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1.
BeneFix, the only recombinant factor IX (FIX), has been reformulated. The reformulation involves a change in diluent and allows for more concentrated infusions of recombinant FIX. A double-blind, randomized, pharmacokinetic (PK) crossover study demonstrated that reformulated BeneFix was bioequivalent to original BeneFix and follow-up PK evaluation after 6 months of treatment demonstrated the PK stability of reformulated BeneFix after multiple exposures. Favourable efficacy and safety profiles, consistent with those already well-established for original BeneFix, were observed: 81.1% of haemorrhages resolved with only a single infusion; 85.3% of initial treatment response ratings were Excellent or Good; more than half of the subjects using reformulated BeneFix for routine prophylaxis (11 of 17, 64.7%) had no spontaneous haemorrhages during their 6-12 month course of prophylactic treatment, with an overall spontaneous bleeding rate of 0.72 year(-1); and for the single surgical procedure (knee washing), treatment was rated Useful. In addition, there was no FIX inhibitor development, allergic-type manifestations, or thrombogenic complications with more than 1100 infusions (nearly 5.2 million IUs) administered in this trial. All efficacy and safety outcomes from this study were achieved with more concentrated recombinant protein infusions than that possible with original BeneFix, and utilization of the 2000 IU per vial dosage strength, newly introduced with the reformulated product, was high (>62%). The reformulation of BeneFix allows smaller delivery volumes and an increased choice of dosage strengths without altering the PK properties (including incremental recovery and half-life) or the established efficacy and safety profile of recombinant FIX.  相似文献   

2.
Immunate Solvent Detergent (S/D) is a plasma derived, purified, human factor VIII (FVIII) - von Willebrand factor (VWF) complex subjected to two virus inactivation/removal processes: S/D and vapor heat treatment. This prospective, multicentre, three-part clinical study evaluated the pharmacokinetics (in comparison to the predecessor product Immunate), efficacy and safety of Immunate S/D in 56 previously treated patients with severe haemophilia A. Subjects received Immunate S/D on-demand, as a prophylactic regimen or both. The results of the pharmacokinetic population demonstrate that Immunate and Immunate S/D were equivalent with respect to the FVIII - and to the retrospectively VWF - parameters assessed. A total of 623 bleeding episodes were reported in 47/56 subjects. The duration of prophylaxis ranged from 0.1-5.2 months with a total of 175.6 months. The median number of bleeds per month in subjects on prophylaxis was 0 (range 0-10). Ninety-six percent of bleeding episodes were rated as having an excellent or good response. For most bleeding episodes (89%), subjects required only one infusion with a mean dose of 29.6 IU kg(-1). No FVIII inhibitory antibodies were observed in any subject. No related serious adverse events were reported. Thus, the introduction of S/D treatment did not alter the PK characteristics and function of VWF and FVIII molecules of Immunate S/D which is effective and safe for treatment of bleeding episodes, management of surgical procedures, and prophylaxis.  相似文献   

3.
Summary.  A Nordic multicentre, open-label, non-interventional postmarketing surveillance study was carried out during a period of 24 months evaluating safety and efficacy of ReFacto as prophylactic or on-demand replacement therapy in patients with haemophilia A treated by self-medication. Fifty-seven patients were enrolled and studied for safety; efficacy was evaluated in 39 patients who received ReFacto for 24 months and recorded sufficient diary data on a hand-held computer. The compliance of using the device was good in small children, variable in adults and poor in teenagers. The fact that the overall compliance was low constituted a limitation of the number of patients with reliable diary data. Overall safety was rated as excellent or good by the clinicians for all patients at all visits and overall efficacy at 24 months evaluated to be excellent (74%) or good (26%). It was noticed that ≥50% of patients/parents reported no absences from school or work owing to bleeding episodes during the study period. Among patients on regular prophylaxis, 6 of the 30 patients (20%) receiving ReFacto experienced no bleeding episodes. A median of four bleeding episodes occurred during the 24-month study period, and 93% of the episodes were resolved with ≤2 ReFacto infusions. In the 7 on-demand patients, there was a median of 18 bleeding episodes, 87% of which resolved with ≤2 ReFacto infusions. Interestingly, 42% of the ReFacto infusions taken by the patients classified to the on-demand group were registered as prophylactic treatment. In conclusion, ReFacto demonstrated good safety and efficacy in prophylaxis as well as treatment of bleeding episodes.  相似文献   

