User login
FDA approves first tx for rare, deadly clotting disorder
Congenital TTP affects fewer than 1,000 people in the United States and is caused by a mutation in the ADAMTS13 gene, which makes an enzyme that regulates blood clotting. Patients with the congenital TTP typically receive prophylactic plasma-based therapy to replenish the ADAMTS13 enzyme and reduce the risk for clotting and bleeding. The condition, however, can be fatal if left untreated.
The new agent is a purified recombinant form of the ADAMTS13 enzyme that works by replacing low levels of the deficient enzyme in patients with congenital TTP. Adzynma is given prophylactically to reduce the risk for disease symptoms and on demand when a patient is experiencing an acute event, according to the FDA approval announcement.
The approval was based on a global randomized phase 3 study comparing the product with plasma-based therapies in 46 patients with congenital TTP. Patients in the trial were randomized to receive 6 months of treatment with either intravenous Adzynma — given once every other week as prophylactic enzyme replacement therapy or once daily as on-demand enzyme replacement therapy — or plasma-based therapies. The patients then crossed over to the other treatment for 6 months.
Interim findings from the study showed that Adzynma reduced the incidence of thrombocytopenia — the most common symptom of congenital TTP — by 60% compared with plasma-based therapy (rate ratio, 0.40). No patients experienced an acute TTP event during Adzynma prophylaxis, Takeda said.
Significantly more patients receiving plasma-based therapies experienced treatment-emergent adverse events compared with those receiving the biologic.
The most common side effects associated with the biologic were headache (31.3%), diarrhea (16.7%), migraine (14.6%), abdominal pain (12.5%), nausea (12.5%), upper respiratory tract infection (12.5%), dizziness (10.4%), and vomiting (10.4%). No treatment-related adverse events, including allergic reactions, were observed during administration.
“The FDA remains deeply committed in our efforts to help facilitate the development and approval of safe and effective therapies for patients with rare diseases,” Peter Marks, MD, PhD, director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, stated. The “approval reflects important progress in the development of much-needed treatment options for patients affected by this life-threatening disorder.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Congenital TTP affects fewer than 1,000 people in the United States and is caused by a mutation in the ADAMTS13 gene, which makes an enzyme that regulates blood clotting. Patients with the congenital TTP typically receive prophylactic plasma-based therapy to replenish the ADAMTS13 enzyme and reduce the risk for clotting and bleeding. The condition, however, can be fatal if left untreated.
The new agent is a purified recombinant form of the ADAMTS13 enzyme that works by replacing low levels of the deficient enzyme in patients with congenital TTP. Adzynma is given prophylactically to reduce the risk for disease symptoms and on demand when a patient is experiencing an acute event, according to the FDA approval announcement.
The approval was based on a global randomized phase 3 study comparing the product with plasma-based therapies in 46 patients with congenital TTP. Patients in the trial were randomized to receive 6 months of treatment with either intravenous Adzynma — given once every other week as prophylactic enzyme replacement therapy or once daily as on-demand enzyme replacement therapy — or plasma-based therapies. The patients then crossed over to the other treatment for 6 months.
Interim findings from the study showed that Adzynma reduced the incidence of thrombocytopenia — the most common symptom of congenital TTP — by 60% compared with plasma-based therapy (rate ratio, 0.40). No patients experienced an acute TTP event during Adzynma prophylaxis, Takeda said.
Significantly more patients receiving plasma-based therapies experienced treatment-emergent adverse events compared with those receiving the biologic.
The most common side effects associated with the biologic were headache (31.3%), diarrhea (16.7%), migraine (14.6%), abdominal pain (12.5%), nausea (12.5%), upper respiratory tract infection (12.5%), dizziness (10.4%), and vomiting (10.4%). No treatment-related adverse events, including allergic reactions, were observed during administration.
“The FDA remains deeply committed in our efforts to help facilitate the development and approval of safe and effective therapies for patients with rare diseases,” Peter Marks, MD, PhD, director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, stated. The “approval reflects important progress in the development of much-needed treatment options for patients affected by this life-threatening disorder.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Congenital TTP affects fewer than 1,000 people in the United States and is caused by a mutation in the ADAMTS13 gene, which makes an enzyme that regulates blood clotting. Patients with the congenital TTP typically receive prophylactic plasma-based therapy to replenish the ADAMTS13 enzyme and reduce the risk for clotting and bleeding. The condition, however, can be fatal if left untreated.
The new agent is a purified recombinant form of the ADAMTS13 enzyme that works by replacing low levels of the deficient enzyme in patients with congenital TTP. Adzynma is given prophylactically to reduce the risk for disease symptoms and on demand when a patient is experiencing an acute event, according to the FDA approval announcement.
The approval was based on a global randomized phase 3 study comparing the product with plasma-based therapies in 46 patients with congenital TTP. Patients in the trial were randomized to receive 6 months of treatment with either intravenous Adzynma — given once every other week as prophylactic enzyme replacement therapy or once daily as on-demand enzyme replacement therapy — or plasma-based therapies. The patients then crossed over to the other treatment for 6 months.
Interim findings from the study showed that Adzynma reduced the incidence of thrombocytopenia — the most common symptom of congenital TTP — by 60% compared with plasma-based therapy (rate ratio, 0.40). No patients experienced an acute TTP event during Adzynma prophylaxis, Takeda said.
Significantly more patients receiving plasma-based therapies experienced treatment-emergent adverse events compared with those receiving the biologic.
The most common side effects associated with the biologic were headache (31.3%), diarrhea (16.7%), migraine (14.6%), abdominal pain (12.5%), nausea (12.5%), upper respiratory tract infection (12.5%), dizziness (10.4%), and vomiting (10.4%). No treatment-related adverse events, including allergic reactions, were observed during administration.
“The FDA remains deeply committed in our efforts to help facilitate the development and approval of safe and effective therapies for patients with rare diseases,” Peter Marks, MD, PhD, director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, stated. The “approval reflects important progress in the development of much-needed treatment options for patients affected by this life-threatening disorder.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Pediatrician with SCD gives her young patients hope
These days, thanks to transformative advances in treating SCD that have substantially improved survival, Dr. Fasipe’s mission for a new generation of patients and their families is to replace their pain and fear with relief and hope.
“If you grow up thinking that you’re going to die when you’re 18, it changes your world and your viewpoints, and it impacts your mental health,” she told this news organization.
“We are trying to make sure our children and their families know that there is a new story for sickle cell disease, and you don’t have to use any age as your prediction marker for your lifespan,” Dr. Fasipe said.
SCD, which affects about 100,000 people nationwide, is an inherited blood disorder, with the majority of patients – but not all – being of African descent. This condition is characterized by pain crises, or vaso-occlusive episodes, triggered when cells that are sickled get stuck and impede blood flow. These crises can come on suddenly and range from mild to severe.
Dr. Fasipe was born in Nigeria, where rates of SCD are among the world’s highest. She attended elementary school in the United States, where her father was studying theology, before returning to Nigeria with her family at age 11.
Back in those days, in both nations only about 50% of children with SCD lived beyond their 18th birthday. The survival rates in Nigeria and sub-Saharan Africa countries continue to be poor. In some more developed regions elsewhere, advances such as universal newborn screening, penicillin prophylaxis, pneumococcal vaccination, stroke screening, and hydroxyurea therapy have yielded substantial improvements, with 95% or more patients with SCD reaching their 18th birthday.
“With measures such as newborn screening, we can immediately start prevention measures in sickle cell disease, such as prevention of infection, which was the number one reason why children were dying,” Dr. Fasipe explained. “With global initiatives, we want that story to be the same in sub-Saharan Africa as well.”
Cousin’s early death inspires medical studies
In an essay published by Texas Medical Center that describes her childhood experiences, Dr. Fasipe recounts a pivotal event in her life: The heartbreaking death of her beloved cousin at the age of just 17, from a complication of SCD. This bereavement fueled Dr. Fasipe’s determination to pursue a medical career, to do all that she could to prevent such losses.
“Having sickle cell disease myself wasn’t the trigger that made me become a doctor. But when Femi [her cousin] died, I thought: ‘This shouldn’t happen,’ ” Dr. Fasipe wrote.
When she applied to medical school back in the United States, she declared in her application essay: “I want to cure sickle cell.”
By the time Dr. Fasipe was ready to undertake residency and fellowship applications, her essay had shifted to focus on pediatrics “specifically because I want to reach sickle cell patients before they’ve defined how their lives are going to be,” she said. “I want to give them hope.”
Hope for a cure
Fast-forwarding to this point in Dr. Fasipe’s career, she noted that her dream of a cure for SCD is no longer a distant aspiration, thanks to the advent of stem cell transplantation and more recently, gene therapy. These advancements have elevated her hope for a cure to an entirely new level.
Each new treatment comes with caveats. Stem cell transplantation requires a matching donor, leaving the majority of patients ineligible. And while gene therapy eliminates the need for a donor, treatment can reportedly cost nearly $3 million. Nevertheless, Dr. Fasipe emphasized the promise that these new advancements represent.
“The scientists that work in these spaces do appreciate these [accessibility barriers], and the expectation is these therapies will be more accessible with time and effort,” she said. “We’ve got to start somewhere, and it’s exciting that they’re making these early successes.”
Advice for clinicians
With firsthand knowledge of how it feels to be the patient, as well as on the clinician side of SCD treatment, Dr. Fasipe advises colleagues on some ways that they can improve care while boosting their patients’ hope:
Speak with empathy
Acknowledge the ‘elephant in the room’; the pain that patients with SCD can experience is real.
“When I’m managing any patient with pain, I first acknowledge the suffering because while we may not understand what that person is going through, acknowledgment is part of showing empathy,” she explains.
Seek out resources
Patients with SCD may typically seek treatment in primary care, where expertise in the disease may be lacking, and general practitioners may feel frustrated that there are limited treatment options.
“If you do find yourself treating a sickle cell disease patient, you may not have all of the answers, but there are good resources, whether it’s a nearby sickle cell disease centers or national guidelines,” Dr. Fasipe said.
Access to treatment
With research, including a recent study, showing that only about 25% of patients with SCD are prescribed hydroxyurea and even fewer – only about 5% – receive more recently approved SCD treatments, clinicians should be proactive by making sure that patients receive needed treatments.
“Clearly medicines like hydroxyurea are not as optimized in this community space as they should be, and then there are newer therapies that families, patients, and even providers may not be aware of, so it is important to be informed of the guidelines and provide all patients with comprehensive, high-quality care,” Dr. Fasipe said.
In the ED, patients with SCD are ‘care-seeking,’ not drug-seeking
Due to the sometimes rapid onset of severe pain symptoms, patients with SCD commonly wind up in the emergency department. In this time of an opioid epidemic, patients too often are suspected of merely seeking drugs.
“Sickle cell disease tends to get lumped into a category of a disease of pain, but pain is subjective and it is difficult to quantify, so unfortunately, patients can be labeled as potentially drug-seeking,” Dr. Fasipe explained, citing an article that detailed this problem.
Consequently, patients may have particularly negative experiences in the emergency department, but the use of resources such as a sickle cell disease point-of-care tool developed by the American College of Emergency Physicians and the American Society of Hematology can help improve care for those patients.
“One of the [point-of-care recommendations] before even managing the pain is that physicians show compassion by acknowledging the patient’s pain and that they understand why pain with sickle cell disease might look different than other types of pain,” Dr. Fasipe said.
Building trust
Encounters such as negative emergency department experiences can perpetuate a deeper issue of distrust between those with SCD and the medical community, which originated in long-held, well-documented racial disparities in health care.
“We know historically and even today that there are difficulties facing our families who are impacted by sickle cell disease, and they are related to structural racism and socioeconomic barriers,” Dr. Fasipe explained.
With these issues in mind, she said, “I refer to sickle cell disease as the medical representation of the Black experience in America.” However, she added, the good news is “we are now doing our best now to improve that.”
Among key efforts in building trust is the inclusion of patients with SCD and their families in as many aspects of research and clinical care as possible.
“In the global health care community, it is imperative to invite people with sickle cell disease and from the community to the decision-making table,” she noted.
“Now, when we’re talking about research for therapies, their expectation is that research trials and other initiatives for sickle cell disease must have input from the community; there are no initiatives for sickle cell disease that do not have input from the community.
“The patients and community members may not be experts on the science of sickle cell, but they’re experts on the lived experience and that’s very important when you’re thinking about new bringing in a new therapy.”
Forward momentum
Meanwhile, Dr. Fasipe observed, with the collective, advocacy-driven, forward momentum of the SCD community as a whole, things should only continue to improve.
“Because of the various barriers, some progress may not be immediately around the corner, but I do have confidence that this current generation of children with sickle cell will have improved health equity by the time they reach adulthood,” she said.
“I believe in this future, so I’m doing the work now, and it’s a promise I tell parents: I want your future adult child to live their best life, and we’re working hard to ensure that that becomes their future reality.”
Sickle cell disease awareness
September is National Sickle Cell Disease Awareness Month, and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute offers a comprehensive website that clinicians can pass along to their patients, with information ranging from fact sheets on the disease and treatments to social media resources and inspiring stories of people with the disease.
In a comment, Lewis Hsu, MD, PhD, chief medical officer of the Sickle Cell Disease Association of America, underscored the uniquely important contributions of people like Dr. Fasipe, in providing inspiration to patients and clinicians alike.
“I have worked with several physicians, nurses, psychologists, and public health specialists who have sickle cell disease,” said Dr. Hsu, who is a pediatric hematologist who also serves as director of the Sickle Cell Center and professor of pediatrics for the University of Illinois at Chicago.
“They are ambassadors who have the trust of both patients and healthcare providers,” Dr. Hsu said.
In addition to providing inspiration of resilience, such care providers can serve as “communication bridges,” he explained.
“When they are conference speakers, everybody wants to hear them; when they sit on advisory committees or focus groups, they can help find the compromise or set the priorities.”
“Their impact on the whole sickle cell community is very large,” Dr. Hsu said.
These days, thanks to transformative advances in treating SCD that have substantially improved survival, Dr. Fasipe’s mission for a new generation of patients and their families is to replace their pain and fear with relief and hope.
“If you grow up thinking that you’re going to die when you’re 18, it changes your world and your viewpoints, and it impacts your mental health,” she told this news organization.
