# Efficacy and safety of thalidomide with hydroxyurea in sickle cell anemia: a quasi-experimental clinical trial

**Authors:** Priyanka Samal, Anindita Paul, Harshwardhan Bahirat, Ajit Kumar Bishoyi, Venkatarao Epari

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s44313-025-00068-4 · Blood Research · 2025-04-01

## TL;DR

This study found that combining thalidomide with hydroxyurea significantly improves outcomes for sickle cell anemia patients compared to hydroxyurea alone.

## Contribution

The study introduces a novel combination therapy of thalidomide and hydroxyurea for treating sickle cell anemia.

## Key findings

- Group A had significantly fewer vaso-occlusive crises and transfusions compared to Group B.
- The combination therapy increased hemoglobin and fetal hemoglobin levels while decreasing sickle hemoglobin levels.
- The results were statistically significant with p-values less than 0.0001.

## Abstract

The clinical course of sickle cell anemia (SCA) is variable, with chronic hemolysis and end-organ damage caused by microvascular occlusion. We evaluated the efficacy and safety of thalidomide plus hydroxyurea (HU) compared with HU alone to determine whether the combination provides a superior clinical benefit and safety profile.

This was an open-label quasi-experimental clinical trial (Clinical Trials Registry of India, CTRI Registration Number 2023/04/065682). Patients with SCA aged > 12 years and postmenopausal females aged > 45 years were allocated 1:1 to receive either HU (20 mg/kg/day) and thalidomide (50 mg/day) in Group A or HU (20 mg/kg/day) only in Group B.

The frequency of vaso-occlusive crises (VOCs), transfusion requirements, variations in hematological parameters (hemoglobin [Hb], fetal hemoglobin [HbF], and sickle hemoglobin [HbS]), and side effects between the groups were assessed over 12 months. Repeated-measures analysis of variance was used to determine changes across the observation period. The mean age of the 66 patients diagnosed with SCA (homozygous HbS mutation) was 32.9 (standard deviation ± 11.5) years, and 57.6% were males. Over the 12-month observation period, Group A had significantly fewer VOCs (3.48 ± 2.81) and packed red blood cell transfusions (3.61 ± 2.19) than Group B (11.36 ± 4.20 VOCs; 13.27 ± 3.70 transfusions) (p = 0.0001). There was a significant increase in Hb (8.2 ± 1.8 to 11.8 ± 1.2 g/dL), a decrease in HbS% (72.5 ± 5.5 to 64.5 ± 5.4), and a rise in HbF% (18.9 ± 5.1 to 28.4 ± 5.6) (p < 0.0001) in Group A.

Combining thalidomide with HU significantly reduced VOCs and transfusion requirements, improved Hb and HbF%, and decreased HbS levels.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** thalidomide (PubChem CID 5426), hydroxyurea (PubChem CID 3657)
- **Diseases:** sickle cell anemia (MONDO:0011382)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** microvascular occlusion (MESH:D017566), chronic hemolysis (MESH:D006461), end-organ damage (MESH:C564816), sickle hemoglobin (MESH:D006450), SCA (MESH:D000755), VOCs (MESH:D013224)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11961824/full.md

## References

9 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11961824/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11961824