Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Fernando Tricta is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Fernando Tricta.


British Journal of Haematology | 2002

The safety and effectiveness of deferiprone in a large-scale, 3-year study in Italian patients

Adriana Ceci; Paola Baiardi; Mariagrazia Felisi; Maria Domenica Cappellini; Vittorio Carnelli; Vincenzo De Sanctis; Renzo Galanello; Aurelio Maggio; Giuseppe Masera; Antonio Piga; Schettini F; Ippazio Stefàno; Fernando Tricta

Summary. In 1997, the Italian Ministry of Health created a special programme for the controlled distribution of deferiprone to collect data and to evaluate its safety and effectiveness in long‐term use. Five hundred and thirty‐two thalassaemia patients from 86 treatment centres were enrolled in this programme. One hundred and eighty‐seven patients (32%) experienced a total of 269 events that led to a temporary interruption or, in some cases, to a discontinuation of treatment. The incidence of agranulocytosis and milder neutropenias were 0·4/100 and 2·1/100 patient‐years respectively. Neutropenia occurred predominantly in younger and non‐splenectomized patients. Transient alanine transaminase increase, gastrointestinal discomfort and arthralgia were the other most commonly reported events. Ferritin levels showed a significant decrease in time after 3 years of therapy. This is the largest number of deferiprone‐treated patients to have been reported to date. These data show that the drug was effective in reducing serum ferritin levels and the incidence of adverse events was not greater than the frequency reported in clinical trials.


British Journal of Haematology | 2000

Safety profile of the oral iron chelator deferiprone: a multicentre study.

Alan R. Cohen; Renzo Galanello; Antonio Piga; Dipalma A; Vullo C; Fernando Tricta

In previous trials, the orally active iron chelator deferiprone (L1) has been associated with sporadic agranulocytosis, milder forms of neutropenia and other side‐effects. To determine the incidence of these events, we performed a multicentre prospective study of the chelator. Blood counts were performed weekly, and confirmed neutropenia mandated discontinuation of therapy. Among 187 patients with thalassaemia major, the incidence of agranulocytosis (neutrophils < 0.5 × 109/l) was 0.6/100 patient–years, and the incidence of milder forms of neutropenia (neutrophils 0.5–1.5 × 109/l) was 5.4/100 patient–years. All cases of neutropenia resolved after interruption of therapy. Neutropenia occurred predominantly in non‐splenectomized patients. Nausea and/or vomiting occurred early in therapy, was usually transient and caused discontinuation of deferiprone in three patients. Mild to moderate joint pain and/or swelling did not require permanent cessation of deferiprone and occurred more commonly in patients with higher ferritin levels. Mean alanine transaminase (ALT) levels rose during therapy. Increased ALT levels were generally transient and occurred more commonly in patients with hepatitis C. Persistent changes in immunological studies were infrequent, although sporadic abnormalities occurred commonly. Mean zinc levels decreased during therapy. Ferritin levels did not change in the overall group but decreased in those patients with baseline levels > 2500 μg/l. This study characterized the safety profile of deferiprone, and, under the specific conditions of monitoring, demonstrated that agranulocytosis is less common than previously predicted.


American Journal of Hematology | 2016

Deferiprone-induced agranulocytosis: 20 years of clinical observations.

Fernando Tricta; Jack Uetrecht; Renzo Galanello; John W. Connelly; Anna Rozova; Michael Spino; Jan Palmblad

Use of the iron chelator deferiprone for treatment of iron overload in thalassemia patients is associated with concerns over agranulocytosis, which requires weekly absolute neutrophil counts (ANC). Here, we analyze all episodes of agranulocytosis (n = 161) and neutropenia (n = 250) during deferiprone use in clinical trials (CT) and postmarketing surveillance programs (PMSP). Rates of agranulocytosis and neutropenia in CT were 1.5% and 5.5%, respectively. Of the agranulocytosis cases, 61% occurred during the first 6 months of therapy and 78% during the first year. These events appeared to be independent of dose, and occurred three times more often in females than males. Their duration was not significantly shortened by use of G‐CSF. No patient with baseline neutropenia (n = 12) developed agranulocytosis during treatment, which raises questions about the validity of prior neutropenia as a contraindication to use. Only 1/7 novel neutropenia cases in CT progressed to agranulocytosis with continued treatment, indicating that neutropenia does not necessarily lead to agranulocytosis. The agranulocytosis fatality rate was 0% in CT and 15/143 (11%) in PMSP. Rechallenge with deferiprone produced agranulocytosis in 75% of patients in whom the event had already occurred, and in 10% with previous neutropenia. Weekly ANC monitoring allows early detection and interruption of therapy, but does not prevent agranulocytosis from occurring. Its relevance appears to decrease after the first year of therapy, when agranulocytosis occurs less often. Based upon analysis of data collected over the past 20 years, it appears that patient education may be the key to minimizing agranulocytosis‐associated risks during deferiprone therapy. Am. J. Hematol. 91:1026–1031, 2016.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2014