4.
A pilot clinical trial was conducted in five patients with severe hemophilia A to evaluate the safety and efficacy of a recombinant human factor VIII preparation, BAY w 6240 (rFVIII). In a comparative pharmacokinetic study of rFVIII and a plasma-derived factor VIII preparation (pdFVIII), the mean t1/2 values for rFVIII at week 1 and week 13 were 16.8 and 14.4 h, while this value for pdFVIII at week -2 was 16.9 h. There were no statistical differences between these values. The mean in vivo recovery rates of rFVIII were comparable to those of pdFVIII. When rFVIII was administered prophylactically three times a week for 4 weeks, no bleeding episodes were observed. Seventy-four bleeding episodes were assessed during the 6-month treatment period. The efficacy rate of the hemostatic effect was confirmed to be 95.9%. No adverse reactions attributable to rFVIII were observed in a total of 178 infusions. Neither FVIII-inhibitors nor antibodies to foreign proteins were detected. Vital signs and laboratory findings showed no significant changes attributable to rFVIII. These results suggest that rFVIII is safe and efficacious as replacement therapy for hemophilia A.  相似文献   

5.
The recombinant full-length FVIII product Kogenate has been reformulated using sucrose (rFVIII-FS) instead of human serum albumin as a stabiliser in purification and formulation. The in vivo recovery, haemostatic efficacy, and safety of rFVIII-FS were investigated in 20 previously treated patients with severe or moderate haemophilia A for > or = 24 weeks. In vivo recoveries of 73.5 +/- 16.3%, 78.4 +/- 16.1%, and 82.8 +/- 23.9% after the initial infusion of 50 IU kg(-1) rFVIII-FS and at weeks 12 and 24, respectively, showed no significant changes over time. A total of 1115 infusions (mean dose 24.1 +/- 8.4 IU kg(-1)) were included in the analysis of haemostatic efficacy. One (80.5%) or two (8.2%) infusions achieved adequate haemostasis in 88.7% of all bleeding episodes, and haemostatic efficacy was judged 'excellent' or 'good' in 749 of 764 episodes (98.0%). The haemostatic efficacy was judged as 'excellent' or 'good' in 924 of 1115 (82.9%) infusions. Twenty-one adverse events were observed in 12 patients in the total 1541 infusions included in the safety analysis. Causality with respect to rFVIII-FS could not be ruled out in three events in one HIV-negative patient: elevated CD4(%), decreased CD8(%), and elevated CD4/CD8 ratio. No FVIII inhibitor development was observed in any patient. ELISA assay testing for antibodies to rFVIII, baby hamster kidney cell (BHK) protein, and murine IgG were all negative. These results show that rFVIII-FS is a safe and effective for long-term treatment of patients with haemophilia A.  相似文献   