“We are trying to make sure our children and their families know that there is a new story for sickle cell disease, and you don’t have to use any age as your prediction marker for your lifespan,” Dr. Fasipe said.
SCD, which affects about 100,000 people nationwide, is an inherited blood disorder, with the majority of patients – but not all – being of African descent. This condition is characterized by pain crises, or vaso-occlusive episodes, triggered when cells that are sickled get stuck and impede blood flow. These crises can come on suddenly and range from mild to severe.
Dr. Fasipe was born in Nigeria, where rates of SCD are among the world’s highest. She attended elementary school in the United States, where her father was studying theology, before returning to Nigeria with her family at age 11.
Back in those days, in both nations only about 50% of children with SCD lived beyond their 18th birthday. The survival rates in Nigeria and sub-Saharan Africa countries continue to be poor. In some more developed regions elsewhere, advances such as universal newborn screening, penicillin prophylaxis, pneumococcal vaccination, stroke screening, and hydroxyurea therapy have yielded substantial improvements, with 95% or more patients with SCD reaching their 18th birthday.
“With measures such as newborn screening, we can immediately start prevention measures in sickle cell disease, such as prevention of infection, which was the number one reason why children were dying,” Dr. Fasipe explained. “With global initiatives, we want that story to be the same in sub-Saharan Africa as well.”
Cousin’s early death inspires medical studies
In an essay published by Texas Medical Center that describes her childhood experiences, Dr. Fasipe recounts a pivotal event in her life: The heartbreaking death of her beloved cousin at the age of just 17, from a complication of SCD. This bereavement fueled Dr. Fasipe’s determination to pursue a medical career, to do all that she could to prevent such losses.
“Having sickle cell disease myself wasn’t the trigger that made me become a doctor. But when Femi [her cousin] died, I thought: ‘This shouldn’t happen,’ ” Dr. Fasipe wrote.
When she applied to medical school back in the United States, she declared in her application essay: “I want to cure sickle cell.”
By the time Dr. Fasipe was ready to undertake residency and fellowship applications, her essay had shifted to focus on pediatrics “specifically because I want to reach sickle cell patients before they’ve defined how their lives are going to be,” she said. “I want to give them hope.”
Hope for a cure
Fast-forwarding to this point in Dr. Fasipe’s career, she noted that her dream of a cure for SCD is no longer a distant aspiration, thanks to the advent of stem cell transplantation and more recently, gene therapy. These advancements have elevated her hope for a cure to an entirely new level.
Each new treatment comes with caveats. Stem cell transplantation requires a matching donor, leaving the majority of patients ineligible. And while gene therapy eliminates the need for a donor, treatment can reportedly cost nearly $3 million. Nevertheless, Dr. Fasipe emphasized the promise that these new advancements represent.
“The scientists that work in these spaces do appreciate these [accessibility barriers], and the expectation is these therapies will be more accessible with time and effort,” she said. “We’ve got to start somewhere, and it’s exciting that they’re making these early successes.”
Advice for clinicians
With firsthand knowledge of how it feels to be the patient, as well as on the clinician side of SCD treatment, Dr. Fasipe advises colleagues on some ways that they can improve care while boosting their patients’ hope:
Speak with empathy
Acknowledge the ‘elephant in the room’; the pain that patients with SCD can experience is real.
“When I’m managing any patient with pain, I first acknowledge the suffering because while we may not understand what that person is going through, acknowledgment is part of showing empathy,” she explains.
Seek out resources
Patients with SCD may typically seek treatment in primary care, where expertise in the disease may be lacking, and general practitioners may feel frustrated that there are limited treatment options.
“If you do find yourself treating a sickle cell disease patient, you may not have all of the answers, but there are good resources, whether it’s a nearby sickle cell disease centers or national guidelines,” Dr. Fasipe said.
Access to treatment
With research, including a recent study, showing that only about 25% of patients with SCD are prescribed hydroxyurea and even fewer – only about 5% – receive more recently approved SCD treatments, clinicians should be proactive by making sure that patients receive needed treatments.
“Clearly medicines like hydroxyurea are not as optimized in this community space as they should be, and then there are newer therapies that families, patients, and even providers may not be aware of, so it is important to be informed of the guidelines and provide all patients with comprehensive, high-quality care,” Dr. Fasipe said.
In the ED, patients with SCD are ‘care-seeking,’ not drug-seeking
Due to the sometimes rapid onset of severe pain symptoms, patients with SCD commonly wind up in the emergency department. In this time of an opioid epidemic, patients too often are suspected of merely seeking drugs.
“Sickle cell disease tends to get lumped into a category of a disease of pain, but pain is subjective and it is difficult to quantify, so unfortunately, patients can be labeled as potentially drug-seeking,” Dr. Fasipe explained, citing an article that detailed this problem.
Consequently, patients may have particularly negative experiences in the emergency department, but the use of resources such as a sickle cell disease point-of-care tool developed by the American College of Emergency Physicians and the American Society of Hematology can help improve care for those patients.
“One of the [point-of-care recommendations] before even managing the pain is that physicians show compassion by acknowledging the patient’s pain and that they understand why pain with sickle cell disease might look different than other types of pain,” Dr. Fasipe said.
Building trust
Encounters such as negative emergency department experiences can perpetuate a deeper issue of distrust between those with SCD and the medical community, which originated in long-held, well-documented racial disparities in health care.
“We know historically and even today that there are difficulties facing our families who are impacted by sickle cell disease, and they are related to structural racism and socioeconomic barriers,” Dr. Fasipe explained.
With these issues in mind, she said, “I refer to sickle cell disease as the medical representation of the Black experience in America.” However, she added, the good news is “we are now doing our best now to improve that.”
Among key efforts in building trust is the inclusion of patients with SCD and their families in as many aspects of research and clinical care as possible.
“In the global health care community, it is imperative to invite people with sickle cell disease and from the community to the decision-making table,” she noted.
“Now, when we’re talking about research for therapies, their expectation is that research trials and other initiatives for sickle cell disease must have input from the community; there are no initiatives for sickle cell disease that do not have input from the community.
“The patients and community members may not be experts on the science of sickle cell, but they’re experts on the lived experience and that’s very important when you’re thinking about new bringing in a new therapy.”
Forward momentum
Meanwhile, Dr. Fasipe observed, with the collective, advocacy-driven, forward momentum of the SCD community as a whole, things should only continue to improve.
“Because of the various barriers, some progress may not be immediately around the corner, but I do have confidence that this current generation of children with sickle cell will have improved health equity by the time they reach adulthood,” she said.
“I believe in this future, so I’m doing the work now, and it’s a promise I tell parents: I want your future adult child to live their best life, and we’re working hard to ensure that that becomes their future reality.”
Sickle cell disease awareness
September is National Sickle Cell Disease Awareness Month, and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute offers a comprehensive website that clinicians can pass along to their patients, with information ranging from fact sheets on the disease and treatments to social media resources and inspiring stories of people with the disease.
In a comment, Lewis Hsu, MD, PhD, chief medical officer of the Sickle Cell Disease Association of America, underscored the uniquely important contributions of people like Dr. Fasipe, in providing inspiration to patients and clinicians alike.
“I have worked with several physicians, nurses, psychologists, and public health specialists who have sickle cell disease,” said Dr. Hsu, who is a pediatric hematologist who also serves as director of the Sickle Cell Center and professor of pediatrics for the University of Illinois at Chicago.
“They are ambassadors who have the trust of both patients and healthcare providers,” Dr. Hsu said.
In addition to providing inspiration of resilience, such care providers can serve as “communication bridges,” he explained.
“When they are conference speakers, everybody wants to hear them; when they sit on advisory committees or focus groups, they can help find the compromise or set the priorities.”
“Their impact on the whole sickle cell community is very large,” Dr. Hsu said.
These days, thanks to transformative advances in treating SCD that have substantially improved survival, Dr. Fasipe’s mission for a new generation of patients and their families is to replace their pain and fear with relief and hope.
“If you grow up thinking that you’re going to die when you’re 18, it changes your world and your viewpoints, and it impacts your mental health,” she told this news organization.
“We are trying to make sure our children and their families know that there is a new story for sickle cell disease, and you don’t have to use any age as your prediction marker for your lifespan,” Dr. Fasipe said.
SCD, which affects about 100,000 people nationwide, is an inherited blood disorder, with the majority of patients – but not all – being of African descent. This condition is characterized by pain crises, or vaso-occlusive episodes, triggered when cells that are sickled get stuck and impede blood flow. These crises can come on suddenly and range from mild to severe.
Dr. Fasipe was born in Nigeria, where rates of SCD are among the world’s highest. She attended elementary school in the United States, where her father was studying theology, before returning to Nigeria with her family at age 11.
Back in those days, in both nations only about 50% of children with SCD lived beyond their 18th birthday. The survival rates in Nigeria and sub-Saharan Africa countries continue to be poor. In some more developed regions elsewhere, advances such as universal newborn screening, penicillin prophylaxis, pneumococcal vaccination, stroke screening, and hydroxyurea therapy have yielded substantial improvements, with 95% or more patients with SCD reaching their 18th birthday.
“With measures such as newborn screening, we can immediately start prevention measures in sickle cell disease, such as prevention of infection, which was the number one reason why children were dying,” Dr. Fasipe explained. “With global initiatives, we want that story to be the same in sub-Saharan Africa as well.”
Cousin’s early death inspires medical studies
In an essay published by Texas Medical Center that describes her childhood experiences, Dr. Fasipe recounts a pivotal event in her life: The heartbreaking death of her beloved cousin at the age of just 17, from a complication of SCD. This bereavement fueled Dr. Fasipe’s determination to pursue a medical career, to do all that she could to prevent such losses.
“Having sickle cell disease myself wasn’t the trigger that made me become a doctor. But when Femi [her cousin] died, I thought: ‘This shouldn’t happen,’ ” Dr. Fasipe wrote.
When she applied to medical school back in the United States, she declared in her application essay: “I want to cure sickle cell.”
By the time Dr. Fasipe was ready to undertake residency and fellowship applications, her essay had shifted to focus on pediatrics “specifically because I want to reach sickle cell patients before they’ve defined how their lives are going to be,” she said. “I want to give them hope.”
Hope for a cure
Fast-forwarding to this point in Dr. Fasipe’s career, she noted that her dream of a cure for SCD is no longer a distant aspiration, thanks to the advent of stem cell transplantation and more recently, gene therapy. These advancements have elevated her hope for a cure to an entirely new level.
Each new treatment comes with caveats. Stem cell transplantation requires a matching donor, leaving the majority of patients ineligible. And while gene therapy eliminates the need for a donor, treatment can reportedly cost nearly $3 million. Nevertheless, Dr. Fasipe emphasized the promise that these new advancements represent.
“The scientists that work in these spaces do appreciate these [accessibility barriers], and the expectation is these therapies will be more accessible with time and effort,” she said. “We’ve got to start somewhere, and it’s exciting that they’re making these early successes.”
Advice for clinicians
With firsthand knowledge of how it feels to be the patient, as well as on the clinician side of SCD treatment, Dr. Fasipe advises colleagues on some ways that they can improve care while boosting their patients’ hope:
Speak with empathy
Acknowledge the ‘elephant in the room’; the pain that patients with SCD can experience is real.
“When I’m managing any patient with pain, I first acknowledge the suffering because while we may not understand what that person is going through, acknowledgment is part of showing empathy,” she explains.
Seek out resources
Patients with SCD may typically seek treatment in primary care, where expertise in the disease may be lacking, and general practitioners may feel frustrated that there are limited treatment options.
“If you do find yourself treating a sickle cell disease patient, you may not have all of the answers, but there are good resources, whether it’s a nearby sickle cell disease centers or national guidelines,” Dr. Fasipe said.
Access to treatment
With research, including a recent study, showing that only about 25% of patients with SCD are prescribed hydroxyurea and even fewer – only about 5% – receive more recently approved SCD treatments, clinicians should be proactive by making sure that patients receive needed treatments.
“Clearly medicines like hydroxyurea are not as optimized in this community space as they should be, and then there are newer therapies that families, patients, and even providers may not be aware of, so it is important to be informed of the guidelines and provide all patients with comprehensive, high-quality care,” Dr. Fasipe said.
In the ED, patients with SCD are ‘care-seeking,’ not drug-seeking
Due to the sometimes rapid onset of severe pain symptoms, patients with SCD commonly wind up in the emergency department. In this time of an opioid epidemic, patients too often are suspected of merely seeking drugs.
“Sickle cell disease tends to get lumped into a category of a disease of pain, but pain is subjective and it is difficult to quantify, so unfortunately, patients can be labeled as potentially drug-seeking,” Dr. Fasipe explained, citing an article that detailed this problem.
Consequently, patients may have particularly negative experiences in the emergency department, but the use of resources such as a sickle cell disease point-of-care tool developed by the American College of Emergency Physicians and the American Society of Hematology can help improve care for those patients.
“One of the [point-of-care recommendations] before even managing the pain is that physicians show compassion by acknowledging the patient’s pain and that they understand why pain with sickle cell disease might look different than other types of pain,” Dr. Fasipe said.
Building trust
Encounters such as negative emergency department experiences can perpetuate a deeper issue of distrust between those with SCD and the medical community, which originated in long-held, well-documented racial disparities in health care.
“We know historically and even today that there are difficulties facing our families who are impacted by sickle cell disease, and they are related to structural racism and socioeconomic barriers,” Dr. Fasipe explained.
With these issues in mind, she said, “I refer to sickle cell disease as the medical representation of the Black experience in America.” However, she added, the good news is “we are now doing our best now to improve that.”
Among key efforts in building trust is the inclusion of patients with SCD and their families in as many aspects of research and clinical care as possible.
“In the global health care community, it is imperative to invite people with sickle cell disease and from the community to the decision-making table,” she noted.
“Now, when we’re talking about research for therapies, their expectation is that research trials and other initiatives for sickle cell disease must have input from the community; there are no initiatives for sickle cell disease that do not have input from the community.
“The patients and community members may not be experts on the science of sickle cell, but they’re experts on the lived experience and that’s very important when you’re thinking about new bringing in a new therapy.”
Forward momentum
Meanwhile, Dr. Fasipe observed, with the collective, advocacy-driven, forward momentum of the SCD community as a whole, things should only continue to improve.
