Assessing prophylactic use and clinical outcomes in hemophilia A patients treated with rVIII-SingleChain and other common rFVIII products in Germany

Eur J Haematol. 2020 Apr;104(4):310-317. doi: 10.1111/ejh.13378. Epub 2020 Jan 21.

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate real-world outcomes with rVIII-SingleChain and other commonly used recombinant FVIII (rFVIII) products.

Methods: Hemophilia treatment centers in Germany (n = 21) contributed patient chart data. Inclusion criteria were prophylactic treatment with one of five rFVIII products for ≥8 weeks.

Results: Male patients (n = 225) were included: rVIII-SingleChain (n = 40), rFVIIIFc (n = 47), octocog alfa (rFVIII; n = 58), octocog alfa (BAY 81-8973; n = 40), or moroctocog alfa (n = 40). In patients with severe disease (n = 76), 66.6%, 70.0%, 20.0%, 7.7%, and 27.3% were dosed ≤2×/week, respectively. Irrespective of dosing frequency, mean annualized bleed rates (ABRs)/annualized spontaneous bleed rates (AsBRs) were 0.3/0.1, 0.8/0.4, 1.1/0.5, 1.5/0.8, and 1.4/0.6, and mean FVIII consumption (IU/kg/week) was 83.2, 97.2, 92.5, 104.0, and 102.1, respectively. Results for all patients were similar. Of the patients on prophylaxis with prior therapy and after switching to rVIII-SingleChain (n = 21), mean ABR/AsBRs were 0.7/0.3 and 0.2/0.0, respectively. After switching to rVIII-SingleChain, mean FVIII consumption reduced (109.4 vs 74.5 IU/kg/week), and percentage of patients dosed ≤2×/week increased (0% to 71.4%).

Conclusions: rVIII-SingleChain prophylaxis provides excellent bleeding protection, with potentially lowest factor consumption among the products assessed. Patients who switched to rVIII-SingleChain prophylaxis reduced dosing frequency and consumption compared with prior treatment, with similar or potentially lower bleeding rates.

Keywords: coagulation disorder.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Factor VIII / therapeutic use*
  • Germany
  • Hemophilia A / drug therapy*
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Recombinant Proteins / therapeutic use
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Treatment Outcome
  • Young Adult

Substances

  • Recombinant Proteins
  • Factor VIII

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