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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Bayesian pharmacokinetic-guided prophylaxis with recombinant factor VIII in severe or moderate haemophilia A

José Luis PovedaMaría Remedios MarquésJuan Eduardo Megías-vericatPau BoschSofía Pérez-alendaSaturnino HayaSantiago BonanadAna Rosa CidE. MonteFelipe Querol

subject

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentHaemophilia AModerate haemophilia A030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyHemophilia ARecombinant factor viiiRecombinant factor VIIIYoung Adult03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePharmacokineticsInternal medicineHaemophilia AArthropathymedicineLimited samplingHumansPharmacokineticsProspective StudiesAgedFactor VIIIbusiness.industryBayes TheoremHematologyBayesian estimationMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasePK-guided prophylaxis030220 oncology & carcinogenesisCohortFemaleObservational studybusinessmyPKFiT

description

Introduction: Personalised pharmacokinetics (PK) using Bayesian analysis with limited sampling is assumed to help to optimise prophylaxis in haemophilia A (HA) patients. Materials and methods: Our prospective, observational study analysed the influence of PK parameters on clinical variables (bleeding rates, joint status, adherence, and consumption) using myPKFiT (R) in a cohort of twenty-one severe and moderate HA patients on prophylaxis with recombinant FVIII (Advate (R)) in two periods of one year, the first before PK-based tailoring and the second after PK-guided prophylaxis. Intra-individual and inter-individual coefficients of variation (CV) of half-life (t(1/2)) were calculated. Results: A total of 73 PK estimations were performed in both periods, resulting in 17.2% inter-individual CV in mean t(1/2), and 4.9% intra-individual CV. Before PK-based tailoring a significant association between joint bleeds and t(1/2) was found (P = 0.010), especially in patients with short t(1/2). This finding was reproduced (P = 0.013) after withdrawal of two patients with bleeding phenotype related to their advanced arthropathy but normal t(1/2) and trough levels. Patients with joint bleeds weighed less (P = 0.039) and required higher doses (P = 0.032) than patients with zero joint bleeds. These associations were not observed in the second period after the adoption of PK-guided prophylaxis. There were no differences between the two periods, although a tendency to fewer spontaneous bleeds was suggested after PK-based tailoring. Conclusions: PK-guided prophylaxis facilitates an adequate level of bleeding control in patients with HA, maintaining clinical variables and patient convenience in an integrative manner, without increasing FVIII consumption.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.thromres.2018.12.027