6.
Nemes L  Pollmann H  Becker T 《Haemophilia》2012,18(4):496-502
The aim of this open-label, multicentre and multinational post-marketing surveillance was to investigate clinical effectiveness, safety and tolerability of a plasma-derived and vWF containing factor VIII product (FVIII/VWF) in patients with severe haemophilia A. Long-term effectiveness, safety and tolerability were investigated in a total of 109 haemophilia A patients treated for prophylaxis or on-demand, as required. Interim data collected until June 2010 are presented. Most patients (99/109; 90.8%) were previously treated patients (PTPs). Mean observation period was 82.6 months. Overall, patients received 105 131 425 IU haemoctin SDH during 68 624 administrations. Each patient was given a mean of 635.4 injections, whereby about half of the administrations were given for treatment of bleeding episodes (46.9%) and the other administrations for prophylactic reasons (53.1%). Patients on prophylaxis had a median of 0.8 bleeding episodes per month. The expected therapeutic effect was reached in 99.3% of treatments. The incidence of clinically relevant inhibitor formation in patients with severe haemophilia (FVIII activity ≤ 1%) was 1.2% for PTPs. One previously untreated patient with severe haemophilia had a clinically relevant transient inhibitor. No treatment related transmissions of hepatitis A, B and C and HIV 1/2 were observed. German patients had a higher extent of exposure and experienced less bleeding episodes than Hungarian patients. In conclusion, haemoctin SDH was effective, safe and well tolerated in long-term prophylaxis and treatment on demand.  相似文献   

7.
Summary. Factor IX Grifols® is a new high‐purity plasma‐derived FIX concentrate with two specific pathogen elimination steps. Until this study was performed, there were no detailed reports with an adequate number of patients on the clinical evaluation of this product. To determine the efficacy and safety of Factor IX Grifols® for replacement therapy in previously treated patients with severe haemophilia B, this open, multicentre and non‐randomized study included 25 male subjects over the age of 12 with severe haemophilia B. Patients underwent prophylaxis and treatment of bleeding episodes with Factor IX Grifols® for 1 year. The clinical efficacy and safety of this product were assessed. Forty percent of the patients were children and adolescents (12–17 years old). During the 12 months follow‐up, 1 446 000 IU of Factor IX Grifols® were administered in 961 infusions (range 12–83 infusions per patient): 31% for prophylaxis and 69% for bleeding episodes. Only five major bleeding events were reported in two patients. These haemorrhages were successfully treated with a mean of 2900 IU per bleed (range 1500–4000 IU), and 1–3 infusions per bleed. The average time elapsed from the first infusion to resolution of bleeding was 43 h (median). Overall, haemostasis was rated as excellent or good by the investigator in 96% of the infusions. No product‐related adverse events were reported. Factor IX Grifols® is an effective and safe Factor IX concentrate and can be considered as a first line option for replacement therapy in haemophilia B patients.  相似文献   

8.
Summary. Plasma‐derived factor IX (FIX) concentrate remains an important choice for replacement therapy in haemophilia B patients. Haemonine ® is a high purity double‐virus inactivated human plasma‐derived coagulation FIX concentrate (pdFIX). Aim was to evaluate the clinical efficacy, safety and pharmacokinetic properties of Haemonine in three prospective, open‐label uncontrolled studies and a compassionate use program in previously treated patients with severe haemophilia B. Long‐term efficacy and safety were investigated in 29 patients treated prophylactically and, in addition, treatment on‐demand (TOD) in the case of acute haemorrhage. Pharmacokinetic properties were assessed in 14 patients at baseline and after 3 months of regular treatment. Pharmacokinetic parameters were in accordance with published data and remained nearly unchanged over time, notably recovery and half‐life. Mean terminal elimination half‐life was 27.6 h and 25.0 h, mean incremental recovery (IU dL?1/IU kg?1) was 1.55 and 1.60, at baseline and 3 months, respectively. Haemonine was shown to be effective in preventing and controlling bleeds. 55.2% (16/29) of patients were free of bleeds under prophylaxis. 38 haemorrhages occurred, 42% (16/38) required treatment and 87.5% (14/16) resolved after a single infusion, 12.5% after 2 infusions. All responses reported on haemorrhages were rated as ‘excellent’ or ‘good’. Moreover, ‘excellent’ haemostatic efficacy was demonstrated in 12 surgeries with no complications. Few adverse events (AEs) and no thrombogenic complication, nor induction of FIX inhibitory antibodies were observed. Haemonine is effective, safe and well tolerated in long‐term prophylaxis, TOD and when applied after minor and major surgeries.  相似文献   

