Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by János Jakucs.
The Lancet Haematology | 2017
Ruben A. Mesa; Alessandro M. Vannucchi; Adam Mead; Miklós Egyed; Anita Szoke; Aleksandr Suvorov; János Jakucs; Andrew C. Perkins; Ritam Prasad; Jiri Mayer; Judit Demeter; Peter Ganly; Jack W. Singer; Huafeng Zhou; James P. Dean; Peter te Boekhorst; Jyoti Nangalia; Jean-Jacques Kiladjian; Claire N. Harrison
BACKGROUND Available therapies for myelofibrosis can exacerbate cytopenias and are not indicated for patients with severe thrombocytopenia. Pacritinib, which inhibits both JAK2 and FLT3, induced spleen responses with limited myelosuppression in phase 1/2 trials. We aimed to assess the efficacy and safety of pacritinib versus best available therapy in patients with myelofibrosis irrespective of baseline cytopenias. METHODS This international, multicentre, randomised, phase 3 trial (PERSIST-1) was done at 67 sites in 12 countries. Patients with higher-risk myelofibrosis (with no exclusions for baseline anaemia or thrombocytopenia) were randomly assigned (2:1) to receive oral pacritinib 400 mg once daily or best available therapy (BAT) excluding JAK2 inhibitors until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. Randomisation was stratified by risk category, platelet count, and region. Treatment assignments were known to investigators, site personnel, patients, clinical monitors, and pharmacovigilance personnel. The primary endpoint was spleen volume reduction (SVR) of 35% or more from baseline to week 24 in the intention-to-treat population as assessed by blinded, centrally reviewed MRI or CT. We did safety analyses in all randomised patients who received either treatment. Here we present the final data. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01773187. FINDINGS Between Jan 8, 2013, and Aug 1, 2014, 327 patients were randomly assigned to pacritinib (n=220) or BAT (n=107). Median follow-up was 23·2 months (IQR 14·8-28·7). At week 24, the primary endpoint of SVR of 35% or more was achieved by 42 (19%) patients in the pacritinib group versus five (5%) patients in the BAT group (p=0·0003). 90 patients in the BAT group crossed over to receive pacritinib at a median of 6·3 months (IQR 5·8-6·7). The most common grade 3-4 adverse events through week 24 were anaemia (n=37 [17%]), thrombocytopenia (n=26 [12%]), and diarrhoea (n=11 [5%]) in the pacritinib group, and anaemia (n=16 [15%]), thrombocytopenia (n=12 [11%]), dyspnoea (n=3 [3%]), and hypotension (n=3 [3%]) in the BAT group. The most common serious adverse events that occurred through week 24 were anaemia (10 [5%]), cardiac failure (5 [2%]), pyrexia (4 [2%]), and pneumonia (4 [2%]) with pacritinib, and anaemia (5 [5%]), sepsis (2 [2%]), and dyspnoea (2 [2%]) with BAT. Deaths due to adverse events were observed in 27 (12%) patients in the pacritinib group and 14 (13%) patients in the BAT group throughout the duration of the study. INTERPRETATION Pacritinib therapy was well tolerated and induced significant and sustained SVR and symptom reduction, even in patients with severe baseline cytopenias. Pacritinib could be a treatment option for patients with myelofibrosis, including those with baseline cytopenias for whom options are particularly limited. FUNDING CTI BioPharma Corp.
