G. Vreugdenhil et al., ERYTHROPOIETIN - MECHANISMS OF ACTION AND INDICATIONS FOR TREATMENT, Netherlands journal of medicine, 42(5-6), 1993, pp. 187-202
We review data concerning site and regulation of erythropoietin (EPO)
production, its effects on target tissue, routes of administration and
clinical applications. In the anaemia of chronic renal failure (ACRF)
treatment with recombinant human erythropoietin (r-Hu-EPO) has been s
hown to be effective in both improvement of the anaemia and increase i
n quality of life. In the anaemia of chronic disease (ACD), associated
with various malignant, infectious and inflammatory disorders, many i
nvestigators have demonstrated an inappropriately low EPO response to
anaemia. Therapeutic trials in patients with ACD mostly lacked suffici
ent numbers of patients for evaluation of the effects. The results obt
ained from some studies in AIDS and rheumatoid arthritis and the effec
t on the number of units of autologous blood obtained from patients pl
anned for elective surgery are encouraging, however. Adverse reactions
of r-Hu-EPO treatment are mainly confined to the ACRF population and
include hypertension, shunt thrombosis and pain at the injection site.
The exact mechanism of action of EPO is not yet fully understood. Lar
ge scale clinical trials are required to establish its effects on both
the anaemia and quality of life in anaemias other than ACRF.