“Because of the various barriers, some progress may not be immediately around the corner, but I do have confidence that this current generation of children with sickle cell will have improved health equity by the time they reach adulthood,” she said.
“I believe in this future, so I’m doing the work now, and it’s a promise I tell parents: I want your future adult child to live their best life, and we’re working hard to ensure that that becomes their future reality.”
Sickle cell disease awareness
September is National Sickle Cell Disease Awareness Month, and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute offers a comprehensive website that clinicians can pass along to their patients, with information ranging from fact sheets on the disease and treatments to social media resources and inspiring stories of people with the disease.
In a comment, Lewis Hsu, MD, PhD, chief medical officer of the Sickle Cell Disease Association of America, underscored the uniquely important contributions of people like Dr. Fasipe, in providing inspiration to patients and clinicians alike.
“I have worked with several physicians, nurses, psychologists, and public health specialists who have sickle cell disease,” said Dr. Hsu, who is a pediatric hematologist who also serves as director of the Sickle Cell Center and professor of pediatrics for the University of Illinois at Chicago.
“They are ambassadors who have the trust of both patients and healthcare providers,” Dr. Hsu said.
In addition to providing inspiration of resilience, such care providers can serve as “communication bridges,” he explained.
“When they are conference speakers, everybody wants to hear them; when they sit on advisory committees or focus groups, they can help find the compromise or set the priorities.”
“Their impact on the whole sickle cell community is very large,” Dr. Hsu said.
Nationwide hematologists shortage: What’s being done?
Over decades, the shrinking pool of CHs – who are compensated far less than hematologist-oncologists – has put patients at risk without access to adequate and timely care. To alleviate this crisis, individual doctors and national organizations are taking action and making more resources available to CHs and their patients.
`Vicious cycle’
The root cause of the CH shortage can be traced to a dramatic reduction in the number of physicians trained in this field, as Leonard Valentino, MD, President of the National Bleeding Disorders Foundation in New York, explained in an interview.
“There is a vicious cycle where there’s not enough classical hematologists to be program directors, and therefore trainees are often steered to fellowships in oncology,” said Dr. Valentino.
According to data published in JAMA, in 1995 there were 74 classical hematology programs in the United States; by 2018, there were only 2, During this same time period, the number of combined hematology/oncology training programs (HOPs) nearly doubled, from 75 to 146. However, it is estimated that less than 5% of graduates of adult HOPs pursued a career in classical hematology, as reported in Blood Advances. This low percentage can be attributed, at least in part, to the emphasis that most HOPs place on oncology.
Dr. Valentino noted that financial pressures are also diverting medical students from becoming CHs, adding that a hematologist-oncologist can make three times the annual salary of a CH.
Furthermore, when CHs treat bleeding and clotting disorders, they often need to meet with a patient for a 60- to 90-minute initial consultation, then they go on to provide a lifetime of labor-intensive care.
“This work is neither verticalized [that is, supported by radiologists, surgeons, and a cadre of nurses], nor is it billable per hour on a scale comparable to what oncologists can charge,” Dr. Valentino explained.
The survey published in Blood Advances illustrates the consequences of such a disparity in income potential: 34% of hematology/oncology fellows surveyed were likely to enter solid tumor oncology, while 20% and 4.6% would proceed to malignant hematology and CH, respectively.
Toll on patients
Primary care doctors treat some common blood disorders, but they almost always refer more difficult or complicated cases to a shrinking population of CHs.
“For many Americans, it is getting more difficult to find providers who subspecialize in hemostasis and thrombosis disorders. Patients can expect prolonged waiting times to get evaluated after a referral” said Mukul Singal, MD, of the Indiana Hemophilia and Thrombosis Center in Indianapolis.
Dr. Singal said the shortage is so acute that “at many institutions, malignant hematologists or oncologists are having to staff in-patient hematology consult services and see outpatient classical hematology patients. General hematologist/oncologists or medical oncologists are often not as comfortable or experienced with dealing with some of the complex CH conditions.”
A working care model, without enough doctors
In 1975, responding to patient advocacy groups, the federal government began funding hemophilia treatment centers (HTCs). Such centers offer a comprehensive care model that gives patients access to practitioners and administrative staff with the expertise to help them stay as healthy as possible. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, people with hemophilia who used an HTC were 40% less likely to die of a hemophilia-related complication and 40% less likely to be hospitalized for bleeding complications, compared to those who did not receive such specialized care.
“HTCs are effective at keeping patients out of the hospital and engaged in their lives. Between 80% and 95% of hemophilia patients get their care from an HTC and more patients want more services from them,” said Joe Pugliese, president of the Hemophilia Alliance in Lansdale, Pa.
Expanding care to meet patient demand is challenged by the restrictions on doctors’ salaries. All 140 U.S.-based HTCs share a $4.9 million federal grant but, by law, they can’t pay any provider more than $211,000 a year. “These restrictions push many people to industry, leaving too few doctors to meet patient demand,” Mr. Pugliese explained.
The fact that most HTCs are located in or near major cities also presents patients with the challenge of commuting, sometimes across state lines, to see a specialist. However, an uptick in telemedicine has provided one bright spot for many patients, allowing care to be brought to them.
The Hemophilia Alliance is also working on a multifaceted approach to change the rules, so that CHs are offered better compensation. “We have lobbyists in Washington, as well as an advocacy committee and a payer committee working to better support the HTC model,” Mr. Pugliese said.
Beyond the paycheck: Supporting CHs and patients
As market and regulatory restrictions make it difficult to boost the pay of CHs, doctors and nonprofit organizations are collaborating to support young CHs and bring more into the field. The American Society of Hematology has started and fully funded the Hematology Focused Fellowship Training Program (HFFTP). This program pairs comprehensive classical hematology training with education in transfusion medicine, sickle cell disease, hemostasis/thrombosis, systems-based hematology, health equity research, and global health. According to the program’s website, HFFTP’s goal is to add 50 new academic hematologists nationwide by 2030, in an effort to “improve the lives of patients with blood and bone marrow disorders.”
Additionally, classic hematologists are aiming to attract younger physicians and trainees to their field by introducing them to the various rewarding aspects of dealing with patients with inherited, chronic blood diseases. Programs like the Partners Physicians Academy (PPA), a 5-day training course that is specifically designed to encourage and retain young hematology students as classical hematologists, are essential to this effort.
“Along with preparing physicians to work in an HTC, programs like the Hematology Focused Fellowship Training Program and the Partners Physicians Academy are so important because they might convince young doctors to stick with non–oncology-based hematology careers, through the right mix of knowing about exciting research like gene therapy, financial and mentorship support, and a desire to meet unmet medical need,” explained Dr. Valentino.
The next PPA is taking place Sept. 18-22 in Indianapolis.
Dr. Singal, Dr. Valentino, and Mr. Pugliese had no financial disclosures to report.
Over decades, the shrinking pool of CHs – who are compensated far less than hematologist-oncologists – has put patients at risk without access to adequate and timely care. To alleviate this crisis, individual doctors and national organizations are taking action and making more resources available to CHs and their patients.
`Vicious cycle’
The root cause of the CH shortage can be traced to a dramatic reduction in the number of physicians trained in this field, as Leonard Valentino, MD, President of the National Bleeding Disorders Foundation in New York, explained in an interview.
“There is a vicious cycle where there’s not enough classical hematologists to be program directors, and therefore trainees are often steered to fellowships in oncology,” said Dr. Valentino.
According to data published in JAMA, in 1995 there were 74 classical hematology programs in the United States; by 2018, there were only 2, During this same time period, the number of combined hematology/oncology training programs (HOPs) nearly doubled, from 75 to 146. However, it is estimated that less than 5% of graduates of adult HOPs pursued a career in classical hematology, as reported in Blood Advances. This low percentage can be attributed, at least in part, to the emphasis that most HOPs place on oncology.
Dr. Valentino noted that financial pressures are also diverting medical students from becoming CHs, adding that a hematologist-oncologist can make three times the annual salary of a CH.
Furthermore, when CHs treat bleeding and clotting disorders, they often need to meet with a patient for a 60- to 90-minute initial consultation, then they go on to provide a lifetime of labor-intensive care.
“This work is neither verticalized [that is, supported by radiologists, surgeons, and a cadre of nurses], nor is it billable per hour on a scale comparable to what oncologists can charge,” Dr. Valentino explained.
The survey published in Blood Advances illustrates the consequences of such a disparity in income potential: 34% of hematology/oncology fellows surveyed were likely to enter solid tumor oncology, while 20% and 4.6% would proceed to malignant hematology and CH, respectively.
Toll on patients
Primary care doctors treat some common blood disorders, but they almost always refer more difficult or complicated cases to a shrinking population of CHs.
“For many Americans, it is getting more difficult to find providers who subspecialize in hemostasis and thrombosis disorders. Patients can expect prolonged waiting times to get evaluated after a referral” said Mukul Singal, MD, of the Indiana Hemophilia and Thrombosis Center in Indianapolis.
Dr. Singal said the shortage is so acute that “at many institutions, malignant hematologists or oncologists are having to staff in-patient hematology consult services and see outpatient classical hematology patients. General hematologist/oncologists or medical oncologists are often not as comfortable or experienced with dealing with some of the complex CH conditions.”
A working care model, without enough doctors
In 1975, responding to patient advocacy groups, the federal government began funding hemophilia treatment centers (HTCs). Such centers offer a comprehensive care model that gives patients access to practitioners and administrative staff with the expertise to help them stay as healthy as possible. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, people with hemophilia who used an HTC were 40% less likely to die of a hemophilia-related complication and 40% less likely to be hospitalized for bleeding complications, compared to those who did not receive such specialized care.
“HTCs are effective at keeping patients out of the hospital and engaged in their lives. Between 80% and 95% of hemophilia patients get their care from an HTC and more patients want more services from them,” said Joe Pugliese, president of the Hemophilia Alliance in Lansdale, Pa.
Expanding care to meet patient demand is challenged by the restrictions on doctors’ salaries. All 140 U.S.-based HTCs share a $4.9 million federal grant but, by law, they can’t pay any provider more than $211,000 a year. “These restrictions push many people to industry, leaving too few doctors to meet patient demand,” Mr. Pugliese explained.
The fact that most HTCs are located in or near major cities also presents patients with the challenge of commuting, sometimes across state lines, to see a specialist. However, an uptick in telemedicine has provided one bright spot for many patients, allowing care to be brought to them.
The Hemophilia Alliance is also working on a multifaceted approach to change the rules, so that CHs are offered better compensation. “We have lobbyists in Washington, as well as an advocacy committee and a payer committee working to better support the HTC model,” Mr. Pugliese said.
Beyond the paycheck: Supporting CHs and patients
As market and regulatory restrictions make it difficult to boost the pay of CHs, doctors and nonprofit organizations are collaborating to support young CHs and bring more into the field. The American Society of Hematology has started and fully funded the Hematology Focused Fellowship Training Program (HFFTP). This program pairs comprehensive classical hematology training with education in transfusion medicine, sickle cell disease, hemostasis/thrombosis, systems-based hematology, health equity research, and global health. According to the program’s website, HFFTP’s goal is to add 50 new academic hematologists nationwide by 2030, in an effort to “improve the lives of patients with blood and bone marrow disorders.”
Additionally, classic hematologists are aiming to attract younger physicians and trainees to their field by introducing them to the various rewarding aspects of dealing with patients with inherited, chronic blood diseases. Programs like the Partners Physicians Academy (PPA), a 5-day training course that is specifically designed to encourage and retain young hematology students as classical hematologists, are essential to this effort.
“Along with preparing physicians to work in an HTC, programs like the Hematology Focused Fellowship Training Program and the Partners Physicians Academy are so important because they might convince young doctors to stick with non–oncology-based hematology careers, through the right mix of knowing about exciting research like gene therapy, financial and mentorship support, and a desire to meet unmet medical need,” explained Dr. Valentino.
The next PPA is taking place Sept. 18-22 in Indianapolis.
Dr. Singal, Dr. Valentino, and Mr. Pugliese had no financial disclosures to report.
Over decades, the shrinking pool of CHs – who are compensated far less than hematologist-oncologists – has put patients at risk without access to adequate and timely care. To alleviate this crisis, individual doctors and national organizations are taking action and making more resources available to CHs and their patients.
`Vicious cycle’
The root cause of the CH shortage can be traced to a dramatic reduction in the number of physicians trained in this field, as Leonard Valentino, MD, President of the National Bleeding Disorders Foundation in New York, explained in an interview.
“There is a vicious cycle where there’s not enough classical hematologists to be program directors, and therefore trainees are often steered to fellowships in oncology,” said Dr. Valentino.
According to data published in JAMA, in 1995 there were 74 classical hematology programs in the United States; by 2018, there were only 2, During this same time period, the number of combined hematology/oncology training programs (HOPs) nearly doubled, from 75 to 146. However, it is estimated that less than 5% of graduates of adult HOPs pursued a career in classical hematology, as reported in Blood Advances. This low percentage can be attributed, at least in part, to the emphasis that most HOPs place on oncology.
Dr. Valentino noted that financial pressures are also diverting medical students from becoming CHs, adding that a hematologist-oncologist can make three times the annual salary of a CH.
Furthermore, when CHs treat bleeding and clotting disorders, they often need to meet with a patient for a 60- to 90-minute initial consultation, then they go on to provide a lifetime of labor-intensive care.
“This work is neither verticalized [that is, supported by radiologists, surgeons, and a cadre of nurses], nor is it billable per hour on a scale comparable to what oncologists can charge,” Dr. Valentino explained.
The survey published in Blood Advances illustrates the consequences of such a disparity in income potential: 34% of hematology/oncology fellows surveyed were likely to enter solid tumor oncology, while 20% and 4.6% would proceed to malignant hematology and CH, respectively.
Toll on patients
Primary care doctors treat some common blood disorders, but they almost always refer more difficult or complicated cases to a shrinking population of CHs.
“For many Americans, it is getting more difficult to find providers who subspecialize in hemostasis and thrombosis disorders. Patients can expect prolonged waiting times to get evaluated after a referral” said Mukul Singal, MD, of the Indiana Hemophilia and Thrombosis Center in Indianapolis.