9.
An open-label multicentre trial was conducted to evaluate high-dose DDAVP (desmopressin acetate) intranasal spray (Stimate; 1.5 mg mL(-1)), for the control of bleeding in 333 patients with mild haemophilia A, mild or moderate type 1 von Willebrand disease, or symptomatic carriers of haemophilia A. Overall, 278 patients received 2170 doses of high-dose DDAVP intranasal spray (1.5 mg mL(-1)). Using study-defined guidelines, patients evaluated the efficacy of high-dose DDAVP intranasal spray (1.5 mg mL(-1)) as 'excellent' or 'good' in 743 (95%) of 784 bleeding episodes. It demonstrated 'excellent' results in 384 (93%) of 413 administrations for prophylaxis and in eight of eight uses prior to acute surgical or dental procedures. When used for the treatment of menorrhagia, the efficacy of high-dose DDAVP intranasal spray (1.5 mg mL(-1)) was rated as 'excellent' after 655 (92%) of 721 daily uses. Of 2170 doses of high-dose DDAVP intranasal spray (1.5 mg mL(-1)), 172 (8%) were associated with adverse events. A total of 272 adverse events were reported among 80 patients. Of these, 239 (88%) were mild or moderate in intensity and only one patient was removed from the study due to an adverse event. These results demonstrate the safety and efficacy of high-dose DDAVP intranasal spray (1.5 mg mL(-1)) for control of bleeding episodes in patients with mildly decreased levels of factor VIII, von Willebrand factor, or both.  相似文献   

10.
Summary.  To increase the safety of antihaemophilic treatment, the production process of full-length recombinant factor VIII (FVIII) KOGENATE® Bayer (Kogenate®FS)has been modified. Human albumin is no longer added as stabilizer during purification and in final formulation. Instead, the new KOGENATE® Bayer production process uses sucrose as a stabilizer in the formulation and adds solvent/detergent virus inactivation step. An European clinical trial was carried out in Germany and France in previously treated patients with severe haemophilia A who had more than 100 exposure days to exogenous FVIII. Pharmacokinetic data was analysed according to one-stage and chromogenic assays. Efficacy and safety during home therapy and in surgical procedures were evaluated; inhibitor formation was carefully monitored. Safety and efficacy were evaluated in 33 European patients for 24 months. Patients received more than 13 million IU KOGENATE® Bayer. Over 75% of patients accrued more than 100 exposure days with the new product. Of 875 bleeding episodes, 90.7% were treated with 1 or 2 infusions and 75.8% of responses to treatment were rated as 'excellent' or 'good'. Prophylactic treatment was the most common mode of therapy (60.7% of infusions). The product was well-tolerated and FVIII recovery studies were consistent throughout the study period. Only 0.26% of adverse events were reported to be drug related. No evidence of de novo inhibitor formation was observed. Overall, KOGENATE® Bayer was efficacious, safe and well-tolerated for the treatment of haemophilia A in multitransfused patients.  相似文献   

11.
Among patients with von Willebrand disease (VWD) who are unresponsive to desmopressin therapy, replacement with plasma-derived concentrates is the treatment of choice. Because prospective studies are lacking, such treatment has been largely empirical. A multicenter, prospective study has been conducted in 81 patients with VWD (15 patients with type 1, 34 with type 2, and 32 with type 3 disease) to investigate the efficacy of a high-purity factor VIII/von Willebrand factor (FVIII/VWF) concentrate for treatment of bleeding and surgical prophylaxis. Two preparations of the concentrate-one virally inactivated with solvent detergent, the other with an additional heat-treatment step--were evaluated. Pharmacokinetic parameters were similar for both preparations. Using pre-established dosages based on the results of pharmacokinetic studies, 53 patients were administered either preparation for the treatment of 87 bleeding episodes, and 39 patients were treated prophylactically for 71 surgical or invasive procedures. Sixty-five (74.7%) and 10 (11.5%) of the bleeding episodes were controlled with 1 or 2 infusions, respectively. Patients with severe type 3 VWD typically required more infusions and higher doses, at shorter time intervals, than did patients with generally milder types 1 and 2. Among patients undergoing surgical procedures, blood loss was lower than that predicted prospectively, and losses exceeding the predicted value did not correlate with the postinfusion skin bleeding time. In conclusion, the concentrate effectively stopped active bleeding and provided adequate hemostasis for surgical or invasive procedures, even in the absence of bleeding time correction.  相似文献   

