𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

North American prophylaxis studies for persons with severe haemophilia: background, rationale and design

✍ Scribed by M. J. Manco-Johnson; V. S. Blanchette


Book ID
104461683
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Weight
63 KB
Volume
9
Category
Article
ISSN
1351-8216

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✦ Synopsis


Summary. Arthropathy is associated with the greatest cost and morbidity to persons with haemophilia. Clinical protocols have been developed empirically to prevent or retard the development of joint disease using routine infusions of replacement factor concentrate. However, randomized clinical trials to determine optimal therapy to prevent joint disease in persons with severe haemophilia are lacking. Two clinical trials are ongoing to answer important clinical questions about the prevention of arthropathy. The first, a US randomized clinical trial, is comparing an aggressive multiple‐infusion episode‐based protocol to standard alternate‐day prophylaxis to determine whether prevention of joint disease requires prevention of the bleeding event, per se, or can be achieved by promoting complete resolution of each bleeding event in the joint. This study included the development and validation of sensitive new physical and imaging scales to detect the earliest signs of joint disease in young children. The second, a single‐arm, open‐label Canadian study, is asking whether prevention of joint disease in young children can be individualized by escalating the dose and frequency of routine replacement infusions of factor concentrate based upon the clinical course of haemophilia in the affected child. Both of these studies will contribute valuable information regarding optimal therapy and will help establish evidence‐based medicine for the management of severe haemophilia.