Nonhealing Surgical Wounds in a Patient with Plasminogen Deficiency Type 1 Successfully Treated with Intravenous Plasminogen: A Case Report.

Adv Skin Wound Care

Robert Wayne Decker, MD, is Clinical Assistant Professor of Medicine, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, California, USA. Joseph Mickler Parker, MD, is Consultant to Kedrion Biopharma Inc, Fort Lee, New Jersey. Jeremy Lorber, MD, is Assistant Clinical Professor, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. Roberto Crea, DVM, is Medical Affairs Director, Kedrion S.p.A, Barga, Italy. Karen Thibaudeau, PhD, is Medical Affairs Director, Prometic Bioproduction, Laval, Quebec, Canada.

Published: July 2024

Intravenous plasminogen replacement therapy for patients with plasminogen deficiency type 1 (hypoplasminogenemia) was recently approved for marketing in the US. In this case report, the authors describe a 33-year-old man with hypoplasminogenemia who developed nonhealing postsurgical wounds following trauma to his right hand despite receiving standard treatment for 4 months. The patient was enrolled in a compassionate-use protocol with intravenous plasminogen replacement therapy and experienced prompt resolution of surgical wounds. He was the first human patient to receive replacement therapy with plasminogen, human-tvmh in the US and first to demonstrate cutaneous wound healing in addition to resolution of ligneous lesions attributable to plasminogen deficiency type 1.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ASW.0000000000000160DOI Listing

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