12.
Summary. Prophylaxis is increasingly prescribed in treatment of haemophilia and its benefit is believed to be most significant for the youngest patients as haemophilic arthropathy may be prevented if prophylaxis is initiated prior to recurrent haemarthroses. While clinical prophylaxis data are readily available for haemophilia A, analogous data for haemophilia B are relatively limited. A prospective clinical study of recombinant factor IX (BeneFIX®; rFIX), designed to allow investigator prescribed prophylaxis according to customary practices, was conducted in children <6 years old with severe haemophilia B. Nearly all children were prescribed prophylaxis (22/25; 88%) for all or part of their study participation. Favourable efficacy and safety profiles were reported. Routine prophylaxis with 1 or 2 rFIX infusions per week over an average of greater than 6 months of therapy resulted in near complete prevention of spontaneous breakthrough haemorrhages (<1 per year), with most children (77%) having none, including seven patients (32%) who had no bleeding episodes at all. Haemorrhages in joints were less common than those outside joints (27% vs. 73% of haemorrhages). In a patient population that included children with multiple prior haemarthroses, 68% of children had no joint bleeding. Breakthrough haemorrhages resolved with 1 or 2 infusions in 89% of episodes. The absence of changes in prophylaxis infusion schedules suggests that 1 or 2 rFIX infusion(s) per week were well‐tolerated by these young patients, including those with (41%) and without (59%) central venous access devices. Safety was established by the low incidence of treatment‐related adverse events.  相似文献   

13.
Background:Nonacog alfa (recombinant factor IX [FIX]) is approved in China for the control and prevention of bleeding events in patients with hemophilia B. This was the first study to assess prophylaxis and on-demand therapy with recombinant FIX replacement in a real-world setting in China. This study aimed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of nonacog alfa in Chinese patients with hemophilia B.Methods:In this open-label, multicenter study (clinicaltrials.gov identifier NCT02336178), patients received on-demand or prophylactic treatment with intravenous nonacog alfa for approximately 6 months or 50 exposure days, whichever occurred first. The primary safety outcome was medically important events (i.e., development of FIX inhibitors, allergic reactions, and thrombotic events). Key secondary efficacy outcomes included the annualized bleeding rate for on-demand treatment and prophylaxis, response to on-demand treatment, the number of infusions per bleeding event, and the number of breakthrough bleeding events within 48 hours of prophylaxis.Results:Seventy male patients (mean [standard deviation] age 7.8 [7.2] years) were enrolled (on-demand, n = 37; prophylaxis, n = 57 [24 patients were included in both groups]). Thirty-eight (54%) patients had up to 50 FIX exposure days before the study. The only medically important event was a transient low-titer FIX inhibitor (incidence 1.4%, 95% confidence interval, 0–7.7). The mean annualized bleeding rate was 26.3 for on-demand treatment and 6.5 for prophylaxis. A mean (standard deviation) of 1.5 (1.7) nonacog alfa infusions were given per bleeding episode; 78.8% of episodes resolved with 1 infusion. Response was “excellent” or “good” for 88% of the on-demand infusions. Twenty-three bleeding events (n = 11 patients) occurred within 48 hours of 2032 prophylaxis doses (1.13%).Conclusion:In the real-world setting, nonacog alfa is safe and effective for on-demand treatment and for prophylaxis for patients with hemophilia B in China.  相似文献   

14.