Annals of Oncology | 2015
Michele Spina; Zsolt Nagy; Josep Maria Ribera; Massimo Federico; Igor Aurer; Karin Jordan; Gabriela Borsaru; Alexander Pristupa; Alberto Bosi; Sebastian Grosicki; Nataliia Glushko; D. Ristic; János Jakucs; Pau Montesinos; Jiri Mayer; Eduardo M. Rego; Simone Baldini; Simona Scartoni; Angela Capriati; Carlo Alberto Maggi; Cecilia Simonelli
BACKGROUND Serum uric acid (sUA) control is of key relevance in tumor lysis syndrome (TLS) prevention as it correlates with both TLS and renal event risk. We sought to determine whether febuxostat fixed dose achieves a better sUA control than allopurinol while preserving renal function in TLS prevention. PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients with hematologic malignancies at intermediate to high TLS risk grade were randomized to receive febuxostat or allopurinol, starting 2 days before induction chemotherapy, for 7-9 days. Study treatment was blinded, whereas daily dose (low/standard/high containing allopurinol 200/300/600 mg, respectively, or fixed febuxostat 120 mg) depended on the investigators choice. The co-primary end points, sUA area under curve (AUC sUA1-8) and serum creatinine change, were assessed from baseline to day 8 and analyzed through analysis of covariance with two-sided overall significance level of 5%. Secondary end points included treatment responder rate, laboratory and clinical TLS incidence and safety. RESULTS A total of 346 patients (82.1% intermediate TLS risk; 82.7% assigned to standard dose) were randomized. Mean AUC sUA1-8 was 514.0 ± 225.71 versus 708.0 ± 234.42 mgxh/dl (P < 0.0001) in favor of febuxostat. Mean serum creatinine change was -0.83 ± 26.98% and -4.92 ± 16.70% for febuxostat and allopurinol, respectively (P = 0.0903). No differences among secondary efficacy end points were detected. Drug-related adverse events occurred in 6.4% of patients in both arms. CONCLUSION In the largest adult trial carried out in TLS prevention, febuxostat achieved a significant superior sUA control with one fixed dose in comparison to allopurinol with comparable renal function preservation and safety profile. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION NCT01724528.
Blood | 2015
Alessandro M. Vannucchi; Ruben A. Mesa; Francisco Cervantes; Ritam Prasad; János Jakucs; Anna Elinder; Christian Recher; Peter te Boekhorst; Steven Knapper; Tim Somervaille; James P. Dean; Tanya Granston; Adam Mead; Claire N. Harrison
Haematologica | 2015
Claire N. Harrison; Anita Szoke; Aleksandr Suvorov; Miklós Egyed; Ritam Prasad; Jiri Mayer; János Jakucs; A Elinder; Christian Recher; P. A. W. te Boekhorst; Steven Knapper; Tim C P Somervaille; Filippo Ciceri; F Quddus; N Straetmans; Dietger Niederwieser; James P. Dean; Tanya Granston; J. J. Kiladjian; Alessandro M. Vannucchi; Jyoti Nangalia; Adam Mead; Ruben A. Mesa
Blood | 2011
Tamás Schneider; András Rosta; Hajna Losonczy; Gáspár Radványi; György Ujj; Árpád Illés; János Jakucs; Zita Borbényi
Pathology & Oncology Research | 2018
Róbert Szász; Elvira Altai; Katalin Pál; Péter Dombi; János László Iványi; János Jakucs; Natália Jóni; Árpád Illés; Ilona Tárkányi; László Szerafin; Zsolt Nagy; Péter Farkas; Ágnes Nagy; Klára Piukovics; György Ujj; Tamás Schneider
Pathology & Oncology Research | 2018
Tamás Schneider; András Rosta; Hajna Losonczy; Gáspár Radványi; György Ujj; Miklós Egyed; Árpád Illés; János Jakucs; László Szerafin; Zoltán Gasztonyi; Tamas Masszi; János László Iványi; Judit Demeter; Péter Dombi; Antal Tóth; Zita Borbényi
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2017
Michele Spina; Zsolt Nagy; Josep Maria Ribera; Massimo Federico; Igor Aurer; Karin Jordan; Gabriela Borsaru; Alexander Pristupa; Alberto Bosi; Sebastian Grosicki; Nataliia Glushko; D. Ristic; János Jakucs; Jiri Mayer; Eduardo M. Rego; Simone Baldini; Simona Scartoni; Cecilia Simonelli; Angela Capriati; Carlo Alberto Maggi
Orvosi Hetilap | 2009
Balázs Kollár; Péter Rajnics; Béla Hunyady; Erika Zeleznik; János Jakucs; Miklós Egyed
Orvosi Hetilap | 2009
Balázs Kollár; Péter Rajnics; Béla Hunyady; Erika Zeleznik; János Jakucs; Miklós Egyed