AI Article Synopsis

  • Atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS) is a rare condition characterized by kidney damage due to abnormal complement activation, affecting not just the kidneys but other organs as well.
  • Eculizumab, a drug that helps manage aHUS, may require personalized and more frequent dosing for some patients to improve their health, as seen in a case study of a 4-year-old boy who needed more frequent doses for stabilization.
  • Individualizing the dosing interval to every 3 weeks instead of the standard 2 weeks resulted in significant cost savings and improved clinical outcomes over a 4-year follow-up period, suggesting a more efficient treatment approach for aHUS.

Article Abstract

Background: Atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS) is an ultra-rare orphan disease caused by dysregulated complement activation resulting in thrombotic microangiopathy. Although complement-mediated endothelial injury predominantly affects the renal microvasculature, extra-renal manifestations are present in a significant proportion of patients. While eculizumab has significantly improved the morbidity and mortality of this rare disease, optimizing therapeutic regimens of this highly expensive drug remains an active area of research in the treatment of aHUS.

Case Presentation: This report describes the case of a previously healthy 4 year-old male who presented with rhabdomyolysis preceding the development of aHUS with anuric kidney injury requiring dialysis. Clinical stabilization required increased and more frequent eculizumab doses compared with the standardized weight-based guidelines. In the maintenance phase of his disease, pharmacokinetic analysis indicated adequate eculizumab levels could be maintained with an individualized dosing regimen every 3 weeks, as opposed to standard 2 week dosing, confirmed in this patient over a 4 year follow up period. Cost analyses show that weight-based maintenance dosing costs $312,000 per year, while extending the dosing interval to every 3 weeks would cost $208,000, a savings of $104,000 per year, relative to the cost of $72,000 from more frequent eculizumab dosing during his initial hospitalization to suppress his acute disease.

Conclusion: This case exemplifies the potential of severe, multisystem involvement of aHUS presenting with extra-renal manifestations, including rhabdomyolysis as in this case, and highlights the possibility for improved clinical outcomes and higher value care with individualized eculizumab dosing in patients over the course of their disease.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8906567PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fped.2022.841051DOI Listing

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