Promacta
Promacta
Generic Name
Promacta
Mechanism
- Binding: Eltrombopag is a non‑peptide small molecule that binds to the intracellular domain of the thrombopoietin receptor (cMpl) on megakaryocytes and precursor cells.
- Signal Transduction: Receptor activation triggers the JAK/STAT, PI3K/AKT, and MAPK pathways, promoting survival, proliferation, and differentiation of megakaryocyte progenitors.
- Outcome: Increases platelet production, elevating platelet counts in patients with chronic immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) or other platelet disorders.
Pharmacokinetics
- Absorption: Oral bioavailability is low (~13 %) due to extensive first‑pass metabolism; food reduces absorption, so it should be taken on an empty stomach (no food ± 1 h).
- Distribution: Highly protein‑bound (~95 %); volume of distribution ~400 mL/kg.
- Metabolism: Primarily hepatic via CYP1A2, CYP2C9, CYP3A4; active metabolites are excreted in bile.
- Elimination: Half‑life ≈ 27 hrs; steady state achieved by day 5–7.
- Drug Interactions: Inhibits absorption when taken with divalent cations (magnesium, calcium, iron, antacids); concomitant use of doxycycline or fluoroquinolones may reduce efficacy.
Indications
- Chronic ITP in adults: refractory to corticosteroid, splenectomy, or other therapies.
- ITP in adults and children 12 yrs or older: failing standard therapy.
- Hepatitis C–related thrombocytopenia: to enable antiviral therapy, in adults & children ≥ 12 yrs.
- Platelet depletion in HIV‑infected patients receiving ritonavir‑boosted protease inhibitors.
Contraindications
- Contraindications:
- Known hypersensitivity to eltrombopag or excipients.
- Active significant liver disease or hepatic failure (ALT/AST > 5× ULN).
- Warnings:
- Thrombosis: Increased risk of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism (PE).
- Retained high platelet counts: Must avoid platelet counts > 450 × 10⁹/L to reduce thrombotic risk.
- Pregnancy: Category B; avoid use if possible during pregnancy or lactation unless the benefit outweighs risk.
- Precautions:
- Monitor LFTs and platelet counts closely.
- Avoid alcohol and hepatotoxic drugs.
- Check iron status—iron deficiency can blunt response.
Dosing
| Population | Initial Dose | Titration | Maintenance | Max Dose | |
| Adults | 50 mg PO once daily | titrate to maintain 50–200 × 10⁹/L | ≤ 150 mg/12 h | 75 mg daily | |
| Children (≥ 12 yrs) | 50 mg PO | same as adults | same | same | |
| Children (6–12 yrs) | 0.75 mg/kg PO | up to 50 mg daily | ≤ 150 mg/12 h |
• Administration: orally, empty stomach. Avoid taking with multivitamins containing multivalent cations; a 12‑hr separation is recommended.
• Dose adjustments: Reduce by 25 % in mild hepatic impairment, discontinue in moderate–severe hepatic dysfunction.
Adverse Effects
- Common (≥10 %): headache, nausea, constipation, arthralgia, fatigue, rash, dysgeusia.
- Serious:
- Elevated liver enzymes (ALT/AST > 5× ULN).
- Thrombosis (DVT, PE, arterial thrombotic events).
- Secondary popliteal lymphedema (rare).
- Iron overload: due to increased iron uptake.
- Other: hypersensitivity reactions, dizziness, anemia.
Monitoring
- Platelet count: every 3–4 days during titration; then weekly until stable; adjust dose to keep within 50–200 × 10⁹/L.
- Liver function tests (ALT/AST, bilirubin): baseline, every 2 weeks for first 3 months, then monthly.
- Ferritin & iron studies: at baseline, especially in patients receiving multiple transfusions.
- Serum creatinine: baseline and periodically for renal safety.
- Signs of thrombosis: assess for swelling, pain, shortness of breath; if suspected, obtain Doppler US or imaging.
Clinical Pearls
- Avoid concomitant iron or multivalent‑cation supplements (including antacids) on the same day; separate by ≥ 2 hrs to preserve absorption.
- Use the lowest effective dose for the shortest time to reduce thrombotic risk; stop treatment when platelet counts normalize.
- Check ferritin first: patients with iron deficiency ( 5× ULN warrant immediate drug discontinuation and referral for liver support.
- For patients on ritonavir‑boosted HAART, start eltrombopag at 25 mg to minimize drug–drug interactions; titrate cautiously.
- Pregnancy & lactation: limited data—consult obstetrician and review risk/benefit before use.
Keywords: eltrombopag, Promacta, thrombopoietin receptor agonist, ITP treatment, platelet production, liver toxicity, thrombosis risk.