Dr. Singal said the shortage is so acute that “at many institutions, malignant hematologists or oncologists are having to staff in-patient hematology consult services and see outpatient classical hematology patients. General hematologist/oncologists or medical oncologists are often not as comfortable or experienced with dealing with some of the complex CH conditions.”
A working care model, without enough doctors
In 1975, responding to patient advocacy groups, the federal government began funding hemophilia treatment centers (HTCs). Such centers offer a comprehensive care model that gives patients access to practitioners and administrative staff with the expertise to help them stay as healthy as possible. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, people with hemophilia who used an HTC were 40% less likely to die of a hemophilia-related complication and 40% less likely to be hospitalized for bleeding complications, compared to those who did not receive such specialized care.
“HTCs are effective at keeping patients out of the hospital and engaged in their lives. Between 80% and 95% of hemophilia patients get their care from an HTC and more patients want more services from them,” said Joe Pugliese, president of the Hemophilia Alliance in Lansdale, Pa.
Expanding care to meet patient demand is challenged by the restrictions on doctors’ salaries. All 140 U.S.-based HTCs share a $4.9 million federal grant but, by law, they can’t pay any provider more than $211,000 a year. “These restrictions push many people to industry, leaving too few doctors to meet patient demand,” Mr. Pugliese explained.
The fact that most HTCs are located in or near major cities also presents patients with the challenge of commuting, sometimes across state lines, to see a specialist. However, an uptick in telemedicine has provided one bright spot for many patients, allowing care to be brought to them.
The Hemophilia Alliance is also working on a multifaceted approach to change the rules, so that CHs are offered better compensation. “We have lobbyists in Washington, as well as an advocacy committee and a payer committee working to better support the HTC model,” Mr. Pugliese said.
Beyond the paycheck: Supporting CHs and patients
As market and regulatory restrictions make it difficult to boost the pay of CHs, doctors and nonprofit organizations are collaborating to support young CHs and bring more into the field. The American Society of Hematology has started and fully funded the Hematology Focused Fellowship Training Program (HFFTP). This program pairs comprehensive classical hematology training with education in transfusion medicine, sickle cell disease, hemostasis/thrombosis, systems-based hematology, health equity research, and global health. According to the program’s website, HFFTP’s goal is to add 50 new academic hematologists nationwide by 2030, in an effort to “improve the lives of patients with blood and bone marrow disorders.”
Additionally, classic hematologists are aiming to attract younger physicians and trainees to their field by introducing them to the various rewarding aspects of dealing with patients with inherited, chronic blood diseases. Programs like the Partners Physicians Academy (PPA), a 5-day training course that is specifically designed to encourage and retain young hematology students as classical hematologists, are essential to this effort.
“Along with preparing physicians to work in an HTC, programs like the Hematology Focused Fellowship Training Program and the Partners Physicians Academy are so important because they might convince young doctors to stick with non–oncology-based hematology careers, through the right mix of knowing about exciting research like gene therapy, financial and mentorship support, and a desire to meet unmet medical need,” explained Dr. Valentino.
The next PPA is taking place Sept. 18-22 in Indianapolis.
Dr. Singal, Dr. Valentino, and Mr. Pugliese had no financial disclosures to report.
Using JAK inhibitors for myelofibrosis
“We are thankfully starting to be blessed with more options than we’ve ever had,” he said, but “in the front-line proliferative setting, ruxolitinib has remained the standard of care.” It’s “well established in higher-risk patients and very much an option for very symptomatic lower-risk patients.”
Dr. Hunter helped his colleagues navigate the evolving field of JAK inhibition for myelofibrosis in a presentation titled “Choosing and Properly Using a JAK Inhibitor in Myelofibrosis,”at the Society of Hematologic Oncology annual meeting.
Ruxolitinib was the first JAK inhibitor for myelofibrosis on the U.S. market, approved in 2011. Two more have followed, fedratinib in 2019 and pacritinib in 2022.
A fourth JAK inhibitor for myelofibrosis, momelotinib, is under Food and Drug Administration review with a decision expected shortly.
JAK inhibitors disrupt a key pathogenic pathway in myelofibrosis and are a mainstay of treatment, but Dr. Hunter noted that they should not replace allogeneic transplants in patients who are candidates because transplants remain “the best way to achieve long term survival, especially in higher risk patients.”
He noted that not every patient needs a JAK inhibitor, especially “lower-risk, more asymptomatic patients who are predominantly manifesting with cytopenias. [They] are less likely to benefit.”
Dr. Hunter said that although ruxolitinib remains a treatment of choice, fedratinib “is certainly an option” with comparable rates of symptom control and splenomegaly reduction. Also, while ruxolitinib is dosed according to platelet levels, fedratinib allows for full dosing down to a platelet count of 50 x 109/L.
“But there’s more GI toxicity than with ruxolitinib, especially in the first couple of months,” he said, as well as a black box warning of Wernicke’s encephalopathy. “I generally put all my [fedratinib] patients on thiamine repletion as a precaution.”
One of the most challenging aspects of using JAK inhibitors for myelofibrosis is their tendency to cause cytopenia, particularly anemia and thrombocytopenia, which, ironically, are also hallmarks of myelofibrosis itself.
Although there’s an alternative low-dose ruxolitinib regimen that can be effective in anemic settings, the approval of pacritinib and most likely momelotinib is particularly helpful for cytopenic patients, “a population which historically has been very hard to treat with our prior agents,” Dr. Hunter said.
Pacritinib is approved specifically for patients with platelet counts below 50 x 109/L; momelotinib also included lower platelet counts in several studies. Both agents indirectly boost erythropoiesis with subsequent amelioration of anemia.
“Momelotinib is an important emerging agent for these more anemic patients,” with a spleen response comparable to ruxolitinib and significantly higher rates of transfusion independence, but with lower rates of symptom control, Dr. Hunter said.
Pacritinib “really helps extend the benefit of JAK inhibitors to a group of thrombocytopenic patients who have been hard to treat with ruxolitinib,” with the added potential of improving anemia, although, like fedratinib, it has more GI toxicity, he said.
There are multiple add-on options for JAK inhibitor patients with anemia, including luspatercept, an erythropoiesis-stimulating agent approved for anemia in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes; promising results were reported recently for myelofibrosis.
Fedratinib, pacritinib, and momelotinib all have activity in the second line after ruxolitinib failure, Dr. Hunter noted, but he cautioned that ruxolitinib must be tapered over a few weeks, not stopped abruptly, to avoid withdrawal symptoms. Some clinicians overlap JAK inhibitors a day or two to avoid issues.
“Clinical trials should still be considered in many of these settings,” he said, adding that emerging agents are under development, including multiple combination therapies, often with JAK inhibitors as the background.
No disclosure information was reported.
“We are thankfully starting to be blessed with more options than we’ve ever had,” he said, but “in the front-line proliferative setting, ruxolitinib has remained the standard of care.” It’s “well established in higher-risk patients and very much an option for very symptomatic lower-risk patients.”
Dr. Hunter helped his colleagues navigate the evolving field of JAK inhibition for myelofibrosis in a presentation titled “Choosing and Properly Using a JAK Inhibitor in Myelofibrosis,”at the Society of Hematologic Oncology annual meeting.
Ruxolitinib was the first JAK inhibitor for myelofibrosis on the U.S. market, approved in 2011. Two more have followed, fedratinib in 2019 and pacritinib in 2022.
A fourth JAK inhibitor for myelofibrosis, momelotinib, is under Food and Drug Administration review with a decision expected shortly.
JAK inhibitors disrupt a key pathogenic pathway in myelofibrosis and are a mainstay of treatment, but Dr. Hunter noted that they should not replace allogeneic transplants in patients who are candidates because transplants remain “the best way to achieve long term survival, especially in higher risk patients.”
He noted that not every patient needs a JAK inhibitor, especially “lower-risk, more asymptomatic patients who are predominantly manifesting with cytopenias. [They] are less likely to benefit.”
Dr. Hunter said that although ruxolitinib remains a treatment of choice, fedratinib “is certainly an option” with comparable rates of symptom control and splenomegaly reduction. Also, while ruxolitinib is dosed according to platelet levels, fedratinib allows for full dosing down to a platelet count of 50 x 109/L.
“But there’s more GI toxicity than with ruxolitinib, especially in the first couple of months,” he said, as well as a black box warning of Wernicke’s encephalopathy. “I generally put all my [fedratinib] patients on thiamine repletion as a precaution.”
One of the most challenging aspects of using JAK inhibitors for myelofibrosis is their tendency to cause cytopenia, particularly anemia and thrombocytopenia, which, ironically, are also hallmarks of myelofibrosis itself.
Although there’s an alternative low-dose ruxolitinib regimen that can be effective in anemic settings, the approval of pacritinib and most likely momelotinib is particularly helpful for cytopenic patients, “a population which historically has been very hard to treat with our prior agents,” Dr. Hunter said.
Pacritinib is approved specifically for patients with platelet counts below 50 x 109/L; momelotinib also included lower platelet counts in several studies. Both agents indirectly boost erythropoiesis with subsequent amelioration of anemia.
“Momelotinib is an important emerging agent for these more anemic patients,” with a spleen response comparable to ruxolitinib and significantly higher rates of transfusion independence, but with lower rates of symptom control, Dr. Hunter said.
Pacritinib “really helps extend the benefit of JAK inhibitors to a group of thrombocytopenic patients who have been hard to treat with ruxolitinib,” with the added potential of improving anemia, although, like fedratinib, it has more GI toxicity, he said.
There are multiple add-on options for JAK inhibitor patients with anemia, including luspatercept, an erythropoiesis-stimulating agent approved for anemia in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes; promising results were reported recently for myelofibrosis.
Fedratinib, pacritinib, and momelotinib all have activity in the second line after ruxolitinib failure, Dr. Hunter noted, but he cautioned that ruxolitinib must be tapered over a few weeks, not stopped abruptly, to avoid withdrawal symptoms. Some clinicians overlap JAK inhibitors a day or two to avoid issues.
“Clinical trials should still be considered in many of these settings,” he said, adding that emerging agents are under development, including multiple combination therapies, often with JAK inhibitors as the background.
No disclosure information was reported.
“We are thankfully starting to be blessed with more options than we’ve ever had,” he said, but “in the front-line proliferative setting, ruxolitinib has remained the standard of care.” It’s “well established in higher-risk patients and very much an option for very symptomatic lower-risk patients.”
Dr. Hunter helped his colleagues navigate the evolving field of JAK inhibition for myelofibrosis in a presentation titled “Choosing and Properly Using a JAK Inhibitor in Myelofibrosis,”at the Society of Hematologic Oncology annual meeting.
Ruxolitinib was the first JAK inhibitor for myelofibrosis on the U.S. market, approved in 2011. Two more have followed, fedratinib in 2019 and pacritinib in 2022.
A fourth JAK inhibitor for myelofibrosis, momelotinib, is under Food and Drug Administration review with a decision expected shortly.
JAK inhibitors disrupt a key pathogenic pathway in myelofibrosis and are a mainstay of treatment, but Dr. Hunter noted that they should not replace allogeneic transplants in patients who are candidates because transplants remain “the best way to achieve long term survival, especially in higher risk patients.”
He noted that not every patient needs a JAK inhibitor, especially “lower-risk, more asymptomatic patients who are predominantly manifesting with cytopenias. [They] are less likely to benefit.”
Dr. Hunter said that although ruxolitinib remains a treatment of choice, fedratinib “is certainly an option” with comparable rates of symptom control and splenomegaly reduction. Also, while ruxolitinib is dosed according to platelet levels, fedratinib allows for full dosing down to a platelet count of 50 x 109/L.
“But there’s more GI toxicity than with ruxolitinib, especially in the first couple of months,” he said, as well as a black box warning of Wernicke’s encephalopathy. “I generally put all my [fedratinib] patients on thiamine repletion as a precaution.”
One of the most challenging aspects of using JAK inhibitors for myelofibrosis is their tendency to cause cytopenia, particularly anemia and thrombocytopenia, which, ironically, are also hallmarks of myelofibrosis itself.
Although there’s an alternative low-dose ruxolitinib regimen that can be effective in anemic settings, the approval of pacritinib and most likely momelotinib is particularly helpful for cytopenic patients, “a population which historically has been very hard to treat with our prior agents,” Dr. Hunter said.
Pacritinib is approved specifically for patients with platelet counts below 50 x 109/L; momelotinib also included lower platelet counts in several studies. Both agents indirectly boost erythropoiesis with subsequent amelioration of anemia.
“Momelotinib is an important emerging agent for these more anemic patients,” with a spleen response comparable to ruxolitinib and significantly higher rates of transfusion independence, but with lower rates of symptom control, Dr. Hunter said.
Pacritinib “really helps extend the benefit of JAK inhibitors to a group of thrombocytopenic patients who have been hard to treat with ruxolitinib,” with the added potential of improving anemia, although, like fedratinib, it has more GI toxicity, he said.
There are multiple add-on options for JAK inhibitor patients with anemia, including luspatercept, an erythropoiesis-stimulating agent approved for anemia in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes; promising results were reported recently for myelofibrosis.
Fedratinib, pacritinib, and momelotinib all have activity in the second line after ruxolitinib failure, Dr. Hunter noted, but he cautioned that ruxolitinib must be tapered over a few weeks, not stopped abruptly, to avoid withdrawal symptoms. Some clinicians overlap JAK inhibitors a day or two to avoid issues.
“Clinical trials should still be considered in many of these settings,” he said, adding that emerging agents are under development, including multiple combination therapies, often with JAK inhibitors as the background.
No disclosure information was reported.
FROM SOHO 2023
CHP/CCUS: Low blood cancer risk for most patients
The reason is that patients will inevitably “go online and see that [the conditions are] associated with lots of bad things; it can really cause patients psychosocial harm if there is no one to explain what their risk is and also provide risk-specific management,” Dr. Weeks said at the annual meeting of the Society of Hematologic Oncology in Houston.
CHIP and CCUS are precursors of myeloid malignancies but for most patients, the risk of progression is less than 1%. CHIPS and CCUS are also associated with cardiovascular, rheumatologic, hepatic, and other diseases.
CHIP is defined by somatic mutations in myeloid malignancy driver genes with a variant allele fraction of 2% or more; CCUS is when those molecular features are accompanied by an unexplained and persistent anemia, thrombocytopenia, or neutropenia.
A small 2017 study suggested that about a third of patients with otherwise unexplained cytopenias have CCUS.