Introduction

Haemophilia A patients are at a high risk of excess bleeding during surgeries. The aim of haemostatic therapy during the perioperative period is to normalize FVIII level perioperatively and postoperatively to maintain normal haemostasis until wound healing is complete.

Aims/Methods

To examine the efficacy of Nuwiq® (simoctocog alfa, human‐cl rhFVIII), a 4th generation recombinant FVIII produced in a human cell line, for surgical prophylaxis in patients with severe haemophilia A. This analysis assessed the efficacy of Nuwiq® during surgical procedures and in the postoperative period in seven clinical studies of previously treated patients (PTPs) with severe haemophilia A.

Results

Thirty‐six patients, aged 3‐55 years, received surgical prophylaxis with Nuwiq® for 60 surgeries (28 major and 32 minor). Efficacy was evaluated for 52 surgeries (25 major and 27 minor). The success rate of Nuwiq® treatment was 98.1% (51 of 52 evaluated surgeries); haemostatic efficacy was assessed as “excellent” or “good” in all but one major surgery (assessed as “moderate”). The number of infusions ranged from 1 to 19 for minor surgeries and from 3 to 76 for major surgeries. The median (range) daily doses were 42.0 (28.2‐100.9) IU kg?1 for minor surgeries and 69.3 (43.3‐135.6) IU kg?1 for major surgeries. There were no serious treatment‐related adverse events, and none of the patients developed FVIII inhibitors.

Conclusions

The results of this pooled analysis show that Nuwiq® was efficacious in maintaining haemostasis during and after major and minor surgical procedures in PTPs with severe haemophilia A.  相似文献   

15.
Summary. Factor replacement with BIOSTATE®, a factor VIII (FVIII)/von Willebrand factor concentrate, forms the mainstay of treatment for children with von Willebrand disorder (VWD) in Australia and New Zealand. However, published data on the clinical efficacy and safety of BIOSTATE in the VWD paediatric population are limited. We retrospectively assessed the efficacy and safety of BIOSTATE in 43 children with VWD who received treatment for surgery, non‐surgical bleeds or continuous prophylaxis at eight paediatric haemophilia centres in Australia and New Zealand. Data were collected on patient demographics, disease history, treatment history, dosage, administration, adverse reactions, concomitant medications and excessive bleeding events. BIOSTATE provided excellent/good haemostatic efficacy in 90% of surgical procedures (n = 42) with a mean daily FVIII dose of 47 IU FVIII:C kg?1 and a median treatment duration of 3 days. Excellent/good haemostatic efficacy was achieved in 94% of non‐surgical bleeding events (n = 72) with a mean FVIII dose of 45 IU FVIII:C kg?1 day?1 and a median treatment duration of 1 day. There were no bleeding events attributable to lack of efficacy. One case of nausea, possibly related to BIOSTATE administration, was reported. These results suggest that BIOSTATE is safe and effective for the treatment and prophylaxis of bleeding in children with VWD.  相似文献   