Deviating from safety guidelines during deferiprone therapy in clinical practice may not be associated with higher risk of agranulocytosis

Mohssen S. Elalfy; Yasser Wali; Mohamad Qari; Ghazi A. Damanhouri; Youssef Al-Tonbary; Dilek Yazman; Zakaria Al Hawsawi; Zeynep Karakas; Yurdanur Kilinç; M. Akif Yesilipek; Mohamed Badr; Usama R. Elsafy; Mostafa Salama; Yousryeia Abdel Rahman; Shebl Said Shebl; Anne Stilman; Noemi Toiber Temin; Fernando Tricta

A risk associated with the iron chelator deferiprone is the development of neutropenia or agranulocytosis. Accordingly, the product label recommends weekly blood monitoring and immediate interruption of treatment upon detection of an absolute neutrophil count (ANC) <1.5 × 109/L, out of concern that continued therapy might lead to a more severe drop. However, it is uncertain how these recommendations are followed under real‐life conditions and, if they are not followed, whether continuation of therapy results in increased incidence of agranulocytosis.


PharmacoEconomics | 2013

Erratum to: Cost–Utility Analysis of Deferiprone for the Treatment of β-Thalassaemia Patients with Chronic Iron Overload: A UK Perspective.

Anthony Bentley; Samantha Gillard; Michael Spino; John W. Connelly; Fernando Tricta

Background Patients with β-thalassaemia major experience chronic iron overload due to regular blood transfusions. Chronic iron overload can be treated using iron-chelating therapies such as desferrioxamine (DFO), deferiprone (DFP) and deferasirox (DFX) monotherapy, or DFO–DFP combination therapy.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Drug-Based Lead Discovery: The Novel Ablative Antiretroviral Profile of Deferiprone in HIV-1-Infected Cells and in HIV-Infected Treatment-Naive Subjects of a Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Randomized Exploratory Trial

Deepti Saxena; Michael Spino; Fernando Tricta; John T. Connelly; Bernadette Cracchiolo; Axel-Rainer Hanauske; Darlene D’Alliessi Gandolfi; Michael B. Mathews; Jonathan Karn; Bart Holland; Myung Hee Park; Tsafi Pe’ery; Paul Palumbo; Hartmut M. Hanauske-Abel

Antiretrovirals suppress HIV-1 production yet spare the sites of HIV-1 production, the HIV-1 DNA-harboring cells that evade immune detection and enable viral resistance on-drug and viral rebound off-drug. Therapeutic ablation of pathogenic cells markedly improves the outcome of many diseases. We extend this strategy to HIV-1 infection. Using drug-based lead discovery, we report the concentration threshold-dependent antiretroviral action of the medicinal chelator deferiprone and validate preclinical findings by a proof-of-concept double-blind trial. In isolate-infected primary cultures, supra-threshold concentrations during deferiprone monotherapy caused decline of HIV-1 RNA and HIV-1 DNA; did not allow viral breakthrough for up to 35 days on-drug, indicating resiliency against viral resistance; and prevented, for at least 87 days off-drug, viral rebound. Displaying a steep dose-effect curve, deferiprone produced infection-independent deficiency of hydroxylated hypusyl-eIF5A. However, unhydroxylated deoxyhypusyl-eIF5A accumulated particularly in HIV-infected cells; they preferentially underwent apoptotic DNA fragmentation. Since the threshold, ascertained at about 150 μM, is achievable in deferiprone-treated patients, we proceeded from cell culture directly to an exploratory trial. HIV-1 RNA was measured after 7 days on-drug and after 28 and 56 days off-drug. Subjects who attained supra-threshold concentrations in serum and completed the protocol of 17 oral doses, experienced a zidovudine-like decline of HIV-1 RNA on-drug that was maintained off-drug without statistically significant rebound for 8 weeks, over 670 times the drug’s half-life and thus clearance from circulation. The uniform deferiprone threshold is in agreement with mapping of, and crystallographic 3D-data on, the active site of deoxyhypusyl hydroxylase (DOHH), the eIF5A-hydroxylating enzyme. We propose that deficiency of hypusine-containing eIF5A impedes the translation of mRNAs encoding proline cluster (‘polyproline’)-containing proteins, exemplified by Gag/p24, and facilitated by the excess of deoxyhypusine-containing eIF5A, releases the innate apoptotic defense of HIV-infected cells from viral blockade, thus depleting the cellular reservoir of HIV-1 DNA that drives breakthrough and rebound. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrial.gov NCT02191657


British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 2016

Effects of renal impairment on the pharmacokinetics of orally administered deferiprone

Caroline Fradette; Vincent Pichette; Eric Sicard; Anne Stilman; Shalini Jayashankar; Yu Chung Tsang; Michael Spino; Fernando Tricta

