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Safety and efficacy of velaglucerase alfa in Gaucher disease type 1 patients previously treated with imiglucerase
Authors:Ari Zimran  Gregory M. Pastores  Anna Tylki‐Szymanska  Derralynn A. Hughes  Deborah Elstein  Rebecca Mardach  Christine Eng  Laurie Smith  Margaret Heisel‐Kurth  Joel Charrow  Paul Harmatz  Paul Fernhoff  William Rhead  Nicola Longo  Pilar Giraldo  Juan A. Ruiz  David Zahrieh  Eric Crombez  Gregory A. Grabowski
Affiliation:1. Shaare Zedek Medical Center and Hebrew University‐Hadassah Medical School, , Jerusalem, Israel;2. New York University School of Medicine, , New York, New York;3. Children's Memorial Health Institute, , Warsaw, Poland;4. Royal Free Hospital, University College London School of Medicine, , London, United Kingdom;5. Kaiser Permanente, , Los Angeles, California;6. Baylor College of Medicine, , Houston, Texas;7. Children's Mercy Hospital, , Kansas City, Missouri;8. Children's Hospitals of Minnesota, , Minneapolis, Minnesota;9. Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago, , Chicago, Illinois;10. Children's Hospital Oakland, , Oakland, California;11. Emory University, , Decatur, Georgia;12. Children's Hospital of Wisconsin, , Milwaukee, Wisconsin;13. University of Utah, , Salt Lake City, Utah;14. Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades Raras (CIBERER) and Hospital Universitario Miguel Servet, , Zaragoza, Spain;15. Shire Human Genetic Therapies, , Lexington, Massachusetts;16. Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, , Cincinnati, Ohio
Abstract:Velaglucerase alfa is a glucocerebrosidase produced by gene activation technology in a human fibroblast cell line (HT‐1080), and it is indicated as an enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) for the treatment of Gaucher disease type 1 (GD1). This multicenter, open‐label, 12‐month study examined the safety and efficacy of velaglucerase alfa in patients with GD1 previously receiving imiglucerase. Eligible patients, ≥2 years old and clinically stable on imiglucerase therapy, were switched to velaglucerase alfa at a dose equal to their prior imiglucerase dose. Infusion durations were 1 hr every other week. Forty patients received velaglucerase alfa (18 male, 22 female; four previously splenectomized; age range 9–71 years). Velaglucerase alfa was generally well tolerated with most adverse events (AEs) of mild or moderate severity. The three most frequently reported AEs were headache (12 of 40 patients), arthralgia (9 of 40 patients), and nasopharyngitis (8 of 40 patients). No patients developed antibodies to velaglucerase alfa. There was one serious AE considered treatment‐related: a Grade 2 anaphylactoid reaction within 30 min of the first infusion. The patient withdrew; this was the only AE‐related withdrawal. Hemoglobin concentrations, platelet counts, and spleen and liver volumes remained stable through 12 months. In conclusion, adult and pediatric patients with GD1, previously treated with imiglucerase, successfully transitioned to velaglucerase alfa, which was generally well tolerated and demonstrated efficacy over 12 months' treatment consistent with that observed in the velaglucerase alfa Phase 3 clinical trial program. Am. J. Hematol. 88:172–178, 2013. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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