With the increasing use of next generation sequencing for tissue and liquid biopsies and other uses, the incidental diagnosis of both conditions is increasing.
Fortunately, Dr. Weeks’ group recently published a tool for predicting the risk of progression to myeloid malignancy.
Their “clonal hematopoiesis risk score” (CHRS) was developed and validated in over 400,000 healthy volunteers in the UK Biobank, with additional validation in cohorts from Dana Farber and the University of Pavia, Italy.
The CHRS incorporates eight high-risk genetic and clinical prognostic factors, including the type and number of genetic mutations in blood cells, factors related to red blood cell volume, and age over 65. It’s available online.
“You just input the patient’s information and it spits out if the patient is low, intermediate, or high risk for progression to any myeloid malignancy,” Dr. Weeks told her audience.
High-risk patients have about a 50% 10-year cumulative incidence of myeloid malignancy. The large majority of patients are low risk, however, and have a 10-year cumulative incidence of less than 1%. Patients in the middle have a 10-year risk of about 8%.
The low-risk group “is the population of people who probably don’t need to see a specialist,” and can be followed with an annual CBC with their primary care doctors plus further workup with any clinical change. Patients should also be evaluated for cardiovascular and other comorbidity risks.
“It’s the high-risk group we worry most about,” Dr. Weeks said. “We see them more often and repeat the next-generation sequencing” annually with a CBC at least every 6 months and a bone marrow biopsy with any clinical change.
“This is the population we would shuttle towards a clinical trial, as this is the population most likely to benefit,” she said.
The overarching goal of the several ongoing studies in CHIP/CCUS is to find a way to prevent progression to blood cancer. They range from prospective cohorts and single arm pilot studies to randomized clinical trials. One trial is evaluating canakinumab to prevent progression. “Intervention in clonal hematopoiesis might have the dual benefit of both preventing hematologic malignancy as well as reducing [the] inflammatory comorbidities,” Dr. Weeks said.
The reason is that patients will inevitably “go online and see that [the conditions are] associated with lots of bad things; it can really cause patients psychosocial harm if there is no one to explain what their risk is and also provide risk-specific management,” Dr. Weeks said at the annual meeting of the Society of Hematologic Oncology in Houston.
CHIP and CCUS are precursors of myeloid malignancies but for most patients, the risk of progression is less than 1%. CHIPS and CCUS are also associated with cardiovascular, rheumatologic, hepatic, and other diseases.
CHIP is defined by somatic mutations in myeloid malignancy driver genes with a variant allele fraction of 2% or more; CCUS is when those molecular features are accompanied by an unexplained and persistent anemia, thrombocytopenia, or neutropenia.
A small 2017 study suggested that about a third of patients with otherwise unexplained cytopenias have CCUS.
With the increasing use of next generation sequencing for tissue and liquid biopsies and other uses, the incidental diagnosis of both conditions is increasing.
Fortunately, Dr. Weeks’ group recently published a tool for predicting the risk of progression to myeloid malignancy.
Their “clonal hematopoiesis risk score” (CHRS) was developed and validated in over 400,000 healthy volunteers in the UK Biobank, with additional validation in cohorts from Dana Farber and the University of Pavia, Italy.
The CHRS incorporates eight high-risk genetic and clinical prognostic factors, including the type and number of genetic mutations in blood cells, factors related to red blood cell volume, and age over 65. It’s available online.
“You just input the patient’s information and it spits out if the patient is low, intermediate, or high risk for progression to any myeloid malignancy,” Dr. Weeks told her audience.
High-risk patients have about a 50% 10-year cumulative incidence of myeloid malignancy. The large majority of patients are low risk, however, and have a 10-year cumulative incidence of less than 1%. Patients in the middle have a 10-year risk of about 8%.
The low-risk group “is the population of people who probably don’t need to see a specialist,” and can be followed with an annual CBC with their primary care doctors plus further workup with any clinical change. Patients should also be evaluated for cardiovascular and other comorbidity risks.
“It’s the high-risk group we worry most about,” Dr. Weeks said. “We see them more often and repeat the next-generation sequencing” annually with a CBC at least every 6 months and a bone marrow biopsy with any clinical change.
“This is the population we would shuttle towards a clinical trial, as this is the population most likely to benefit,” she said.
The overarching goal of the several ongoing studies in CHIP/CCUS is to find a way to prevent progression to blood cancer. They range from prospective cohorts and single arm pilot studies to randomized clinical trials. One trial is evaluating canakinumab to prevent progression. “Intervention in clonal hematopoiesis might have the dual benefit of both preventing hematologic malignancy as well as reducing [the] inflammatory comorbidities,” Dr. Weeks said.
The reason is that patients will inevitably “go online and see that [the conditions are] associated with lots of bad things; it can really cause patients psychosocial harm if there is no one to explain what their risk is and also provide risk-specific management,” Dr. Weeks said at the annual meeting of the Society of Hematologic Oncology in Houston.
CHIP and CCUS are precursors of myeloid malignancies but for most patients, the risk of progression is less than 1%. CHIPS and CCUS are also associated with cardiovascular, rheumatologic, hepatic, and other diseases.
CHIP is defined by somatic mutations in myeloid malignancy driver genes with a variant allele fraction of 2% or more; CCUS is when those molecular features are accompanied by an unexplained and persistent anemia, thrombocytopenia, or neutropenia.
A small 2017 study suggested that about a third of patients with otherwise unexplained cytopenias have CCUS.
With the increasing use of next generation sequencing for tissue and liquid biopsies and other uses, the incidental diagnosis of both conditions is increasing.
Fortunately, Dr. Weeks’ group recently published a tool for predicting the risk of progression to myeloid malignancy.
Their “clonal hematopoiesis risk score” (CHRS) was developed and validated in over 400,000 healthy volunteers in the UK Biobank, with additional validation in cohorts from Dana Farber and the University of Pavia, Italy.
The CHRS incorporates eight high-risk genetic and clinical prognostic factors, including the type and number of genetic mutations in blood cells, factors related to red blood cell volume, and age over 65. It’s available online.
“You just input the patient’s information and it spits out if the patient is low, intermediate, or high risk for progression to any myeloid malignancy,” Dr. Weeks told her audience.
High-risk patients have about a 50% 10-year cumulative incidence of myeloid malignancy. The large majority of patients are low risk, however, and have a 10-year cumulative incidence of less than 1%. Patients in the middle have a 10-year risk of about 8%.
The low-risk group “is the population of people who probably don’t need to see a specialist,” and can be followed with an annual CBC with their primary care doctors plus further workup with any clinical change. Patients should also be evaluated for cardiovascular and other comorbidity risks.
“It’s the high-risk group we worry most about,” Dr. Weeks said. “We see them more often and repeat the next-generation sequencing” annually with a CBC at least every 6 months and a bone marrow biopsy with any clinical change.
“This is the population we would shuttle towards a clinical trial, as this is the population most likely to benefit,” she said.
The overarching goal of the several ongoing studies in CHIP/CCUS is to find a way to prevent progression to blood cancer. They range from prospective cohorts and single arm pilot studies to randomized clinical trials. One trial is evaluating canakinumab to prevent progression. “Intervention in clonal hematopoiesis might have the dual benefit of both preventing hematologic malignancy as well as reducing [the] inflammatory comorbidities,” Dr. Weeks said.
FROM SOHO 2023
Hemophilia: Concizumab lessens bleeding, could expand treatment options
Concizumab (Novo Nordisk), a subcutaneous monoclonal antibody administered once daily, shows significant reductions in annualized bleeding rates in patients with hemophilia A or B with inhibitors, potentially representing the first subcutaneous treatment option for patients with hemophilia B with inhibitors.
“These results demonstrate the potential of concizumab as an efficacious treatment option for people living with hemophilia A or B with inhibitors – the latter a population with severely limited treatment options,” first author Tadashi Matsushita, MD, PhD, of the department of transfusion medicine, Nagoya (Japan) University Hospital, said in an interview regarding the study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
The results are from the prospective, multicenter, phase 3 explorer7 trial, involving 133 patients, including 80 with hemophilia A and 53 had hemophilia B, all with inhibitors, a complication of hemophilia therapy in which antibodies ‘inhibit’ clot formation and complicate standard treatment.
The patients, aged 12 or older and all receiving on-demand treatment with bypassing agents, were randomized to receive no prophylaxis for at least 24 weeks (n = 19) or concizumab prophylaxis for at least 32 weeks (n = 33), with the remaining patients nonrandomly assigned to two groups receiving concizumab prophylaxis for at least 24 weeks (n = 81).
For the primary endpoint of the estimated mean annualized bleeding rate, the rate in the no-prophylaxis group was 11.8 episodes versus just 1.7 episodes in the concizumab prophylaxis 32-week group (rate ratio, 0.14; P < .001).
The overall median annualized bleeding rate for patients in all three groups receiving concizumab was zero episodes.
Annualized rates of treated spontaneous, joint, and target joint bleeding episodes were also lower in the concizumab groups versus the no-prophylaxis group, with annualized rate ratios that were similar to the annualized rate ratio for the primary endpoint.
While similar annualized bleeding rates were observed in hemophilia subtypes, the study wasn’t powered to show superiority according the hemophilia A or B, the authors noted.
Plasma concentrations of concizumab remained stable over the course of the study.
There were no significant differences in terms of key secondary endpoints of change in bodily pain and physical functioning scores from the start of treatment to week 24.
Pause for safety
Treatment in the study was paused for 6 months from March 2020 to August 2020 following nonfatal thromboembolic events occurring in three patients receiving concizumab, including one in the explorer7 trial and two in the concurrent explorer8 trial, evaluating the drug in patients with hemophilia without inhibitors.
The authors wrote that the three patients had all received concomitant treatment for bleeding and had thrombotic risk factors including obesity and other comorbidities.
The trial resumed following mitigation measures that included revising the dosing regimen to include a 1–mg/kg concizumab loading dose, followed by a subcutaneous once-daily dose of 0.2 mg/kg concizumab. No further thromboembolic events were reported after the pause. Otherwise, adverse events were mainly low grade, with serious events being rare.
Option for hemophilia B important
Of the two disease types, hemophilia A is much more common, with an estimated prevalence in the United States of 12 cases per 100,000 males versus hemophilia B, which has a rate of only 3.7 cases per 100,000, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Women make up only about 1% of cases with moderate to severe hemophilia.
A standard treatment of hemophilia A or B is prophylaxis with factor replacement therapies allow for improved clotting and reduced bleeding. However, one caveat is the need for intravenous injections, as often as once daily in some cases.
The development of inhibitors in response to replacement therapy may further necessitate the need for treatment with bypassing agents for breakthrough bleeding.
As an alternative, non–factor replacement therapies can promote coagulation, notably the factor VIII mimetic emicizumab, given by subcutaneous injection, and approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 2018 for patients with and without inhibitors.
Emicizumab is recommended by the World Federation on Hemophilia over bypassing agents as prophylaxis for patients with hemophilia A and persistent inhibitors.
Importantly, however, there are no effective prophylactic treatments or easily administered subcutaneous therapies available for hemophilia B with inhibitors, underscoring the potential importance of concizumab, which targets the tissue factor pathway inhibitor protein, linked to coagulation.
“Concizumab has the potential to become the first subcutaneous and first-in-class treatment for hemophilia B with inhibitors,” Dr. Matsushita said. “There are other therapies investigated for hemophilia B with and without inhibitors still in clinical development,” he noted.
FDA resubmission planned
In May, Novo Nordisk announced that the FDA had rejected its application for concizumab, requesting more information on the drug’s manufacturing process and its system for the monitoring and dosing of patients to ensure proper drug administration. In a statement, Novo Nordisk reported its plans to move ahead.
“Novo Nordisk has begun addressing the FDA’s feedback and is working closely with the FDA as plans for resubmission continue,” the company reported. “We are confident in the potential of concizumab to address a significant unmet need, particularly for people with hemophilia B with inhibitors who currently have limited prophylactic options and are committed to bringing this important treatment to people with hemophilia with inhibitors living in the U.S.A.”
Meanwhile in Canada, concizumab was approved in March 2023 for the treatment of adolescent and adult patients with hemophilia B with inhibitors and who require routine prophylaxis to prevent or reduce the frequency of bleeding episodes.
The authors wrote that concizumab continues to be investigated across all hemophilia subtypes, including in the explorer10 study, which is evaluating the drug in children living with hemophilia A or B, with and without inhibitors.
The study was supported by Novo Nordisk. Dr. Matsushita reported speaking for and participating on a scientific advisory board of Novo Nordisk.
Concizumab (Novo Nordisk), a subcutaneous monoclonal antibody administered once daily, shows significant reductions in annualized bleeding rates in patients with hemophilia A or B with inhibitors, potentially representing the first subcutaneous treatment option for patients with hemophilia B with inhibitors.
“These results demonstrate the potential of concizumab as an efficacious treatment option for people living with hemophilia A or B with inhibitors – the latter a population with severely limited treatment options,” first author Tadashi Matsushita, MD, PhD, of the department of transfusion medicine, Nagoya (Japan) University Hospital, said in an interview regarding the study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
The results are from the prospective, multicenter, phase 3 explorer7 trial, involving 133 patients, including 80 with hemophilia A and 53 had hemophilia B, all with inhibitors, a complication of hemophilia therapy in which antibodies ‘inhibit’ clot formation and complicate standard treatment.
The patients, aged 12 or older and all receiving on-demand treatment with bypassing agents, were randomized to receive no prophylaxis for at least 24 weeks (n = 19) or concizumab prophylaxis for at least 32 weeks (n = 33), with the remaining patients nonrandomly assigned to two groups receiving concizumab prophylaxis for at least 24 weeks (n = 81).
For the primary endpoint of the estimated mean annualized bleeding rate, the rate in the no-prophylaxis group was 11.8 episodes versus just 1.7 episodes in the concizumab prophylaxis 32-week group (rate ratio, 0.14; P < .001).
The overall median annualized bleeding rate for patients in all three groups receiving concizumab was zero episodes.
Annualized rates of treated spontaneous, joint, and target joint bleeding episodes were also lower in the concizumab groups versus the no-prophylaxis group, with annualized rate ratios that were similar to the annualized rate ratio for the primary endpoint.