Abstract Aims In light of the growing recognition of renal disease in thalassemia, it is important to understand the impact of renal impairment on the pharmacokinetics of iron chelators. This study evaluated the pharmacokinetics and safety of the iron chelator deferiprone (DFP) in subjects with renal impairment in comparison with healthy volunteers (HVs). Methods Thirty‐two subjects were categorized into four groups based on degree of renal impairment: none, mild, moderate or severe, as determined by estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR). All subjects received a single oral dose of 33 mg kg−1 DFP, provided serum and urine samples for pharmacokinetic assessment over 24 h and were monitored for safety. Results Renal clearance of DFP decreased as renal impairment increased. However, based on C max, AUC(0,t) and AUC(0,∞), there were no significant group differences in systemic exposure, because less than 4% of the drug was excreted unchanged in the urine. DFP is extensively metabolized to a renally excreted, pharmacologically inactive metabolite, deferiprone 3‐O‐glucuronide (DFP‐G), which exhibited higher C max, AUC(0,t), AUC(0,∞) and longer t max and t 1/2 in the renally impaired groups compared with HVs. The C max and AUCs of DFP‐G increased as eGFR decreased. Overall, 75%–95% of the dose was retrieved in urine, either as DFP or DFP‐G, regardless of severity of renal impairment. With respect to safety, DFP was well tolerated. Conclusions These data suggest that no adjustment of the DFP dosage regimen in patients with renal impairment is necessary, as there were no significant changes in the systemic exposure to the drug.


Clinical pharmacology in drug development | 2018

Randomized, Blinded, Placebo‐ and Positive‐Controlled Crossover Study to Determine the Effect of Deferiprone on the QTc Interval in Healthy Subjects

Caroline Fradette; Anna Rozova; Anne Stilman; Yu Chung Tsang; Mark J. Allison; Fernando Tricta

This study evaluated whether deferiprone, an oral iron chelator, acts to prolong the QT interval. Fifty healthy volunteers received single doses of each of the following: therapeutic dose of deferiprone (33 mg/kg), supratherapeutic dose (50 mg/kg), placebo, or moxifloxacin, a positive control known to significantly prolong QT interval. Following each dose, subjects underwent cardiac monitoring, pharmacokinetics assessments, and safety assessments. Based on the QT interval obtained using the Fridericia correction for heart rate (QTcF), the upper bound of the 1‐sided 95% confidence interval of the mean difference between deferiprone and placebo was <10 milliseconds (the threshold of concern defined by authorities) at all time points for both doses: maximum difference of 3.01 milliseconds for the therapeutic dose and 5.23 milliseconds for the supratherapeutic dose. The difference in dQTcF between moxifloxacin and placebo demonstrated that the study was adequately sensitive to detect a significant prolongation of QTcF. The concentration‐response correlation analyses revealed some weak but statistically significant trends of increase in dQTcF and ddQTcF with increasing exposure to deferiprone, but these trends should have no clinical consequence even at the recommended maximum dosage. In conclusion, there was no clinically meaningful effect on QTc interval following single therapeutic or supratherapeutic doses of deferiprone.


American Journal of Hematology | 2018

Safety and Efficacy of Early Start of Iron Chelation Therapy with Deferiprone in Young Children Newly Diagnosed with Transfusion-Dependent Thalassemia: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Mohsen Saleh Elalfy; Amira A.M. Adly; Hanem Awad; Mohamed Tarif Salam; Vasilios Berdoukas; Fernando Tricta

Iron overload is inevitable in patients who are transfusion dependent. In young children with transfusion‐dependent thalassemia (TDT), current practice is to delay the start of iron chelation therapy due to concerns over toxicities, which have been observed when deferoxamine was started too early. However, doing so may increase the risk of iron accumulation that will be manifested as toxicities later in life. This study investigated whether deferiprone, a chelator with a lower affinity for iron than deferoxamine, could postpone transfusional iron overload while maintaining a good safety profile. Recently diagnosed TDT infants (N = 64 their age ranged from 10 to 18 (median 12) months, 54.7% males; receiving ≤6 transfusions; serum ferittin (SF) >400 to < 1000 ng/mL were randomized to “early start deferiprone” (.ES‐DFP) at a low dose (50 mg/kg/day) or to “delay chelation” (DC), and remained in the study until their serum ferritin (SF) level reached ≥1000 μg/L. 61 patients continued the study Levels of transferrin saturation (TSAT) and labile plasma iron (LPI) were measured as well. By approximately 6 months postrandomization, 100% of the subjects in DC group had achieved SF > 1000 µg/L and TSAT > 70% compared with none in the ES‐DFP group. LPI level > 0.6 µM was observed in 97% vs. 40% of the DS and ES groups, respectively, (P < 0.001). The time to reach SF > 1000 µg/L was delayed by 6 months in the ES‐DFP group (P < 0.001) without escalating DFP dose. No unexpected, serious, or severe adverse events were seen in the ES‐DFP group.


Blood | 2003

Safety and effectiveness of long-term therapy with the oral iron chelator deferiprone

Alan R. Cohen; Renzo Galanello; Antonio Piga; Vincenzo De Sanctis; Fernando Tricta

Collaboration


Dive into the Fernando Tricta's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John W. Connelly

Idaho Department of Fish and Game

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alan R. Cohen

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Vasilios Berdoukas

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge