Interventions such as immunization, penicillin prophylaxis, hydroxyurea and transfusion have extended life in patients with sickle cell disease (SCD). Nonetheless, these interventions are limited by toxicity or effectiveness; continued substantial morbidity and mortality in SCD indicates the need for better disease modification. In previous phase I/II clinical trials, 13 of 13 patients treated with the DNA hypomethylating agent decitabine responded with clinically significant fetal hemoglobin and total hemoglobin elevation and improvement in surrogate clinical end-points. However, in these early studies, no clinical end-points were measured and further studies have been delayed by funding issues. We describe an off-label experience in four patients with severe SCD that suggests

  • remarkable clinical effectiveness in patients who have exhausted standard of care and are severely ill;

  • tolerability even in the severely ill;

  • a mechanism of action based on increased reticulocytosis in addition to increased fetal hemoglobin.

All four patients had multiple alloantibodies and red-cell auto-antibodies that limited availability and increased risks of transfusion, and had previously been treated with hydroxyurea with continued clinical deterioration. Three of the four patients had relative reticulocytopenia (absolute reticulocyte count <250x109/L and hemoglobin <9g/dl) and were receiving erythropoietin or darbopoietin for more than 8 weeks with continued progressive anemia and progressive congestive heart failure. All four patients were ECOG performance status 3 and ineligible for available clinical trials. Based on the clinical trial experience conducted at our institution, decitabine therapy at 0.1–0.2 mg/kg 1–2X/week was initiated in these patients not for research purposes but with the intent to produce direct clinical benefit. The limited clinical data and potential for unanticipated toxicity was discussed in full with each patient and family members. IRB approval was obtained for a retrospective chart review. No decitabine related adverse events occurred. All patients demonstrated >2g/dl increases in hemoglobin levels with an associated improvement in clinical status - decrease in pain, improvement in performance status, improvement in congestive heart failure symptoms/signs. Upward trends in the platelet and reticulocyte counts concurrent with downward trends in the neutrophil counts were consistent with previously observed effects of low dose decitabine or the related compound 5-azacytidine. Clinically significant neutropenia was avoided by dose reductions that did not reverse the improved hemoglobin levels. The differentiation altering effects of low dose decitabine relieve SCD anemia by decreasing hemolysis (through elevated HbF) and increasing reticulocytosis. Previous clinical trials, and this off-label experience, suggest that decitabine holds remarkable promise as a disease modifying agent for SCD and β-thalassemia. Further clinical trials to confirm this impression should be supported.

Author notes

Disclosure:Off Label Use: Off-label usage of decitabine to treat severe sickle cell disease.

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