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Pattern of use and clinical outcomes with rIX-FP in pediatric/adolescent patients with haemophilia B in Italy: Results from IDEAL real-world study. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to assess the usage patterns and clinical outcomes of pediatric patients in the IDEAL study, focusing on those under 18 who were fully on prophylaxis.
  • Analysis of 13 patients showed a significant decrease in infusion frequency and annualized factor consumption after switching from rFIX to rIX-FP, with infusion rates dropping from 2 times a week to less than once a week.
  • Despite the changes, the overall bleeding rates remained low, with a higher percentage of patients experiencing no bleeding incidents, indicating that rIX-FP is both effective and safe for this demographic.

Article Abstract

Objectives: To evaluate pattern of use and clinical outcomes in pediatric/adolescent patients enrolled in the IDEAL study.

Methods: This post-hoc analysis of IDEAL retrospective-prospective observational study focused on patients <18 years, 100% on prophylaxis during the entire observation period.

Results: Thirteen subjects (median age 10.0 years; 61.5% ≤ 11 years) were analyzed. The infusion frequency changed from 2/week in 84.6% (N = 11) of patients with previous rFIX, to less than 1/weekly in 76.9% (N = 9) with rIX-FP and the annualized number of infusions reduced of 57% (p = .002), from a mean ± SD of 95.1 ± 22.77 to 40.4 ± 6.79, respectively. Annualized mean consumption decreased of about 56% (p = .001), from 3748.4 ± 1155.40 IU/kg with previous rFIX, to 1656.8 ± 456.63 IU/kg of rIX-FP. Mean FIX trough level changed from 3.0% ± 1.98% to 10.92% ± 3.6%. Low mean Annualized Bleeding Rate was maintained across all prophylaxis regimens (0.8 ± 1.69 vs. 0.3 ± 0.89) and zero bleeding patients moved from 69.2% (N = 9) with previous rFIX to 84.6% (N = 11) with rIX-FP (p = .63). Two adverse events, none related to rIX-FP, occurred in two patients. No inhibitors development was reported.

Conclusions: The results in this pediatric/adolescent subgroup support rIX-FP prophylaxis may reduce infusion frequency, while providing high FIX trough levels, stable annualized bleeding rate and a good safety profile.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ejh.14168DOI Listing

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