4 results match your criteria: "Faculty of Medicine of the Comenius University and University Hospital[Affiliation]"

 Immune tolerance induction (ITI) with repeated factor VIII (FVIII) administration is the only strategy proven to eradicate inhibitors. The observational ITI study is evaluating ITI with a range of FVIII products.  This subgroup analysis reports prospective interim data for patients treated with a plasma-derived, von Willebrand factor-stabilized FVIII concentrate (pdFVIII/VWF, octanate).

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A high prevalence of genetic polymorphisms increases sensitivity to warfarin therapy. In this study, we investigated 47 patients with effective long-term therapy by warfarin well-controlled by monitoring of International Normalised Ratio (INR). All patients were tested for gene polymorphisms VKORC1, CYP2C9*C2, and CYP2C9*C3, which were used for a dose calculation employing a program www.

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The immune tolerance induction is the treatment of choice for the eradication of factor VIII inhibitors, a serious complication of inherited haemophilia A. Despite the preferred treatment of patients with good prognosis and testing of different regimens, the immune tolerance is achieved in 70-80%. Several modifications of regimens including the addition of immunomodulatory agents were proposed in order to improve immune tolerance induction (ITI) outcome.

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Introduction: The development of factor VIII inhibitors is a serious complication of replacement therapy in patients with congenital hemophilia A. Immune tolerance induction has been accepted as the only clinically proven treatment allowing antigen-specific tolerance to factor VIII. However, some of its issues, such as patient selection, timing, factor VIII dosing, use of immunosuppressive or immunomodulatory procedures, still remain the subject of debate.

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