16.
Summary. Replacement therapy or prophylaxis, has become the standard of care for the treatment of severe haemophilia A. To describe bleeding patterns in children, adolescents and adults on prophylaxis and their observed relationships to times of infusion (during the week and during the day) as well as season of the year. Data from Advate pre‐licensure prospective clinical trials from 145 patients with factor VIII (FVIII) <1%, were used. All patients underwent a 48‐h pharmacokinetic study. The 10–65 year group had ≥75 exposure days on fixed prophylaxis (25–40 IU kg?1 3–4x per week). Prophylaxis was not fixed but similar for 1–6 year olds. Bleeding patterns were analysed. Overall, 700 bleeds were observed in 110/145 patients. All were treated with prophylaxis, mean dose 108 IU kg?1 week?1 in on average 2.9 infusions (1–6 years), 86 IU kg ?1week?1 in 2.7 infusions (10–17 years),and 75 IU kg ?1week?1 in 2.6 infusions (18–65 years), respectively. On prophylaxis, median total bleeds per year were low at 3.1 for patients aged 1–6 years, 3.3 for those aged 10–17 years and 2.1 for patients aged 18–65 years. Patients aged 1–6 years had predominantly soft tissue bleeds (79%). Incidence of joint bleeding was not associated with season, but was significantly lower in patients who infused FVIII in the mornings: median 0 per year (IQR 0.0–0.4) compared to those who infused later [median 1.8 per year (IQR 0.0–5.2)]. Older patients predominantly experienced joint bleeds (50% and 62%, respectively). More joint bleeds occurred during the summer [43 and 46% respectively, (P < 0.01)]. Bleeding patterns in patients on prophylaxis varied according to age. In addition, the 10–65 year olds showed increased bleeding during the summer. After confirmation in prospective studies, this information may be used to improve tailoring of prophylactic treatment.  相似文献   

17.
Summary. Effective treatment with factor IX (FIX) requires a thorough consideration of the properties of the concentrate to be used as replacement therapy, to date, the only available treatment for haemophilia B. The aim of the study was to determine the pharmacokinetics, clinical efficacy and safety in routine clinical use of AlphaNine®, a high‐purity human FIX concentrate. This open, single‐arm, multicentre, non‐randomized trial included 25 subjects (age ≥ 12) with moderate/severe haemophilia B. Pharmacokinetics was assessed at baseline and after a 6‐month follow‐up. The degree of haemostasis control achieved was evaluated during a 12‐month follow‐up. Safety was evaluated in terms of tolerance, thrombogenicity, immunogenicity and viral safety. Mean recovery was 1.01 ± 0.19 IU dL?1 per IU kg?1 at baseline and 1.23 ± 0.34 IU dL?1 per IU kg?1 6 months later. Terminal half‐life was 34.5 ± 6.2 h and 33.7 ± 5.4 h, respectively. Ratios of each parameter between the two pharmacokinetic studies were all close to 1. A total of 1,576,890 IU AlphaNine® were administered in 889 infusions (mean dose per infusion: 1774 IU; 3.2 infusions per month per patient). The main reasons for infusion were mild/moderate bleeding (62.3%) and prophylaxis (20.5% continuous, 15.6% intermittent). Overall, 93.0% of the efficacy assessments were rated as excellent/good and 88.8% of bleedings resolved after the first infusion. Twenty‐one adverse events were reported in eight patients, none of which was considered related to the study medication. AlphaNine® showed a pharmacokinetic profile in agreement with that of other plasma‐derived FIX concentrates and provides safe and clinically effective substitution therapy for patients with haemophilia B.  相似文献   

18.
D A Roth  C M Kessler  K J Pasi  B Rup  S G Courter  K L Tubridy 《Blood》2001,98(13):3600-3606
Human plasma-derived factor IX (pdFIX) concentrates are routinely used to treat patients with hemophilia B, an X-linked bleeding disorder that affects 1 in 30 000 males, but concerns remain regarding transmission of blood-borne pathogens. Therefore, the safety and efficacy of recombinant human factor IX (rFIX) were evaluated. A 20-center international trial was conducted in previously treated patients with severe or moderate (< 5 IU/dL factor IX activity) hemophilia B. Participants received rFIX for pharmacokinetic studies, treatment of or prophylaxis against hemorrhage, or surgical hemostasis, and were assessed at 3-month intervals for 2 years. Fifty-six subjects were treated. Mean incremental rFIX recovery was 0.75 IU/dL per IU/kg, 30% lower than expected for pdFIX, although the mean half-life was similar. Pharmacokinetic parameters were stable over time. Somewhat lower recoveries were seen in subjects younger than 15 years of age and in those with no detectable factor IX antigen. A total of 7362 infusions of rFIX were administered. All 1796 hemorrhages were controlled, 80.9% of which required only one rFIX infusion. Effective hemostasis was also achieved in prophylactic and surgical settings. One individual developed a low titer (1.2 Bethesda unit) transient inhibitor that spontaneously resolved. rFIX was not associated with serious adverse events, thrombogenicity, or virus transmission. rFIX is safe and effective for the treatment of hemophilia B. Despite a lower recovery compared with pdFIX, rFIX controlled hemorrhage in a wide variety of settings and may provide a safety advantage in terms of risk from blood-borne pathogens.  相似文献   

