Marcelo Iastrebner
Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires
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Featured researches published by Marcelo Iastrebner.
Blood | 2010
Elena Lukina; Watman N; Elsa Avila Arreguin; Marta Dragosky; Marcelo Iastrebner; Hanna Rosenbaum; Phillips M; Gregory M Pastores; Ravi S. Kamath; Daniel I. Rosenthal; Mathilde Kaper; Tejdip Singh; Puga Ac; Peterschmitt Mj
Eliglustat tartrate is an investigational oral substrate reduction therapy for Gaucher disease type 1 that is pharmacologically distinct from intravenous enzyme replacement therapy. Eliglustat tartrate improved clinical manifestations in patients who received 50 or 100 mg twice daily for 1 year during an open-label phase 2 study (Blood. 2010;116(6):893-899). We report further improvements after 2 years of treatment in 20 patients (11 females, 9 males; mean age, 33 years) with baseline splenomegaly and thrombocytopenia and/or anemia. Statistically significant (P < .001) percentage improvements from baseline occurred in platelet count (mean ± SD, 81% ± 56%), hemoglobin level (20% ± 15%), spleen volume (-52% ± 11%), and liver volume (-24% ± 13%). Mean platelet count increased ∼ 50 000/mm(3). Mean hemoglobin level increased 2.1 g/dL overall and 3.1 g/dL in 10 patients with baseline anemia. Organ volume reductions were greatest in patients with severe baseline organomegaly. Seventeen (85%) patients met established therapeutic goals for ≥ 3 of the 4 parameters. Lumbar spine bone mineral density increased 7.8% ± 10.6% (P = .01) and T-score 0.6 ± 0.8 (P = .012), with major gains in osteoporotic and osteopenic patients. Magnetic resonance imaging assessment showed that bone marrow infiltration by Gaucher cells was decreased (8/18 patients) or stable (10/18 patients). No safety-related trends emerged during 2 years of treatment. This multisite, open-label, single-arm phase 2 study is registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as NCT00358150.
Blood | 2010
Elena Lukina; Nora Watman; Elsa Avila Arreguin; Maryam Banikazemi; Marta Dragosky; Marcelo Iastrebner; Hanna Rosenbaum; Mici Phillips; Gregory M. Pastores; Daniel I. Rosenthal; Mathilde Kaper; Tejdip Singh; Ana Cristina Puga; Peter L. Bonate; M. Judith Peterschmitt
Eliglustat tartrate (Genz-112638), a specific inhibitor of glucosylceramide synthase, is under development as an oral substrate reduction therapy for Gaucher disease type 1 (GD1). A multinational, open-label, single-arm phase 2 study of 26 GD1 patients (16 female, 10 male; mean age, 34 years) evaluated the efficacy, safety, and pharmacokinetics of eliglustat tartrate administered twice daily by mouth at 50- or 100-mg doses based on plasma drug concentrations. Entry criteria required splenomegaly with thrombocytopenia and/or anemia. The composite primary efficacy end point required improvement after 52 weeks in at least 2 of these 3 disease manifestations and was met by 77% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 58%-89%) of all patients and 91% (95% CI = 72%-98%) of the 22 patients completing 52 weeks. Statistically significant improvements occurred in mean hemoglobin level (1.62 g/dL; 95% CI =1.05-2.18 g/dL), platelet count (40.3%; 95% CI = 23.7-57.0 g/dL), spleen volume (-38.5%; 95% CI = -43.5%--33.5%), liver volume (-17.0%; 95% CI = -21.6%-12.3%), and lumbar spine bone mineral density (0.31 Z-score; 95% CI = 0.09-0.53). Elevated biomarkers (chitotriosidase; chemokine CCL18; angiotensin-converting enzyme; tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase) decreased by 35% to 50%. Plasma glucosylceramide and ganglioside GM3 normalized. Eliglustat tartrate was well tolerated: 7 mild, transient adverse events in 6 patients were considered treatment-related. Individual pharmacokinetics varied; mean time to maximal observed concentration was 2.3 hours and mean half-life was 6.8 hours. Eliglustat tartrate appears to be a promising oral treatment for GD1.
Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2010
Marcelo Iastrebner; Jun Ho Jang; Elsa Nucifora; Kihyun Kim; Federico Sackmann; Dong Hwan Kim; Sergio Orlando; Chul Won Jung; Ana Lisa Basquiera; Graciela Klein; Fernando Santini; Haydee i Bernard; Jorge Korin; Gustavo Taborda
This multicenter, open-label study evaluated the efficacy and safety of decitabine in patients from Argentina and South Korea with myelodysplastic syndromes or chronic myelomonocytic leukemia. Of 106 patients who received decitabine 20 mg/m2 intravenously over 1 h once daily for 5 days in 4-week cycles, 99 patients were evaluable after receiving at least two cycles. The overall improvement rate was 35% (19% complete response +4% marrow complete response +4% partial response +8% hematologic improvement). Overall survival at 2 years was 71%. Treatment-related adverse events included febrile neutropenia, thrombocytopenia and bleeding, asthenia, fatigue, and eosinophilia. After complete response (CR), three patients received an allogeneic stem cell transplant. Four patients who relapsed after CR responded to decitabine retreatment. Acute myelogenous leukemia developed during follow-up in 21% of patients. Decitabine in a 5-day outpatient administration schedule was effective and well tolerated in typical clinical practice settings in South America and Asia.
Annals of Hematology | 2014
Carolina Belli; Yesica Bestach; Mario Giunta; Marcelo Iastrebner; Isabel Santos; Noemí Pintos; Jorge Arbelbide; Ana Lisa Basquiera; Raquel Bengió; Irene Larripa
Dear Editor, The International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS) [1], the gold standard for risk assessment in myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), has been recently revised (IPSS-R). The authors proposed a new prognostic model including novel components: five cytogenetic prognostic subgroups with specific classification of a number of less common cytogenetic subsets [2, 3]; the 2–<5%; depth of cytopenias at clinically relevant cut-points for haemoglobin level, platelet count, and absolute neutrophil count [2]. As the score [2] was established in MDS patients including all French–American–British classification subtypes [4], the aim of this study was to apply the IPSS-R in Argentinean MDS patients classified according to the World Health Organization (WHO) classification [5]. We retrospectively analysed a cohort of 371 de novo MDS patients [6] diagnosed between 1981 and 2012. According to the WHO classification, 43 patients were classified as refractory cytopenia with unilineage dysplasia/ refractory anaemia with ringed sideroblasts, 17 as del(5q) syndrome, 201 as refractory cytopenia with multilineage dysplasia, 44 as RAEB type 1, and 66 as RAEB type 2. The median age was 70 (17–92) years with 72 % of patients above 60, the gender ratio was 1.4 (M/F: 214/ 157), and 157 (42 %) patients showed an abnormal karyotype. During the follow-up (median 23.3 months), 80 (22 %) showed
Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2009
Judith Peterschmitt; Elena Lukina; Nora Watman; Elsa Avila Arreguin; Maryam Banikazemi; Gregory M. Pastores; Marcelo Iastrebner; Marta Dragosky; Hanna Rosenbaum; Ari Zimran; Fanny O’Brien; Sharon Smith; Ana Cristina Puga
Blood | 2011
M. Judith Peterschmitt; Ravi S. Kamath; Elena Lukina; Nora Watman; Marta Dragosky; Marcelo Iastrebner; Gregory M. Pastores; Elsa Avila Arreguin; Mici Phillips; Hanna Rosenbaum; Elena Sysoeva; Rasha Aguzzi; Leorah Ross; Ana Cristina Puga; Daniel I. Rosenthal
Blood | 2011
M. Judith Peterschmitt; Elena Lukina; Nora Watman; Marta Dragosky; Marcelo Iastrebner; Gregory M. Pastores; Elsa Avila Arreguin; Mici Phillips; Hanna Rosenbaum; Elena Sysoeva; Rasha Aguzzi; Leorah Ross; Ana Cristina Puga
Blood | 2009
Judith Peterschmitt; Elena Lukina; Nora Watman; Elsa Avila Arreguin; Maryam Banikazemi; Gregory M. Pastores; Marcelo Iastrebner; Marta Dragosky; Hanna Rosenbaum; Mici Phillips; Mathilde Kaper; Tejdip Singh; Ana Cristina Puga
Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2008
Judith Peterschmitt; Elena Lukina; Nora Watman; Maryam Banikazemi; Marcelo Iastrebner; Hanna Rosenbaum; Ari Zimran; Elsa Avila Arreguin; Fanny O’Brien; Sharon Smith; Ana Cristina Puga
Blood | 2014
Carolina Belli; Ronald Feitosa Pinheiro; Silvia M. M. Magalhães; Jacqueline Gonzalez; Marcelo Iastrebner; Maria Virginia Prates; Silvia Benasayag; Yesica Bestach; Juliana Cordeiro; Marcela Cavalcante de Andrade Silva; Roberta Sandra da Silva Tanizawa; Raquel Bengió; Cecilia Lang; Elsa Nucifora; Irene Larripa; Elvira Rp Velloso