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Modelling lifelong effects of different prophylactic treatment strategies for severe haemophilia A.

Authors :
Fischer, K.
Lewandowski, D.
Janssen, M. P.
Source :
Haemophilia. Sep2016, Vol. 22 Issue 5, pe375-e382. 8p. 2 Charts, 2 Graphs.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Background Lifelong prophylactic replacement therapy with clotting factor concentrates is recommended for severe haemophilia. The prophylactic dose determines both clinical outcome and treatment cost. In the absence of clinical studies, computer simulation was used to explore lifelong effects and clotting factor consumption for various prophylactic dose levels, and optimize strategies for switching between prophylactic and on-demand treatment. Design and Methods Individual patients' lifetime joint bleeds, radiological arthropathy (Pettersson score, 0-78) and consumption were simulated for each treatment strategy. Treatment effectiveness (expressed as % of patients maintaining a lifetime Pettersson score ≤14) and clotting factor consumption were modelled for lifelong prophylaxis at dose levels 1000-4500 IU kg−1 year−1, for on-demand treatment and for switching strategies. Treatment efficiency (consumption per unit of effectiveness) was used to compare strategies. Results Compared to lifelong on-demand treatment, lifelong prophylaxis at 1000 IU kg−1 year−1 increased effectiveness from 21 to 36%, at an additional consumption of 0.9 × 106 IU kg−1. For lifelong prophylaxis, each additional 1000 IU kg−1 year−1 resulted in a proportional increase in consumption by ±5 × 106 IU kg−1 but a less than proportional reduction in arthropathy by ±50%; consequently, increasing consumption progressively diminished treatment efficiency. Switching strategies slightly reduce effectiveness and consumption. Optimum switching criteria were similar across prophylactic dose levels. Conclusion According to the simulation model, low-dose prophylaxis (1000 IU kg−1 year−1) improved outcome at a limited increase in consumption compared to on-demand treatment. Increasing prophylactic dose further improved health outcomes, but at decreasing efficiency. Optimal prophylactic dose should therefore be selected balancing acceptable health impact and available budget. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13518216
Volume :
22
Issue :
5
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Haemophilia
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
118222388
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/hae.13019