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Safety and Tolerability of a Shorter Agalsidase Beta Infusion Time in Patients with Classic or Later-Onset Fabry Disease. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Fabry disease presents complex challenges in patient care, and while enzyme replacement therapy (agalsidase beta) is beneficial, its long infusion time can be burdensome for patients.
  • A study involved 39 adult patients with Fabry disease to evaluate the safety of reducing the infusion time to 90 minutes without premedication, with a total of 85 infusions conducted.
  • The findings showed no reported adverse events, stable vital signs, and high patient satisfaction, indicating that shorter infusion times are safe and feasible for patients with Fabry disease.*

Article Abstract

Background: The multisystem manifestations of Fabry disease can create major challenges in patient care. Although enzyme replacement therapy with recombinant agalsidase beta has demonstrated clinical benefits, the standard fortnightly, multi-hour infusion regimen imposes a substantial burden on patients.

Methods: We assessed the safety and feasibility of shortening the agalsidase beta infusion time to 90 min in adult patients with classic or later-onset Fabry disease in the absence of premedication. A total of 39 consecutive adult patients (agalsidase-naïve: n = 7; with significant comorbidities: n = 15) with no recent infusion-associated reactions underwent a total of 85 agalsidase beta infusions in our tertiary reference centre for lysosomal diseases. Each infusion was administered at a constant rate (between 0.78 and 1.17 mg/min, depending on the total dose administered).

Results: No adverse events of any type (including discomfort and infusion-associated reactions) were reported during or after infusions. The patients' vital signs and physical examination remained stable, and patients' satisfaction was high.

Conclusions: Our results suggest that shortening the agalsidase beta infusion time to 90 min is safe and feasible in stably treated adult patients with Fabry disease and no recent infusion-associated reactions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11591728PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines12112578DOI Listing

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