While similar annualized bleeding rates were observed in hemophilia subtypes, the study wasn’t powered to show superiority according the hemophilia A or B, the authors noted.
Plasma concentrations of concizumab remained stable over the course of the study.
There were no significant differences in terms of key secondary endpoints of change in bodily pain and physical functioning scores from the start of treatment to week 24.
Pause for safety
Treatment in the study was paused for 6 months from March 2020 to August 2020 following nonfatal thromboembolic events occurring in three patients receiving concizumab, including one in the explorer7 trial and two in the concurrent explorer8 trial, evaluating the drug in patients with hemophilia without inhibitors.
The authors wrote that the three patients had all received concomitant treatment for bleeding and had thrombotic risk factors including obesity and other comorbidities.
The trial resumed following mitigation measures that included revising the dosing regimen to include a 1–mg/kg concizumab loading dose, followed by a subcutaneous once-daily dose of 0.2 mg/kg concizumab. No further thromboembolic events were reported after the pause. Otherwise, adverse events were mainly low grade, with serious events being rare.
Option for hemophilia B important
Of the two disease types, hemophilia A is much more common, with an estimated prevalence in the United States of 12 cases per 100,000 males versus hemophilia B, which has a rate of only 3.7 cases per 100,000, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Women make up only about 1% of cases with moderate to severe hemophilia.
A standard treatment of hemophilia A or B is prophylaxis with factor replacement therapies allow for improved clotting and reduced bleeding. However, one caveat is the need for intravenous injections, as often as once daily in some cases.
The development of inhibitors in response to replacement therapy may further necessitate the need for treatment with bypassing agents for breakthrough bleeding.
As an alternative, non–factor replacement therapies can promote coagulation, notably the factor VIII mimetic emicizumab, given by subcutaneous injection, and approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 2018 for patients with and without inhibitors.
Emicizumab is recommended by the World Federation on Hemophilia over bypassing agents as prophylaxis for patients with hemophilia A and persistent inhibitors.
Importantly, however, there are no effective prophylactic treatments or easily administered subcutaneous therapies available for hemophilia B with inhibitors, underscoring the potential importance of concizumab, which targets the tissue factor pathway inhibitor protein, linked to coagulation.
“Concizumab has the potential to become the first subcutaneous and first-in-class treatment for hemophilia B with inhibitors,” Dr. Matsushita said. “There are other therapies investigated for hemophilia B with and without inhibitors still in clinical development,” he noted.
FDA resubmission planned
In May, Novo Nordisk announced that the FDA had rejected its application for concizumab, requesting more information on the drug’s manufacturing process and its system for the monitoring and dosing of patients to ensure proper drug administration. In a statement, Novo Nordisk reported its plans to move ahead.
“Novo Nordisk has begun addressing the FDA’s feedback and is working closely with the FDA as plans for resubmission continue,” the company reported. “We are confident in the potential of concizumab to address a significant unmet need, particularly for people with hemophilia B with inhibitors who currently have limited prophylactic options and are committed to bringing this important treatment to people with hemophilia with inhibitors living in the U.S.A.”
Meanwhile in Canada, concizumab was approved in March 2023 for the treatment of adolescent and adult patients with hemophilia B with inhibitors and who require routine prophylaxis to prevent or reduce the frequency of bleeding episodes.
The authors wrote that concizumab continues to be investigated across all hemophilia subtypes, including in the explorer10 study, which is evaluating the drug in children living with hemophilia A or B, with and without inhibitors.
The study was supported by Novo Nordisk. Dr. Matsushita reported speaking for and participating on a scientific advisory board of Novo Nordisk.
Concizumab (Novo Nordisk), a subcutaneous monoclonal antibody administered once daily, shows significant reductions in annualized bleeding rates in patients with hemophilia A or B with inhibitors, potentially representing the first subcutaneous treatment option for patients with hemophilia B with inhibitors.
“These results demonstrate the potential of concizumab as an efficacious treatment option for people living with hemophilia A or B with inhibitors – the latter a population with severely limited treatment options,” first author Tadashi Matsushita, MD, PhD, of the department of transfusion medicine, Nagoya (Japan) University Hospital, said in an interview regarding the study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
The results are from the prospective, multicenter, phase 3 explorer7 trial, involving 133 patients, including 80 with hemophilia A and 53 had hemophilia B, all with inhibitors, a complication of hemophilia therapy in which antibodies ‘inhibit’ clot formation and complicate standard treatment.
The patients, aged 12 or older and all receiving on-demand treatment with bypassing agents, were randomized to receive no prophylaxis for at least 24 weeks (n = 19) or concizumab prophylaxis for at least 32 weeks (n = 33), with the remaining patients nonrandomly assigned to two groups receiving concizumab prophylaxis for at least 24 weeks (n = 81).
For the primary endpoint of the estimated mean annualized bleeding rate, the rate in the no-prophylaxis group was 11.8 episodes versus just 1.7 episodes in the concizumab prophylaxis 32-week group (rate ratio, 0.14; P < .001).
The overall median annualized bleeding rate for patients in all three groups receiving concizumab was zero episodes.
Annualized rates of treated spontaneous, joint, and target joint bleeding episodes were also lower in the concizumab groups versus the no-prophylaxis group, with annualized rate ratios that were similar to the annualized rate ratio for the primary endpoint.
While similar annualized bleeding rates were observed in hemophilia subtypes, the study wasn’t powered to show superiority according the hemophilia A or B, the authors noted.
Plasma concentrations of concizumab remained stable over the course of the study.
There were no significant differences in terms of key secondary endpoints of change in bodily pain and physical functioning scores from the start of treatment to week 24.
Pause for safety
Treatment in the study was paused for 6 months from March 2020 to August 2020 following nonfatal thromboembolic events occurring in three patients receiving concizumab, including one in the explorer7 trial and two in the concurrent explorer8 trial, evaluating the drug in patients with hemophilia without inhibitors.
The authors wrote that the three patients had all received concomitant treatment for bleeding and had thrombotic risk factors including obesity and other comorbidities.
The trial resumed following mitigation measures that included revising the dosing regimen to include a 1–mg/kg concizumab loading dose, followed by a subcutaneous once-daily dose of 0.2 mg/kg concizumab. No further thromboembolic events were reported after the pause. Otherwise, adverse events were mainly low grade, with serious events being rare.
Option for hemophilia B important
Of the two disease types, hemophilia A is much more common, with an estimated prevalence in the United States of 12 cases per 100,000 males versus hemophilia B, which has a rate of only 3.7 cases per 100,000, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Women make up only about 1% of cases with moderate to severe hemophilia.
A standard treatment of hemophilia A or B is prophylaxis with factor replacement therapies allow for improved clotting and reduced bleeding. However, one caveat is the need for intravenous injections, as often as once daily in some cases.
The development of inhibitors in response to replacement therapy may further necessitate the need for treatment with bypassing agents for breakthrough bleeding.
As an alternative, non–factor replacement therapies can promote coagulation, notably the factor VIII mimetic emicizumab, given by subcutaneous injection, and approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 2018 for patients with and without inhibitors.
Emicizumab is recommended by the World Federation on Hemophilia over bypassing agents as prophylaxis for patients with hemophilia A and persistent inhibitors.
Importantly, however, there are no effective prophylactic treatments or easily administered subcutaneous therapies available for hemophilia B with inhibitors, underscoring the potential importance of concizumab, which targets the tissue factor pathway inhibitor protein, linked to coagulation.
“Concizumab has the potential to become the first subcutaneous and first-in-class treatment for hemophilia B with inhibitors,” Dr. Matsushita said. “There are other therapies investigated for hemophilia B with and without inhibitors still in clinical development,” he noted.
FDA resubmission planned
In May, Novo Nordisk announced that the FDA had rejected its application for concizumab, requesting more information on the drug’s manufacturing process and its system for the monitoring and dosing of patients to ensure proper drug administration. In a statement, Novo Nordisk reported its plans to move ahead.
“Novo Nordisk has begun addressing the FDA’s feedback and is working closely with the FDA as plans for resubmission continue,” the company reported. “We are confident in the potential of concizumab to address a significant unmet need, particularly for people with hemophilia B with inhibitors who currently have limited prophylactic options and are committed to bringing this important treatment to people with hemophilia with inhibitors living in the U.S.A.”
Meanwhile in Canada, concizumab was approved in March 2023 for the treatment of adolescent and adult patients with hemophilia B with inhibitors and who require routine prophylaxis to prevent or reduce the frequency of bleeding episodes.
The authors wrote that concizumab continues to be investigated across all hemophilia subtypes, including in the explorer10 study, which is evaluating the drug in children living with hemophilia A or B, with and without inhibitors.
The study was supported by Novo Nordisk. Dr. Matsushita reported speaking for and participating on a scientific advisory board of Novo Nordisk.
FROM THE NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE
SCD: Survival disparities seen across insurance types
“To the best of our knowledge, this is the first United States nationwide investigation into lifetime survival for individuals with sickle cell disease covered by Medicare and Medicaid and disparities in survival by public insurance type, using comprehensive claims data collected from all 50 states,” the authors report in the study, published in Blood Advances.
“Our study underscores the persistent life expectancy shortfall for patients with sickle cell disease, the burden of premature mortality during adulthood, and survival disparities by insurance status,” they write.
SCD, which disproportionately affects people of African descent, significantly increases the risk of various acute and chronic life-threatening complications, including acute pain crisis, stroke, acute chest syndrome, chronic pain, symptomatic anemia, infections, and organ damage.
In recent years, advances ranging from newborn screening to prophylactic antibiotics have significantly improved the survival rates of children with SCD in the United States. However, premature mortality in adulthood has remained well above that of the general public.
A recent study of a U.S. birth cohort predicted life expectancy with SCD to be approximately 2 decades shorter than in those without the disease. However, those projections were based on a simulation model, and other life expectancy estimates have had sample sizes with state or regional limitations.
With no population-level individual data–based periodic life tables existing for individuals with SCD, the authors turned to nationwide data on Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries to get a better idea of survival predictions.
For the study, they identified 94,616 individuals diagnosed with SCD who had not undergone transplant and were receiving common care, based on nationwide Medicare and Medicaid claim data from 2008 to 2016 on beneficiaries in all 50 states.
Of the patients, 74% were Black and 53% resided in the South at the index date. The patients had a mean entry age overall of 26.6 years across insurance types.
The results showed projected life expectancy at birth with SCD to be 52.6 years, with the life expectancy at birth for females significantly longer, compared with that of males (55.0 versus 49.3 years). For the general population, U.S. life expectancy estimates have been reported to be about 76 years.
Specifically, life expectancy in the cohort into adulthood was 35.4 years at 18 years of age; 24.1 years at 35 years of age; 19.6 years at 45 years old; 13.2 years at 65 years of age; and 5.4 years at 85 years old.
Likewise, survival probability rates were high during childhood, with survival probability at 18 years being 0.98, declining to 0.804 at age 30; 0.628 at age 45; 0.267 at age 65 and 0.70 at age 85.
Black individuals had a significantly shorter life expectancy at birth than non-Black individuals (52.2 vs. 55.1 years), with the survival expectancy for Black individuals significantly shorter than the 75-year life expectancy estimated by the 2016 U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention life table for the Black population in general.
Of the patients, only 5% had Medicare old age and survivor’s insurance, and 4% had Medicare disability insurance benefits or end-stage renal disease (ESRD), while 48% had Medicaid, and 43% were dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid. The racial and regional distributions were similar across insurance types.
Adults covered by Medicare had a life expectancy of 39.8 years at 18 years of age, an improvement over life expectancy for those with Medicare for disabilities or ESRD and those dually insured by Medicare and Medicaid.
And the shorter life expectancy with Medicare and Medicaid was also observed among beneficiaries aged 65 or older, compared with those enrolled in Medicare old age and survivor’s insurance.
“Evidently, the life expectancy gap persists among patients with sickle cell disease, even though they are protected by public insurance,” the authors report.
The shorter life expectancy among those with dual eligibility for Medicare and Medicaid is consistent with that of the general population, the authors add.
“It is well-recognized that the dual-eligible individuals are a vulnerable population with some of the most complex and expensive health care needs,” they write. “They are more likely to have fewer socioeconomic resources, more chronic conditions, and poorer survival outcomes than single eligible.”
First author Boshen Jiao, PhD, MPH, of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, in Boston, noted that socioeconomic factors, on a broader level, have an important impact on SCD.
“Even the first and most established FDA-approved medication for sickle cell disease, hydroxyurea, suffers from underutilization,” he told MDedge. “This issue can be associated with disparities along racial lines, particularly concerning access to treatments.”
Such factors can also play a role in the lack of a well-coordinated transition program needed to prevent gaps in care between youth and adulthood, as well as a lack of access to specialized care needed to potentially initiate new therapies.
Ultimately, the decline in survival seen from childhood to adulthood in SCD “emphasizes the pivotal role of health care during the critical transition phase from childhood to adulthood for individuals with sickle cell disease,” Dr. Jiao said. “Moreover, the prospect of a curative therapy that can intervene in the early stages of life, prior to adulthood, stands as a desirable goal.”
The authors urge that “future studies should uncover factors influencing survival outcomes and explore policy options to address the unmet needs of the disabled or dually eligible population with SCD.” They had no disclosures to report.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
“To the best of our knowledge, this is the first United States nationwide investigation into lifetime survival for individuals with sickle cell disease covered by Medicare and Medicaid and disparities in survival by public insurance type, using comprehensive claims data collected from all 50 states,” the authors report in the study, published in Blood Advances.
“Our study underscores the persistent life expectancy shortfall for patients with sickle cell disease, the burden of premature mortality during adulthood, and survival disparities by insurance status,” they write.
SCD, which disproportionately affects people of African descent, significantly increases the risk of various acute and chronic life-threatening complications, including acute pain crisis, stroke, acute chest syndrome, chronic pain, symptomatic anemia, infections, and organ damage.
In recent years, advances ranging from newborn screening to prophylactic antibiotics have significantly improved the survival rates of children with SCD in the United States. However, premature mortality in adulthood has remained well above that of the general public.
A recent study of a U.S. birth cohort predicted life expectancy with SCD to be approximately 2 decades shorter than in those without the disease. However, those projections were based on a simulation model, and other life expectancy estimates have had sample sizes with state or regional limitations.
