; Andres Brainsky


Blood | 2009

Long-Term Treatment of Chronic Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura with Oral Eltrombopag: Results From the EXTEND Study.

Mansoor N. Saleh; James B. Bussel; Gregory Cheng; Balkis Meddeb; Bhabita Mayer; Christine K Bailey; Manuel Aivado


Blood | 2011

Evaluation of Bone Marrow Reticulin in Patients with Chronic Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP) Treated with Eltrombopag – Data From the EXTEND Study

Russell K. Brynes; Attilio Orazi; Shalini Verma; Andres Brainsky; Christine K Bailey; Kalpana Bakshi


Blood | 2013

Update On The Safety and Efficacy Of EXTENDed Treatment With Eltrombopag (EPAG) In Adults With Chronic Immune Thrombocytopenia (ITP)

Mansoor N. Saleh; Raymond Siu Ming Wong; Paul Burgess; Kalpana Bakshi; Geoffrey Chan; Christine K Bailey


Blood | 2011

Rate of Cataracts Across the Eltrombopag Clinical Studies in Patients with Chronic Immune Thrombocytopenia

Nichola Cooper; Raymond Chi-Wing Wong; Andres Brainsky; Christine K Bailey

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Mansoor N. Saleh

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Gregory Cheng

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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