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Low-dose cyclophosphamide combined with standard immunosuppressive therapy improves early response rates in severe aplastic anemia

Front Immunol. 2026 Jan 30;17:1741042. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2026.1741042. eCollection 2026.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Thrombopoietin receptor agonists combined with anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG) and cyclosporine (CsA) are the standard immunosuppressive therapy (IST) for severe/very severe aplastic anemia (SAA/VSAA). However, early response rates remain suboptimal. Cyclophosphamide (CTX) has shown efficacy in relapsed/refractory AA. Therefore, we designed a clinical trial to evaluate low-dose CTX combined with the standard IST as a first-line treatment for SAA/VSAA to improve early response rates.

METHODS: This study was a single-arm, prospective, phase II clinical trial using a Simon’s two-stage design, and 43 patients were enrolled. The primary endpoint was the overall response rate (ORR) at 3 months. Newly diagnosed SAA/VSAA patients received a combination treatment as follows: porcine ATG at 25 mg/kg/day from days 1 to 5, CsA at 3-5 mg/kg/day continuously, hetrombopag at 15 mg/day starting from day 1 and continued for 6 months, low-dose CTX at 20 mg/kg/day on days 29-30 and days 43-44.

RESULTS: All 43 patients achieved the primary endpoint, demonstrating 3-month and 6-month ORR of 65.1% (28/43) and 69.8% (30/43) respectively. Complete response (CR) rates were 9.3% (4/43) at 3-month and 27.9% (12/43) at 6-month. CTX associated toxicities comprised 100% grade 1-2 gastrointestinal reactions, grade 3-4 neutropenia in 62.8% of patients (median duration 6 days, range 4-33). Infectious events occurred in 60.5% (26/43) of patients within the first 3 months of treatment, while no mortality observed during this period.

CONCLUSIONS: Low-dose CTX combined with standard IST appears to improve the early response rate in SAA/VSAA patients with manageable toxicity.

PMID:41694401 | PMC:PMC12902132 | DOI:10.3389/fimmu.2026.1741042