With no population-level individual data–based periodic life tables existing for individuals with SCD, the authors turned to nationwide data on Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries to get a better idea of survival predictions.
For the study, they identified 94,616 individuals diagnosed with SCD who had not undergone transplant and were receiving common care, based on nationwide Medicare and Medicaid claim data from 2008 to 2016 on beneficiaries in all 50 states.
Of the patients, 74% were Black and 53% resided in the South at the index date. The patients had a mean entry age overall of 26.6 years across insurance types.
The results showed projected life expectancy at birth with SCD to be 52.6 years, with the life expectancy at birth for females significantly longer, compared with that of males (55.0 versus 49.3 years). For the general population, U.S. life expectancy estimates have been reported to be about 76 years.
Specifically, life expectancy in the cohort into adulthood was 35.4 years at 18 years of age; 24.1 years at 35 years of age; 19.6 years at 45 years old; 13.2 years at 65 years of age; and 5.4 years at 85 years old.
Likewise, survival probability rates were high during childhood, with survival probability at 18 years being 0.98, declining to 0.804 at age 30; 0.628 at age 45; 0.267 at age 65 and 0.70 at age 85.
Black individuals had a significantly shorter life expectancy at birth than non-Black individuals (52.2 vs. 55.1 years), with the survival expectancy for Black individuals significantly shorter than the 75-year life expectancy estimated by the 2016 U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention life table for the Black population in general.
Of the patients, only 5% had Medicare old age and survivor’s insurance, and 4% had Medicare disability insurance benefits or end-stage renal disease (ESRD), while 48% had Medicaid, and 43% were dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid. The racial and regional distributions were similar across insurance types.
Adults covered by Medicare had a life expectancy of 39.8 years at 18 years of age, an improvement over life expectancy for those with Medicare for disabilities or ESRD and those dually insured by Medicare and Medicaid.
And the shorter life expectancy with Medicare and Medicaid was also observed among beneficiaries aged 65 or older, compared with those enrolled in Medicare old age and survivor’s insurance.
“Evidently, the life expectancy gap persists among patients with sickle cell disease, even though they are protected by public insurance,” the authors report.
The shorter life expectancy among those with dual eligibility for Medicare and Medicaid is consistent with that of the general population, the authors add.
“It is well-recognized that the dual-eligible individuals are a vulnerable population with some of the most complex and expensive health care needs,” they write. “They are more likely to have fewer socioeconomic resources, more chronic conditions, and poorer survival outcomes than single eligible.”
First author Boshen Jiao, PhD, MPH, of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, in Boston, noted that socioeconomic factors, on a broader level, have an important impact on SCD.
“Even the first and most established FDA-approved medication for sickle cell disease, hydroxyurea, suffers from underutilization,” he told MDedge. “This issue can be associated with disparities along racial lines, particularly concerning access to treatments.”
Such factors can also play a role in the lack of a well-coordinated transition program needed to prevent gaps in care between youth and adulthood, as well as a lack of access to specialized care needed to potentially initiate new therapies.
Ultimately, the decline in survival seen from childhood to adulthood in SCD “emphasizes the pivotal role of health care during the critical transition phase from childhood to adulthood for individuals with sickle cell disease,” Dr. Jiao said. “Moreover, the prospect of a curative therapy that can intervene in the early stages of life, prior to adulthood, stands as a desirable goal.”
The authors urge that “future studies should uncover factors influencing survival outcomes and explore policy options to address the unmet needs of the disabled or dually eligible population with SCD.” They had no disclosures to report.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
“To the best of our knowledge, this is the first United States nationwide investigation into lifetime survival for individuals with sickle cell disease covered by Medicare and Medicaid and disparities in survival by public insurance type, using comprehensive claims data collected from all 50 states,” the authors report in the study, published in Blood Advances.
“Our study underscores the persistent life expectancy shortfall for patients with sickle cell disease, the burden of premature mortality during adulthood, and survival disparities by insurance status,” they write.
SCD, which disproportionately affects people of African descent, significantly increases the risk of various acute and chronic life-threatening complications, including acute pain crisis, stroke, acute chest syndrome, chronic pain, symptomatic anemia, infections, and organ damage.
In recent years, advances ranging from newborn screening to prophylactic antibiotics have significantly improved the survival rates of children with SCD in the United States. However, premature mortality in adulthood has remained well above that of the general public.
A recent study of a U.S. birth cohort predicted life expectancy with SCD to be approximately 2 decades shorter than in those without the disease. However, those projections were based on a simulation model, and other life expectancy estimates have had sample sizes with state or regional limitations.
With no population-level individual data–based periodic life tables existing for individuals with SCD, the authors turned to nationwide data on Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries to get a better idea of survival predictions.
For the study, they identified 94,616 individuals diagnosed with SCD who had not undergone transplant and were receiving common care, based on nationwide Medicare and Medicaid claim data from 2008 to 2016 on beneficiaries in all 50 states.
Of the patients, 74% were Black and 53% resided in the South at the index date. The patients had a mean entry age overall of 26.6 years across insurance types.
The results showed projected life expectancy at birth with SCD to be 52.6 years, with the life expectancy at birth for females significantly longer, compared with that of males (55.0 versus 49.3 years). For the general population, U.S. life expectancy estimates have been reported to be about 76 years.
Specifically, life expectancy in the cohort into adulthood was 35.4 years at 18 years of age; 24.1 years at 35 years of age; 19.6 years at 45 years old; 13.2 years at 65 years of age; and 5.4 years at 85 years old.
Likewise, survival probability rates were high during childhood, with survival probability at 18 years being 0.98, declining to 0.804 at age 30; 0.628 at age 45; 0.267 at age 65 and 0.70 at age 85.
Black individuals had a significantly shorter life expectancy at birth than non-Black individuals (52.2 vs. 55.1 years), with the survival expectancy for Black individuals significantly shorter than the 75-year life expectancy estimated by the 2016 U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention life table for the Black population in general.
Of the patients, only 5% had Medicare old age and survivor’s insurance, and 4% had Medicare disability insurance benefits or end-stage renal disease (ESRD), while 48% had Medicaid, and 43% were dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid. The racial and regional distributions were similar across insurance types.
Adults covered by Medicare had a life expectancy of 39.8 years at 18 years of age, an improvement over life expectancy for those with Medicare for disabilities or ESRD and those dually insured by Medicare and Medicaid.
And the shorter life expectancy with Medicare and Medicaid was also observed among beneficiaries aged 65 or older, compared with those enrolled in Medicare old age and survivor’s insurance.
“Evidently, the life expectancy gap persists among patients with sickle cell disease, even though they are protected by public insurance,” the authors report.
The shorter life expectancy among those with dual eligibility for Medicare and Medicaid is consistent with that of the general population, the authors add.
“It is well-recognized that the dual-eligible individuals are a vulnerable population with some of the most complex and expensive health care needs,” they write. “They are more likely to have fewer socioeconomic resources, more chronic conditions, and poorer survival outcomes than single eligible.”
First author Boshen Jiao, PhD, MPH, of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, in Boston, noted that socioeconomic factors, on a broader level, have an important impact on SCD.
“Even the first and most established FDA-approved medication for sickle cell disease, hydroxyurea, suffers from underutilization,” he told MDedge. “This issue can be associated with disparities along racial lines, particularly concerning access to treatments.”
Such factors can also play a role in the lack of a well-coordinated transition program needed to prevent gaps in care between youth and adulthood, as well as a lack of access to specialized care needed to potentially initiate new therapies.
Ultimately, the decline in survival seen from childhood to adulthood in SCD “emphasizes the pivotal role of health care during the critical transition phase from childhood to adulthood for individuals with sickle cell disease,” Dr. Jiao said. “Moreover, the prospect of a curative therapy that can intervene in the early stages of life, prior to adulthood, stands as a desirable goal.”
The authors urge that “future studies should uncover factors influencing survival outcomes and explore policy options to address the unmet needs of the disabled or dually eligible population with SCD.” They had no disclosures to report.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM BLOOD ADVANCES
SCD, beta-thalassemia: CRISPR-based gene therapy `transformative’
Results from the prespecified interim analyses of the phase 3 CLIMB THAL-111 and CLIMB SCD-121 studies, presented at the European Hematology Association annual congress, show that patients with beta-thalassemia who received exa-cel were able to remain transfusion-free for up to 40.7 consecutive months, while in patients with sickle cell disease, the treatment likewise provided up to 36.5 months of freedom from vaso-occlusive crises.
The findings underscore that “exa-cel can provide a one-time, functional cure to patients with beta-thalassemia and sickle cell disease,” said coauthor Franco Locatelli, MD, of Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital, Rome.
In a comment, senior investigator Haydar Frangoul, MD, noted that, “with almost 4 years of follow-up on patients with beta-thalassemia and sickle cell disease, it appears that the benefit is holding.”
“The engraftment of our edited cells appears very stable over time. There is no reason to believe it will change,” said Dr. Frangoul, who is medical director of pediatric hematology/oncology, Sarah Cannon Center for Blood Cancer at The Children’s Hospital at TriStar Centennial, Nashville, Tenn.
Burden is high; current curative options have caveats
Patients with transfusion-dependent beta-thalassemia may require blood transfusions as often as every 2-5 weeks because of genetic mutations causing the absence of functional hemoglobin and subsequent depletions in red blood cells. And with hemoglobin being an iron-rich protein, patients are also at risk of an iron accumulation in the body, adding the possible need for uncomfortable iron chelation therapy to prevent organ damage.
The measures are burdensome, but the need is dire. Life expectancy in beta-thalassemia without them is only about 5 years.
With SCD, patients can face severe pain from vaso-occlusive crises as sickled red blood cells block blood flow, potentially causing hospitalization and complications including kidney failure or stroke.
A cure does already exist for both genetic disorders in the form of allogeneic stem cell transplantation. However, that option requires a matched related stem cell donor, and fewer than 20% of patients have accessibility to such donors.
Gene therapy
Gene therapy offers a potentially ideal alternative, providing a possible “functional cure” without the need for a donor, by instead harvesting patients’ cells, fixing the mutation and transferring them back to the patient.
The Food and Drug Administration already approved a first gene therapy, betibeglogene autotemcel (beti-cel), for children and adults with transfusion dependent beta-thalassemia, in August 2022.
While beti-cel utilizes a viral vector to insert functional copies of a modified gene into patients’ extracted hematopoietic stem cells before transfusing them back, exa-cel instead uses CRISPR-CAS9 technology to edit the gene, allowing the body to produce fetal hemoglobin, in an approach believed to be more precise and efficient.
“As we explain to patients, it’s a difference between gene addition, which is what beti-cel is, or gene editing, which is what exa-cel is,” Dr. Frangoul explained.
Phase 3 trial interim results
In investigating exa-cel for beta-thalassemia, the ongoing CLIMB THAL-111 has enrolled 48 patients with a mean baseline age of 20, with 16 between the ages of 12 and 18. Of the patients, 28 (58.3%) had severe genotypes of disease.
Among 27 patients who were evaluable for the study endpoints of the current interim analysis, 24 (88.9%), achieved the primary endpoint of maintaining a weighted average hemoglobin of at least 9 g/dL without the need for a transfusion for at least 12 months (P < .0001).
Patients who achieved the transfusion independence for at least 12 months remained transfusion-free for a mean duration of 20.5 months, with a range of 12.1-40.7 months.
Of 3 patients who did not achieve the 12-month transfusion-free endpoint, substantial reductions in transfusion volume were nevertheless achieved, of 70.3%, 79.6%, and 95.5%, among the 3.
And for the CLIMB SCD-121 trial of SCD, 35 participants have been dosed with exa-cel; in the primary efficacy set of 17 patients, 16 of the 17 (94.1%) achieved the primary endpoint of having no severe vaso-occlusive crises for at least 12 months (P < .0001).
All patients, however, achieved the secondary endpoint of being free from in-patient hospitalizations for severe vaso-occlusive crises for at least 12 months (P < .0001).
Patients who achieved freedom from vaso-occlusive crises for at least 12 months remained free of the events for a mean of 18.7 months, ranging from 13.1 months to 36.5 months.
Durability, patient-reported outcomes favorable
Importantly, in both studies, hemoglobin levels, as well as levels of the edited BCL11A alleles in bone marrow CD34+ and peripheral blood nucleated cells, showed sustained stability over time, indicating durable editing of the cells, Dr. Locatelli said.
In terms of patient-reported quality-of-life, measures significantly improved during both trials at 24 months of follow-up, with significant improvements on the EuroQol visual analog scale, Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy–General, and the Bone Marrow Transplantation Subscale.
Safety results were consistent with those observed with myeloablative busulfan-based conditioning regimen and autologous transplantation procedures, with adverse events that were manageable.
In the beta-thalassemia study, two patients experienced serious adverse events that were determined to be related to exa-cel, including one patient having symptoms in the context of hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis.
For the other patient, the serious adverse events consisted of delayed engraftment and thrombocytopenia, each also considered related to busulfan. None of the patients with SCD had serious adverse events related to exa-cel.
All serious adverse events were resolved, with no reports of deaths, study discontinuations, or malignancies.
Potentially first ever CRISPR-based FDA approval
While CRISPR-CAS9 gene editing is being investigated in multiple other trials in humans for various disorders, to date none have received FDA approval, which would make an approval for exa-cel a landmark development.
The therapy is currently under review, and Dr. Frangoul said the FDA has stated that a decision on the indication for SCD is expected by Dec. 8, 2023, and for beta-thalassemia, by March 2024.
Commenting on the research, Raffaella Colombatti, MD, a pediatric hematologist-oncologist and assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Padova (Italy), underscored the need for a better curative alternative.
“Unfortunately, the other curative option, bone marrow transplant, is not available for all candidates due to the lack of suitable donors,” Dr. Colombatti said in an interview.
“And, although there are promising results from alternative donors and new conditioning regimens, a further option for selected patients with sickle cell disease and thalassemia utilizing gene therapy and gene editing is needed.”
Caveats regarding gene therapy for the two diseases that still need consideration include: “long-term safety results are still not available and eligibility criteria still needs to be explored outside clinical trials,” she said.
Furthermore, “costs and sustainability are also an issue,” Dr. Colombatti added.
