Awarded/Presented
Tags
Bleeding Disorders Conference
Clinical Research
Researchers
Thomas J. Humphries, Stephan Rauchensteiner, Claudia Tückmantel, Alexander Pieper, Monika Maas Enriquez, Prasad Mathew

Objectives:

Factor VIII (FVIII) prophylaxis regimens for severe hemophilia A that allow more flexible dosing than the standard 3-times-weekly regimen while maintaining efficacy may improve adherence. This analysis compared the clinical efficacy of once- or twice-weekly versus ≥3-times-weekly prophylaxis dosing of Bayer’s sucrose-formulated recombinant FVIII (rFVIII-FS) in patients with severe hemophilia A.

Methods:

Data from 3 postmarketing studies were pooled. Patients with severe hemophilia A and no history of inhibitors who were receiving ≥1 prophylaxis infusion/wk of rFVIII-FS for ≥80% of a prophylaxis observation period (≥5 months) were included. Patients were categorized based on age (<18 and ≥18 years) and physician-assigned treatment regimens of 1–2 prophylaxis injections/wk (n=63) or ≥3 prophylaxis injections/wk (n=76). Descriptive statistics were determined for annualized bleeding rates (ABRs) by dosing group and age subgroups.

Summary:

Median (quartile 1; quartile 3) ABR for all bleeds was 2.0 (0; 4.0) in the group receiving 1–2 prophylaxis injections/wk and 3.9 (1.5; 9.3) in the group with ≥3 prophylaxis injections/wk. Similarly, median ABRs for joint, spontaneous, and trauma-related bleeds were numerically lower in the group receiving 1–2 prophylaxis injections/wk. The trend toward lower ABRs in the group with 1–2 prophylaxis injections/wk was observed in both age subgroups, although ABRs were somewhat higher in patients ≥18 vs <18 years. Zero annualized bleeds were reported by 30% and 7% of patients in the groups with 1–2 prophylaxis injections/wk and ≥3 prophylaxis injections/wk, respectively.

Conclusions:

These data demonstrate that bleeding control can be achieved in some patients with severe hemophilia A using a <3-times-weekly prophylaxis dosing regimen and that physicians’ judgment based on bleeding phenotype can successfully direct the frequency of prophylactic dosing.