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Switching to recombinant factor IX Fc fusion protein prophylaxis results in fewer infusions, decreased factor IX consumption and lower bleeding rates.

Authors :
Powell, Jerry
Shapiro, Amy
Ragni, Margaret
Negrier, Claude
Windyga, Jerzy
Ozelo, Margareth
Pasi, John
Baker, Ross
Potts, James
Li, Shuanglian
Mei, Baisong
Pierce, Glenn F.
Robinson, Brian
Source :
British Journal of Haematology. Jan2015, Vol. 168 Issue 1, p113-123. 11p. 1 Diagram, 4 Charts, 3 Graphs.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

In the phase 3 B-LONG [Recombinant Factor IX Fc Fusion Protein ( rFIXFc) in Subjects with Haemophilia B] study, rFIXFc dosed every 1-2 weeks was safe and efficacious in previously treated subjects with haemophilia B. To date, there are no evaluations of transitioning from conventional to long-acting factor IX (FIX) prophylaxis. This post-hoc analysis of B-LONG subjects compared prophylaxis with other FIX products and r FIXFc. Pre- and on-study data were analysed to assess dosing regimen, weekly FIX consumption and annualized bleeding rates (ABRs). Population pharmacokinetics models were used to generate FIX activity profiles with r FIXFc and recombinant FIX prophylaxis. Thirty-nine subjects, previously treated prophylactically, were evaluated. Prior to study, most subjects (69·2%) received twice-weekly FIX infusions; on study, subjects infused r FIXFc once every 1-2 weeks with c. 30-50% reductions in weekly consumption. On-study estimated mean ABRs were lower than pre-study estimated mean ABRs. Models predicted that r FIXFc administered 50 iu/kg weekly and 100 iu/kg every 10 d would maintain steady-state FIX trough levels ≥1 iu/dl in 95·4% and 89·2% of subjects, respectively. These results indicate that patients receiving r FIXFc prophylaxis can markedly reduce infusion frequency and FIX consumption, have a greater likelihood of maintaining FIX activity >1 iu/dl and experience fewer bleeding episodes compared with prior FIX prophylaxis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00071048
Volume :
168
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
British Journal of Haematology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
99885283
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/bjh.13109