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Hemophilia Management: Joint Bleeds and Prophylaxis
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Factor VIII Measures FVIII:C correlates with bleeding phenotype – Inter-patient variability – Non-linear relationship with bleed frequency FVIII:C and aPTT assess only plasma matrix
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MANAGEMENT OF JOINT BLEED?
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Joint Bleeding Management The cryoprecipitate days (1970s) – Clinical observations 20 IU/kg recommended – Penner and Kelly 1977 Compared “success rates” of three doses “success” defined as clincial resolution of bleed with one dose of cryoprecitate – 7-9 IU/kg 90% – 11-13 IU/kg 79% – 15-17 IU/kg 94%
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Joint Bleeding Management The cryoprecipitate days (1970s) – Weiss 1977 Compared of two doses – Target 15-25% factor activity 89% – Target 25-40% factor activity 94%
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Joint Bleeding Management The cryoprecipitate days (1980s) – Aronstam 1980 Compared 7 IU/kg vs. 14 IU/kg vs. 28 IU/kg >90% treated within 2 hours Clinical resolution – faster with 14 IU/kg > 7 IU/kg – 28 IU/kg did not appear superior to 14 IU/kG – Aronstam 1983 Treatment > 3 hours after bleed onset with >50% decrease in joint ROM Targeted 20% vs. 40% factor activity All patients had preexisting arthropathy No difference in number of infusions needed clinically or time in hospital Functional restoration better with the 40% activity target
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Joint Bleeding Management Recombinant Factor Concentrate Era (1980s) – Aledort 1994 Examined long-term orthopedic outcomes Compared four dose ranges – 40 IU/kg Mean age 13.5 years +/- 6.6 years Average joint score at entry 6.05 +/- 6.58 Outcome: change in radiographic scores from baseline – 25-40% IU/kg appeared best
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Joint Bleeding Management Prophylaxis vs. Episodic Therapy – Patient population Age <30 months with FVIII <2 u/dL without inhibitor <2 bleeds in each index joint Normal baseline joint imaging – RCT using Kogenate Prophylaxis 25 IU/kg every other day Episodic – 40 IU/kg at onset of bleed – 20 IU/kg at 24 and 72 hours – 20 IU/kg then encouraged every other day until pain and mobility impairment completely resolved (up to 4 weeks)
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Joint Bleeding Management Prophylaxis vs. Episodic Therapy – Outcome Joint damage on MRI and radiographs at age 6 years – Subcondryl cysts – Surface erosion – Joint-space narrowing Joint function – Joint scores » Joint swelling » ROM » Pain » Gait
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Manco-Johnson MJ et al. N Engl J Med 2007;357:535-544. Joint Scores on Physical Examination, Frequency of Bleeding Events, and Factor VIII Use According to Age and Study Group.
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Tailored Prophylaxis Prophylaxis – Dosing 25-40 units/kg – Frequency: qod vs. biw vs. tiw Tailored Prophylaxis – Standardized step-wise approach to dosing – Individualized pharmacokinetics Maintain FVIII trough above threshold Dose and recovery vs. Dose frequency and t1/2
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Prophylaxis Pegylated Recombinant FVIII
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In a descriptive analysis of 118 subjects in the PPAS, the median (Q1; Q3) and mean (SD) ABRs were computed for the prophylactic group vs the on-demand group, for all, joint and spontaneous bleeding episodes. Barbara A. Konkle et al. Blood 2015;126:1078-1085 ©2015 by American Society of Hematology
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Long-Acting Factor VIII Products Adynovate: Pegylated recombinant FVII – Half-life ~16 hours Eloctate: Fc Fusion recombinant FVIII – Half-life ~19 hours
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Prophylaxis in FIX Deficiency Phase 3 Study of Eftrenonacog – Fc Fusion Protein of recombinant factor IX – Endogenous IgG recycling pathway Delays lysosomal degradation of IgG and fusion protein Prolongs plasma half-life
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Prophylaxis in FIX Deficiency Phase 3 Study of Eftrenonacog – Patients Age 12+ years with FIX <2 u/dL without inhibitor Either – On prophylaxis – Prior >100 exposure days of FIX replacement Excluded if – Anaphylaxis with factor of IVIG – HIV or uncontrolled infection – Other coagulopathy – Renal dysfunction or active hepatic disease
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Prophylaxis in FIX Deficiency Phase 3 Study of Eftrenonacog – Study arms Group 1 – rFIXFc 50 IU/kg every 7 days » Titrate dose for trough 1-3+ above baseline Group 2 – rFIXFc 100 IU/kg every 10 days » Titrate interval for trough 1-3+ above baseline Group 3 – rFIXFc 20-100 IU/kg prn for bleeding » Dose based on severity – Primary Outcome: Annualized bleeding rate
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Powell JS et al. N Engl J Med 2013;369:2313-2323. Duration of Factor IX Activity with Recombinant Factor IX and rFIXFc at a Dose of 50 IU per Kilogram of Body Weight. Factor Recovery similar between two factor products (92- 95%) Terminal Half Life rFIX t1/2 33.8 hours FIXFc t1/2 82.1 hours Time to 1% FIX activity rFIX 5.1 days FIXFc 11.2 days
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Powell JS et al. N Engl J Med 2013;369:2313-2323. Efficacy End Points for Weekly Prophylaxis, Interval-Adjusted Prophylaxis, and Episodic Treatment. NOTE: TABLE TRUNCATED FROM ORIGINAL
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Powell JS et al. N Engl J Med 2013;369:2313-2323. Annualized Bleeding Rate in Groups 1, 2, and 3 and Subgroups of Group 1.
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LOTS OF QUESTIONS REMAIN
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Tailored Prophylaxis Prophylaxis – Dosing 25-40 units/kg – Frequency: qod vs. biw vs. tiw Tailored Prophylaxis – Standardized step-wise approach to dosing – Individualized pharmacokinetics Maintain FVIII trough above threshold Dose and recovery vs. Dose frequency and t1/2
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Global Hemostasis in Hemophilia Usual prophylactic dose administered Labs: 0, 0.5, 1, 2, 4, 8, 12, 24, and 48 hours – FVIII:C One-stage clotting assay – TEG Whole blood using TEG5000 Hemostasis Analyzer – TGA Platelet-poor plasma – Fluorogenic substrate Z-Gly-Gly-Arg-AMC by Hemker method
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Thrombin and Endogenous Thrombin Potential
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FVIII:C and Thrombin Generation
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Patients 1 and 7 Patient 7Baseline48 Hours Thrombin Generation26 nM21 nM ETP400 nM min -1 237 nM min -1 TTP16.3 min16 min FVIII:C<1 IU dL -1 Patient 1Baseline48 Hours Thrombin Generation103 nM177 nM ETP1593 nM min -1 1654 nM min -1 TTP17.3 min13.4 min FVIII:C1 IU dL -1 16 IU dL -1
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FVIII:C and TEG Parameters TEG – Peak response at the 30-60 minutes – Baseline at 48 hours – Median R and K parameters Below target 24 hours – Despite median FVIII:C 13 IU dL -1 Absent at 48 hours – Median FVIII:C 1 IU dL -1
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Questions as We Go Forward with Prophylaxis? Individualized pharmacokinetic targets? – Maintain FVIII trough above threshold Dose and recovery vs. Dose frequency and t1/2 – Global Hemostatic measures What are the possible benefits of this testing with the newer long-acting products, especially in considering prophylactic regimens? What constitutes adequate prophylaxis? – Routine vs. event/activity specific
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