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Phase 4 Safety and Efficacy Study of Antihemophilic Factor (Recombinant) in Previously Treated Chinese Patients With Severe/Moderately Severe Hemophilia A

Authors :
Yongqiang Zhao PhD
Yu Hu PhD
Jie Jin PhD
Xielan Zhao PhD
Xuefeng Wang PhD
Runhui Wu PhD
Depei Wu MD
Renchi Yang PhD
Feng’e Yang MD
Qun Hu PhD
Juan Wang MD
Hai Fang MD
Werner Engl PhD
Source :
Clinical and Applied Thrombosis/Hemostasis, Vol 27 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
SAGE Publishing, 2021.

Abstract

Antihemophilic factor (recombinant) (rAHF; ADVATE ® ; Baxalta US Inc., a Takeda company, Lexington, MA, USA) is indicated for the treatment and prevention of bleeding in patients with hemophilia A. We aimed to assess the safety and efficacy of standard prophylaxis versus on-demand treatment with rAHF in previously treated Chinese patients with severe/moderately severe hemophilia A. This open-label, sequential, interventional, postapproval study (NCT02170402) conducted in China included patients of any age with hemophilia A with factor VIII (FVIII) level ≤2%. Patients received 6 months’ on-demand rAHF then 6 months’ rAHF prophylaxis (20-40 IU/kg every 48 ± 6 hours). The primary objective was percentage reduction in annualized bleeding rate (ABR) in the per-protocol analysis set (PPAS); secondary objectives included ABR by bleeding subtype, hemostatic efficacy, immunogenicity, and safety. Of 72 patients who received ≥1 rAHF dose, 61 were included in the PPAS. Total ABR was lower during prophylaxis (mean 2.5, 95% CI 1.5-3.7; median 0) versus on-demand treatment (mean 58.3, 95% CI 52.5-64.7; median 53.9), representing a 95.9% risk reduction. Similar findings in favor of prophylaxis were observed for all types of bleeding event by cause and location. rAHF hemostatic efficacy was rated as “excellent”/“good” in 96.1% of treated bleeding events. Transient FVIII inhibitors (0.6-1.7 BU) in 4 patients resolved before study end; no unexpected safety issues were observed. rAHF prophylaxis in this study of previously treated Chinese patients with severe/moderately severe hemophilia A resulted in a clear reduction in bleeding events versus rAHF on-demand treatment, with no change in safety profile.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19382723 and 10760296
Volume :
27
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Clinical and Applied Thrombosis/Hemostasis
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.6d2be8639d4a44af9e02dcb0664a92f9
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/1076029621989811