AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates long-term joint health in adolescents aged 10-19 with moderate and severe haemophilia A (HA) while considering severity and inhibitor status.
  • A total of 141 patients were examined, revealing that those with inhibitors had a higher prevalence of joint abnormalities, and that longer inhibitor duration worsens joint health.
  • Results indicated that ultrasound, combined with physical exams, improves the detection of joint damage, and highlighted that most adolescents with HA maintain favorable joint health overall, despite some deterioration in inhibitor patients.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Favourable joint outcomes are expected with modern haemophilia A (HA) management. Evaluation of long-term treatment outcomes is hampered by the delay between bleeding episodes during childhood and resulting joint outcomes in adulthood.

Aim: To measure the long-term joint health of adolescents with moderate and severe HA, according to severity and inhibitor status.

Methods: Pilot cross-sectional study of five European PedNet centres in moderate and severe HA patients aged 10-19 years. Structured assessment of joint status by physical examination (HJHS) and ultrasound (HEAD-US).

Results: In total, 141 HA patients were evaluable, 100 without inhibitors (81 severe, 19 moderate HA), and 41 severe HA with current/past inhibitors. On physical examination, 12/81 (15%) of severe HA without inhibitors, 3/19 (16%) of moderate HA, and 13/41 (32%) of severe HA patients with inhibitors exhibited joint abnormalities. Inhibitor persistence, longer inhibitor duration, and a high peak inhibitor level were associated with impaired joint health. Ultrasound showed joint damage (bone or cartilage) in 13/49 (27%) of severe HA without inhibitors, 1/12 (8%) of moderate HA, and 10/28 (36%) of severe HA patients with inhibitors. A discordant ankle evaluation by ultrasound versus physical examination was present in 53/169 joints (31%).

Conclusions: Most adolescents with severe or moderate HA show favourable joint health. Future research with combined ultrasound and/or MRI is needed to better understand joint outcomes in the remaining patients. Patents with inhibitors showed a two-fold increased proportion with joint deterioration. Ultrasound paired with physical examination increases sensitivity for detection of joint damage.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9804743PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hae.14636DOI Listing

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