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Managing Relevant Clinical Conditions of Hemophilia A/B Patients

The Medical Directors of nine Italian Hemophilia Centers reviewed and discussed the key issues concerning the replacement therapy of hemophilia patients during a one-day consensus conference held in Rome one year ago. Particular attention was paid to the replacement therapy needed for surgery using...

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Autores principales: Morfini, Massimo, Agnelli Giacchiello, Jacopo, Baldacci, Erminia, Carulli, Christian, Castaman, Giancarlo, Giuffrida, Anna Chiara, Malcangi, Giuseppe, Rocino, Angiola, Siragusa, Sergio, Zanon, Ezio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10298198/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37367088
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/hematolrep15020039
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author Morfini, Massimo
Agnelli Giacchiello, Jacopo
Baldacci, Erminia
Carulli, Christian
Castaman, Giancarlo
Giuffrida, Anna Chiara
Malcangi, Giuseppe
Rocino, Angiola
Siragusa, Sergio
Zanon, Ezio
author_facet Morfini, Massimo
Agnelli Giacchiello, Jacopo
Baldacci, Erminia
Carulli, Christian
Castaman, Giancarlo
Giuffrida, Anna Chiara
Malcangi, Giuseppe
Rocino, Angiola
Siragusa, Sergio
Zanon, Ezio
author_sort Morfini, Massimo
collection PubMed
description The Medical Directors of nine Italian Hemophilia Centers reviewed and discussed the key issues concerning the replacement therapy of hemophilia patients during a one-day consensus conference held in Rome one year ago. Particular attention was paid to the replacement therapy needed for surgery using continuous infusion (CI) versus bolus injection (BI) of standard and extended half-life Factor VIII (FVIII) concentrates in severe hemophilia A patients. Among the side effects, the risk of development of neutralizing antibodies (inhibitors) and thromboembolic complications was addressed. The specific needs of mild hemophilia A patients were described, as well as the usage of bypassing agents to treat patients with high-responding inhibitors. Young hemophilia A patients may take significant advantages from primary prophylaxis three times or twice weekly, even with standard half-life (SHL) rFVIII concentrates. Patients affected by severe hemophilia B probably have a less severe clinical phenotype than severe hemophilia A patients, and in about 30% of cases may undergo weekly prophylaxis with an rFIX SHL concentrate. The prevalence of missense mutations in 55% of severe hemophilia B patients allows the synthesis of a partially changed FIX molecule that can play some hemostatic role at the level of endothelial cells or the subendothelial matrix. The flow back of infused rFIX from the extravascular to the plasma compartment allows a very long half-life of about 30 h in some hemophilia B patients. Once weekly, prophylaxis can assure a superior quality of life in a large severe or moderate hemophilia B population. According to the Italian registry of surgery, hemophilia B patients undergo joint replacement by arthroplasty less frequently than hemophilia A patients. Finally, the relationships between FVIII/IX genotypes and the pharmacokinetics of clotting factor concentrates have been investigated.
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spelling pubmed-102981982023-06-28 Managing Relevant Clinical Conditions of Hemophilia A/B Patients Morfini, Massimo Agnelli Giacchiello, Jacopo Baldacci, Erminia Carulli, Christian Castaman, Giancarlo Giuffrida, Anna Chiara Malcangi, Giuseppe Rocino, Angiola Siragusa, Sergio Zanon, Ezio Hematol Rep Conference Report The Medical Directors of nine Italian Hemophilia Centers reviewed and discussed the key issues concerning the replacement therapy of hemophilia patients during a one-day consensus conference held in Rome one year ago. Particular attention was paid to the replacement therapy needed for surgery using continuous infusion (CI) versus bolus injection (BI) of standard and extended half-life Factor VIII (FVIII) concentrates in severe hemophilia A patients. Among the side effects, the risk of development of neutralizing antibodies (inhibitors) and thromboembolic complications was addressed. The specific needs of mild hemophilia A patients were described, as well as the usage of bypassing agents to treat patients with high-responding inhibitors. Young hemophilia A patients may take significant advantages from primary prophylaxis three times or twice weekly, even with standard half-life (SHL) rFVIII concentrates. Patients affected by severe hemophilia B probably have a less severe clinical phenotype than severe hemophilia A patients, and in about 30% of cases may undergo weekly prophylaxis with an rFIX SHL concentrate. The prevalence of missense mutations in 55% of severe hemophilia B patients allows the synthesis of a partially changed FIX molecule that can play some hemostatic role at the level of endothelial cells or the subendothelial matrix. The flow back of infused rFIX from the extravascular to the plasma compartment allows a very long half-life of about 30 h in some hemophilia B patients. Once weekly, prophylaxis can assure a superior quality of life in a large severe or moderate hemophilia B population. According to the Italian registry of surgery, hemophilia B patients undergo joint replacement by arthroplasty less frequently than hemophilia A patients. Finally, the relationships between FVIII/IX genotypes and the pharmacokinetics of clotting factor concentrates have been investigated. MDPI 2023-06-07 /pmc/articles/PMC10298198/ /pubmed/37367088 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/hematolrep15020039 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Conference Report
Morfini, Massimo
Agnelli Giacchiello, Jacopo
Baldacci, Erminia
Carulli, Christian
Castaman, Giancarlo
Giuffrida, Anna Chiara
Malcangi, Giuseppe
Rocino, Angiola
Siragusa, Sergio
Zanon, Ezio
Managing Relevant Clinical Conditions of Hemophilia A/B Patients
title Managing Relevant Clinical Conditions of Hemophilia A/B Patients
title_full Managing Relevant Clinical Conditions of Hemophilia A/B Patients
title_fullStr Managing Relevant Clinical Conditions of Hemophilia A/B Patients
title_full_unstemmed Managing Relevant Clinical Conditions of Hemophilia A/B Patients
title_short Managing Relevant Clinical Conditions of Hemophilia A/B Patients
title_sort managing relevant clinical conditions of hemophilia a/b patients
topic Conference Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10298198/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37367088
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/hematolrep15020039
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