AI Article Synopsis

  • Caplacizumab, a therapy for immune-mediated thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (iTTP), shows benefits in achieving quicker platelet counts but is linked to slower recovery of ADAMTS13 activity.
  • A study compared acute iTTP patients treated with and without caplacizumab, highlighting that those on caplacizumab took longer to normalize ADAMTS13 activity, with significant differences in inhibitor levels and antibody titers.
  • The findings suggest that while caplacizumab helps improve platelet counts faster, it may delay the recovery of ADAMTS13 due to fewer plasma exchanges and later administration of rituximab.

Article Abstract

For patients with immune-mediated thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (iTTP), caplacizumab, a nanobody against von Willebrand factor A1 domain, has become crucial. Delayed normalization of ADAMTS13 activity during caplacizumab therapy has been identified. In a retrospective analysis, we compared platelet count, ADAMTS13 activity, its inhibitor, and anti-ADAMTS13 immunoglobulin G (IgG) levels in acute iTTP cases treated with caplacizumab (n = 14) or without it (n = 16). The median time from initial therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE) to the first rituximab administration was 12 days in the caplacizumab group (n = 11) and 10 days in the group without caplacizumab (n = 13). We evaluated ADAMTS13-related parameters at onset and once a week until day 28 after the first TPE. The number of days until the platelet counts reached ≥150 × 109/L was significantly shorter in the caplacizumab group than in the non-caplacizumab group. The median ADAMTS13 activity levels on days 14, 21, and 28 were significantly lower in the caplacizumab group. The median titers of the ADAMTS13 inhibitor and anti-ADAMTS13 IgG on the same days were significantly higher in the caplacizumab group. Furthermore, the median number of days from the first TPE until finally achieving an ADAMTS13 activity of ≥10% was significantly longer in the caplacizumab group than in the non-caplacizumab group (42 vs 23 days, P = .014). We observed delayed ADAMTS13 activity recovery and continued inhibitor and anti-ADAMTS13 IgG detection in patients with acute iTTP on caplacizumab, possibly because of the decreased number of TPEs and delayed frontline rituximab.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11068500PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/bloodadvances.2023012451DOI Listing

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