19.
von Willebrand disease (VWD) is characterized by insufficient von Willebrand factor (VWF) activity. It has been proposed that VWF:ristocetin cofactor (VWF:RCo) activity may be useful in evaluating the response to VWD treatment in patients who require replacement therapy. This prospective, open-label, non-randomized study evaluated the safety and efficacy of a factor VIII (FVIII)/VWF concentrate (Humate-P) used in treatment regimens based on VWF:RCo activity in subjects with VWD in situations requiring urgent and necessary surgery. This article summarizes the results for 39 subjects with 42 evaluable surgical treatment events, 100% of which were rated as excellent/good for overall efficacy (achievement of haemostasis). The median loading dose based upon VWF:RCo activity was 82.3 international units/kilogram (IU kg(-1); range 32.5-216.8 IU kg(-1)), and the median maintenance dose per infusion was 52.8 IU kg(-1) (range 24.2-196.5 IU kg(-1)) for a median of 3 days (range 1-50 days). The median number of infusions per event was 6 (range 1-67 infusions). Three unanticipated adverse events (peripheral oedema, extremity pain and pseudo-thrombocytopenia) from two surgical treatment events were reported that were potentially treatment-related. No serious drug-related adverse events (AEs) were observed, and no thrombotic events were reported in this study. This study supports the safety and efficacy of the FVIII/VWF concentrate Humate-P for the prevention of surgical haemorrhage in patients with VWD when administered in doses calculated in VWF:RCo units.  相似文献   

20.
This clinical trial evaluated the safety and efficacy of ReFacto (St Louis-derived active substance) in patients with severe or moderately severe haemophilia A over a period of 6 months or 50 exposure days (EDs), whichever occurred first. Sixty patients, 58 previously treated and two previously untreated, were enrolled into this study. This was an open-label, multicentre, postmarketing surveillance study in which patients received prophylaxis or on-demand treatment as determined by their doctor. Surgical prophylaxis was evaluated in seven patients requiring elective surgery. Thirty-two patients aged <1 to 66 years (median 19.5) received prophylaxis and 28 patients, aged 1-71 years (median 33.5), received on-demand treatment. The majority of patients had severe haemophilia A (FVIII:C < 2%): 84.4% in the prophylaxis group and 85.7% in the on-demand group. Prophylaxis with ReFacto was associated with a median of 6.7 bleeds per year (range: 0-37). The investigator's assessment of final outcome for prophylactic treatment was excellent or effective for 93.1% of patients. ReFacto resolved 92.8% of bleeds with one or two infusions. The investigator's assessment was excellent or good for 98.2% of bleeds treated with ReFacto. Haemostasis was achieved for all seven surgical cases and ReFacto gave an excellent or good response for each. The nature and incidence of adverse events was as expected and no new safety concerns emerged. One previously treated patient (PTP) developed a high-titre inhibitor (maximum 75 BU) and one minimally treated patient (MTP) developed a low-titre inhibitor while on the study but eventually achieved high titres (maximum 30 BU) after immune tolerance therapy was initiated with a plasma-derived FVIII product. One previously untreated patient (PUP) developed a transient low-titre inhibitor (0.4 BU). Other serious adverse events (SAEs) were unrelated to study treatment. There were no allergic events. The results of this study are consistent with the previously published ReFacto pivotal studies.  相似文献   

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