International audienceOsteoporosis has been recently recognized as a severe comorbidity factor in hemophilia. However, its pathogenesis is still obscure. We evaluated the incidence of osteoporosis in 90 hemophilia patients and investigated possible correlations with clinical and laboratory data. Out of the 90 patients, 80 (89%) had severe hemophilia, and 35 (38.9%) were human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive. Hemophilic arthropahty was assessed using World Federation of Hemophilia clinical score and Petterson radiological score. Bone mineral density of the lumbar spine (LS) and femoral neck (FN) were measured using dual-energy X-ray absortiometry. Bone turnover was evaluated by the measurement of: (1) bone resorption markers [N-terminal cross-linking telopeptide of collagen type I (NTX), C-terminal cross-linking telopeptide of collagen type I (CTX), and tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase isoform-5b (TRACP-5b)], (2) bone formation markers [bone-alkaline phosphatase (bALP) and osteocalcin], and (3) osteoclast stimulators (receptor activator of nuclear factor-κB ligand, osteoprotegerin, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha). Osteopenia or osteoporosis was observed in 86% and 65% of the patients in FN and LS, respectively. Osteoporosis was more common among HIV-positive patients in both FN (65.3% vs 41.6%; = 0.007) and LS (17.86% vs 5.41%, = 0.004). The severity of osteoporosis in FN correlated with the patients' total clinical and radiological score ( = 0.001). Hemophilia patients showed increased osteoclastic activity (significant increase of TRACP-5b, NTX, and CTX), which was not accompanied by a comparable increased bone formation (reduced osteocalcin and borderline increase of bALP). In multivariate analysis, HIV infection ( = 0.05) and total clinical score ( = 0.001) were independent risk factors for osteoporosis development. We conclude that there is a high prevalence of osteoporosis among hemophiliacs, which is related to the severity of arthropathy and is enhanced by HIV infection. We report for the first time a high bone resorption that seems not to be balanced by a comparable bone formation
In patients with haemophilia A, factor VIII (FVIII) prophylaxis reduces bleeding frequency and joint damage compared with on-demand therapy. To assess the effect of prophylaxis initiation age, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was used to evaluate bone and cartilage damage in patients with severe haemophilia A. In this cross-sectional, multinational investigation, patients aged 12–35 years were assigned to 1 of 5 groups: primary prophylaxis started at age <2 years (group 1); secondary prophylaxis started at age 2 to <6 years (group 2), 6 to <12 years (group 3), or 12−18 years (group 4); or on-demand treatment (group 5). Joint status at ankles and knees was assessed using Compatible Additive MRI scoring (maximum and mean ankle; maximum and mean of all 4 joints) and Gilbert scores in the per-protocol population (n = 118). All prophylaxis groups had better MRI joint scores than the on-demand group. MRI scores generally increased with current patient age and later start of prophylaxis. Ankles were the most affected joints. In group 1 patients currently aged 27−35 years, the median of maximum ankle scores was 0.0; corresponding values in groups 4 and 5 were 17.0 and 18.0, respectively [medians of mean index joint scores: 0.0 (group 1), 8.1 (group 2) and 13.8 (group 4)]. Gilbert scores revealed outcomes less pronounced than MRI scores. MRI scores identified pathologic joint status with high sensitivity. Prophylaxis groups had lower annualized joint bleeds and MRI scores vs. the on-demand group. Primary prophylaxis demonstrated protective effects against joint deterioration compared with secondary prophylaxis.
Summary. Background: Vatreptacog alfa, a recombinant human factor VIIa (rFVIIa) analog developed to improve the treatment of bleeds in hemophilia patients with inhibitors, differs from native FVIIa by three amino acid substitutions. In a randomized, double-blind, crossover, confirmatory phase III trial (adept TM 2), 8/72 (11%) hemophilia A or B patients with inhibitors treated for acute bleeds developed anti-drug antibodies (ADAs) to vatreptacog alfa. Objectives: To characterize the formation of anti-vatreptacog alfa ADAs in hemophilia patients with inhibitors. Methods/patients: This was a post hoc analysis of adept TM 2. Immunoglobulin isotype determination, specificity analysis of rFVIIa cross-reactive antibodies, epitope mapping of rFVIIa single mutant analogs and pharmacokinetic (PK) profiling were performed to characterize the ADAs. Results: Immunoglobulin isotyping indicated that the ADAs were of the immunoglobulin G subtype. In epitope mapping, none of the rFVIIa single mutant analogs (V158D, E296V or M298Q) contained the complete antibody epitope, confirming that the antibodies were specific for vatreptacog alfa. In two patients, for whom PK profiling was performed both before and after the development of ADAs, vatreptacog alfa showed a prolonged elimination phase following ADA development. During the follow-up evaluation, the rFVIIa cross-reactivity disappeared after the last vatreptacog alfa exposure, despite continued exposure to rFVIIa as part of standard care. Conclusions: Results from the vatreptacog alfa phase III trial demonstrate that the specific changes made, albeit relatively small, to the FVIIa molecule alter its clinical immunogenicity.
HIV RNA levels at the same stage of HIV-1 infection differ significantly by sex, risk group and age at SC. Given the lack of evidence of a survival difference by sex or risk group prior to initiation of effective therapy, further research on differential effects of virus load on treatment-free disease progression is needed, before a conclusion about considering these factors for ART initiation is drawn.
Low cellular HIV-1 DNA load is a marker of sustained virological response in patients with initial VR and it can reliably predict the long-term success of HAART.
Background and Objectives. Health Related Quality of Life (HRQoL) is an important health outcome measure in haemophilia. The aim of this study was to assess the psychometric properties of the Greek version of Haem-A-QoL, a disease-specific questionnaire for haemophiliacs. Methods. Haem-A-QoL and SF-36 were administered to 118 adult haemophilia patients. Hypothesized scale structure, internal consistency (Cronbach's α), and test-retest reliability, as well as various types of construct validity were evaluated. Results. Scale structure of Haem-A-QoL was confirmed, with good item convergence (87%) and discrimination (80.6%) rates. Cronbach's α was >0.70 for all but one dimension (dealing) and test-retest reliability was significantly high. The strength of Spearman's correlations between Haem-A-QoL and SF-36 scales ranged from 0.25 to 0.75 (P < 0.01). Multiple stepwise linear regression analysis revealed that all but one Haem-A-QoL dimensions were important predictors of SF-36 scales. Known-groups comparisons yielded consistent support of the instruments' construct validity and significant relationships were identified for age, educational level, haemophilia type, disease severity, and viral infections. Conclusion. Overall, the psychometric properties of the Greek version of Haem-A-QoL, resulting from this first time administration of the instrument to Greek adult haemophiliacs, confirmed it as a reliable and valid questionnaire for assessing haemophilia-specific HRQoL in Greece.
DDAVP can be recommended to cover invasive procedure in selected patients with VWD, however, we need more information and systematic recording of adverse events associated with DDAVP use in VWD. A companion paper will be published covering the use of factor concentrates in VWD patients.
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