The price of gene therapy is not cheap. With beti-cel priced at more than $2 million for the treatment, its manufacturer, Bluebird Bio, has reportedly already indicated that it will not pursue marketing in Europe because of unfavorable reimbursement policies, and a similar high price is anticipated for exa-cel.
Overall, however, the findings bode well for groundbreaking improvements in treatment of the two red blood cell disorders, Michael J. Eckrich, MD, MPH, medical director of pediatric stem cell transplant & cellular therapy at Atrium Health Levine Children’s Hospital Cancer and Blood Disorders in Charlotte, N.C., said in an interview.
“I do think that this is transformative therapy and will change our approach for patients with severe sickle cell disease in need of transplant,” said Dr. Eckrich, who has also been an investigator on the research of exa-cel for sickle cell disease.
“It might not be hard to imagine, that with the progress in gene therapies and gene editing, that allogeneic transplant will soon become obsolete for patients with sickle cell disease and beta-thalassemia.”
Dr. Locatelli is on the advisory board for Vertex Pharma and the speaker’s bureau for BluebirdBio. Dr. Frangoul and Dr. Colombatti are or have been consultants for Vertex Pharma.
Results from the prespecified interim analyses of the phase 3 CLIMB THAL-111 and CLIMB SCD-121 studies, presented at the European Hematology Association annual congress, show that patients with beta-thalassemia who received exa-cel were able to remain transfusion-free for up to 40.7 consecutive months, while in patients with sickle cell disease, the treatment likewise provided up to 36.5 months of freedom from vaso-occlusive crises.
The findings underscore that “exa-cel can provide a one-time, functional cure to patients with beta-thalassemia and sickle cell disease,” said coauthor Franco Locatelli, MD, of Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital, Rome.
In a comment, senior investigator Haydar Frangoul, MD, noted that, “with almost 4 years of follow-up on patients with beta-thalassemia and sickle cell disease, it appears that the benefit is holding.”
“The engraftment of our edited cells appears very stable over time. There is no reason to believe it will change,” said Dr. Frangoul, who is medical director of pediatric hematology/oncology, Sarah Cannon Center for Blood Cancer at The Children’s Hospital at TriStar Centennial, Nashville, Tenn.
Burden is high; current curative options have caveats
Patients with transfusion-dependent beta-thalassemia may require blood transfusions as often as every 2-5 weeks because of genetic mutations causing the absence of functional hemoglobin and subsequent depletions in red blood cells. And with hemoglobin being an iron-rich protein, patients are also at risk of an iron accumulation in the body, adding the possible need for uncomfortable iron chelation therapy to prevent organ damage.
The measures are burdensome, but the need is dire. Life expectancy in beta-thalassemia without them is only about 5 years.
With SCD, patients can face severe pain from vaso-occlusive crises as sickled red blood cells block blood flow, potentially causing hospitalization and complications including kidney failure or stroke.
A cure does already exist for both genetic disorders in the form of allogeneic stem cell transplantation. However, that option requires a matched related stem cell donor, and fewer than 20% of patients have accessibility to such donors.
Gene therapy
Gene therapy offers a potentially ideal alternative, providing a possible “functional cure” without the need for a donor, by instead harvesting patients’ cells, fixing the mutation and transferring them back to the patient.
The Food and Drug Administration already approved a first gene therapy, betibeglogene autotemcel (beti-cel), for children and adults with transfusion dependent beta-thalassemia, in August 2022.
While beti-cel utilizes a viral vector to insert functional copies of a modified gene into patients’ extracted hematopoietic stem cells before transfusing them back, exa-cel instead uses CRISPR-CAS9 technology to edit the gene, allowing the body to produce fetal hemoglobin, in an approach believed to be more precise and efficient.
“As we explain to patients, it’s a difference between gene addition, which is what beti-cel is, or gene editing, which is what exa-cel is,” Dr. Frangoul explained.
Phase 3 trial interim results
In investigating exa-cel for beta-thalassemia, the ongoing CLIMB THAL-111 has enrolled 48 patients with a mean baseline age of 20, with 16 between the ages of 12 and 18. Of the patients, 28 (58.3%) had severe genotypes of disease.
Among 27 patients who were evaluable for the study endpoints of the current interim analysis, 24 (88.9%), achieved the primary endpoint of maintaining a weighted average hemoglobin of at least 9 g/dL without the need for a transfusion for at least 12 months (P < .0001).
Patients who achieved the transfusion independence for at least 12 months remained transfusion-free for a mean duration of 20.5 months, with a range of 12.1-40.7 months.
Of 3 patients who did not achieve the 12-month transfusion-free endpoint, substantial reductions in transfusion volume were nevertheless achieved, of 70.3%, 79.6%, and 95.5%, among the 3.
And for the CLIMB SCD-121 trial of SCD, 35 participants have been dosed with exa-cel; in the primary efficacy set of 17 patients, 16 of the 17 (94.1%) achieved the primary endpoint of having no severe vaso-occlusive crises for at least 12 months (P < .0001).
All patients, however, achieved the secondary endpoint of being free from in-patient hospitalizations for severe vaso-occlusive crises for at least 12 months (P < .0001).
Patients who achieved freedom from vaso-occlusive crises for at least 12 months remained free of the events for a mean of 18.7 months, ranging from 13.1 months to 36.5 months.
Durability, patient-reported outcomes favorable
Importantly, in both studies, hemoglobin levels, as well as levels of the edited BCL11A alleles in bone marrow CD34+ and peripheral blood nucleated cells, showed sustained stability over time, indicating durable editing of the cells, Dr. Locatelli said.
In terms of patient-reported quality-of-life, measures significantly improved during both trials at 24 months of follow-up, with significant improvements on the EuroQol visual analog scale, Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy–General, and the Bone Marrow Transplantation Subscale.
Safety results were consistent with those observed with myeloablative busulfan-based conditioning regimen and autologous transplantation procedures, with adverse events that were manageable.
In the beta-thalassemia study, two patients experienced serious adverse events that were determined to be related to exa-cel, including one patient having symptoms in the context of hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis.
For the other patient, the serious adverse events consisted of delayed engraftment and thrombocytopenia, each also considered related to busulfan. None of the patients with SCD had serious adverse events related to exa-cel.
All serious adverse events were resolved, with no reports of deaths, study discontinuations, or malignancies.
Potentially first ever CRISPR-based FDA approval
While CRISPR-CAS9 gene editing is being investigated in multiple other trials in humans for various disorders, to date none have received FDA approval, which would make an approval for exa-cel a landmark development.
The therapy is currently under review, and Dr. Frangoul said the FDA has stated that a decision on the indication for SCD is expected by Dec. 8, 2023, and for beta-thalassemia, by March 2024.
Commenting on the research, Raffaella Colombatti, MD, a pediatric hematologist-oncologist and assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Padova (Italy), underscored the need for a better curative alternative.
“Unfortunately, the other curative option, bone marrow transplant, is not available for all candidates due to the lack of suitable donors,” Dr. Colombatti said in an interview.
“And, although there are promising results from alternative donors and new conditioning regimens, a further option for selected patients with sickle cell disease and thalassemia utilizing gene therapy and gene editing is needed.”
Caveats regarding gene therapy for the two diseases that still need consideration include: “long-term safety results are still not available and eligibility criteria still needs to be explored outside clinical trials,” she said.
Furthermore, “costs and sustainability are also an issue,” Dr. Colombatti added.
The price of gene therapy is not cheap. With beti-cel priced at more than $2 million for the treatment, its manufacturer, Bluebird Bio, has reportedly already indicated that it will not pursue marketing in Europe because of unfavorable reimbursement policies, and a similar high price is anticipated for exa-cel.
Overall, however, the findings bode well for groundbreaking improvements in treatment of the two red blood cell disorders, Michael J. Eckrich, MD, MPH, medical director of pediatric stem cell transplant & cellular therapy at Atrium Health Levine Children’s Hospital Cancer and Blood Disorders in Charlotte, N.C., said in an interview.
“I do think that this is transformative therapy and will change our approach for patients with severe sickle cell disease in need of transplant,” said Dr. Eckrich, who has also been an investigator on the research of exa-cel for sickle cell disease.
“It might not be hard to imagine, that with the progress in gene therapies and gene editing, that allogeneic transplant will soon become obsolete for patients with sickle cell disease and beta-thalassemia.”
Dr. Locatelli is on the advisory board for Vertex Pharma and the speaker’s bureau for BluebirdBio. Dr. Frangoul and Dr. Colombatti are or have been consultants for Vertex Pharma.
Results from the prespecified interim analyses of the phase 3 CLIMB THAL-111 and CLIMB SCD-121 studies, presented at the European Hematology Association annual congress, show that patients with beta-thalassemia who received exa-cel were able to remain transfusion-free for up to 40.7 consecutive months, while in patients with sickle cell disease, the treatment likewise provided up to 36.5 months of freedom from vaso-occlusive crises.
The findings underscore that “exa-cel can provide a one-time, functional cure to patients with beta-thalassemia and sickle cell disease,” said coauthor Franco Locatelli, MD, of Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital, Rome.
In a comment, senior investigator Haydar Frangoul, MD, noted that, “with almost 4 years of follow-up on patients with beta-thalassemia and sickle cell disease, it appears that the benefit is holding.”
“The engraftment of our edited cells appears very stable over time. There is no reason to believe it will change,” said Dr. Frangoul, who is medical director of pediatric hematology/oncology, Sarah Cannon Center for Blood Cancer at The Children’s Hospital at TriStar Centennial, Nashville, Tenn.
Burden is high; current curative options have caveats
Patients with transfusion-dependent beta-thalassemia may require blood transfusions as often as every 2-5 weeks because of genetic mutations causing the absence of functional hemoglobin and subsequent depletions in red blood cells. And with hemoglobin being an iron-rich protein, patients are also at risk of an iron accumulation in the body, adding the possible need for uncomfortable iron chelation therapy to prevent organ damage.
The measures are burdensome, but the need is dire. Life expectancy in beta-thalassemia without them is only about 5 years.
With SCD, patients can face severe pain from vaso-occlusive crises as sickled red blood cells block blood flow, potentially causing hospitalization and complications including kidney failure or stroke.
A cure does already exist for both genetic disorders in the form of allogeneic stem cell transplantation. However, that option requires a matched related stem cell donor, and fewer than 20% of patients have accessibility to such donors.
Gene therapy
Gene therapy offers a potentially ideal alternative, providing a possible “functional cure” without the need for a donor, by instead harvesting patients’ cells, fixing the mutation and transferring them back to the patient.
The Food and Drug Administration already approved a first gene therapy, betibeglogene autotemcel (beti-cel), for children and adults with transfusion dependent beta-thalassemia, in August 2022.
While beti-cel utilizes a viral vector to insert functional copies of a modified gene into patients’ extracted hematopoietic stem cells before transfusing them back, exa-cel instead uses CRISPR-CAS9 technology to edit the gene, allowing the body to produce fetal hemoglobin, in an approach believed to be more precise and efficient.
“As we explain to patients, it’s a difference between gene addition, which is what beti-cel is, or gene editing, which is what exa-cel is,” Dr. Frangoul explained.
Phase 3 trial interim results
In investigating exa-cel for beta-thalassemia, the ongoing CLIMB THAL-111 has enrolled 48 patients with a mean baseline age of 20, with 16 between the ages of 12 and 18. Of the patients, 28 (58.3%) had severe genotypes of disease.
Among 27 patients who were evaluable for the study endpoints of the current interim analysis, 24 (88.9%), achieved the primary endpoint of maintaining a weighted average hemoglobin of at least 9 g/dL without the need for a transfusion for at least 12 months (P < .0001).
Patients who achieved the transfusion independence for at least 12 months remained transfusion-free for a mean duration of 20.5 months, with a range of 12.1-40.7 months.
Of 3 patients who did not achieve the 12-month transfusion-free endpoint, substantial reductions in transfusion volume were nevertheless achieved, of 70.3%, 79.6%, and 95.5%, among the 3.
And for the CLIMB SCD-121 trial of SCD, 35 participants have been dosed with exa-cel; in the primary efficacy set of 17 patients, 16 of the 17 (94.1%) achieved the primary endpoint of having no severe vaso-occlusive crises for at least 12 months (P < .0001).
All patients, however, achieved the secondary endpoint of being free from in-patient hospitalizations for severe vaso-occlusive crises for at least 12 months (P < .0001).
Patients who achieved freedom from vaso-occlusive crises for at least 12 months remained free of the events for a mean of 18.7 months, ranging from 13.1 months to 36.5 months.
Durability, patient-reported outcomes favorable
Importantly, in both studies, hemoglobin levels, as well as levels of the edited BCL11A alleles in bone marrow CD34+ and peripheral blood nucleated cells, showed sustained stability over time, indicating durable editing of the cells, Dr. Locatelli said.
In terms of patient-reported quality-of-life, measures significantly improved during both trials at 24 months of follow-up, with significant improvements on the EuroQol visual analog scale, Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy–General, and the Bone Marrow Transplantation Subscale.
Safety results were consistent with those observed with myeloablative busulfan-based conditioning regimen and autologous transplantation procedures, with adverse events that were manageable.
In the beta-thalassemia study, two patients experienced serious adverse events that were determined to be related to exa-cel, including one patient having symptoms in the context of hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis.
For the other patient, the serious adverse events consisted of delayed engraftment and thrombocytopenia, each also considered related to busulfan. None of the patients with SCD had serious adverse events related to exa-cel.
All serious adverse events were resolved, with no reports of deaths, study discontinuations, or malignancies.
Potentially first ever CRISPR-based FDA approval
While CRISPR-CAS9 gene editing is being investigated in multiple other trials in humans for various disorders, to date none have received FDA approval, which would make an approval for exa-cel a landmark development.
The therapy is currently under review, and Dr. Frangoul said the FDA has stated that a decision on the indication for SCD is expected by Dec. 8, 2023, and for beta-thalassemia, by March 2024.
Commenting on the research, Raffaella Colombatti, MD, a pediatric hematologist-oncologist and assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Padova (Italy), underscored the need for a better curative alternative.
“Unfortunately, the other curative option, bone marrow transplant, is not available for all candidates due to the lack of suitable donors,” Dr. Colombatti said in an interview.
“And, although there are promising results from alternative donors and new conditioning regimens, a further option for selected patients with sickle cell disease and thalassemia utilizing gene therapy and gene editing is needed.”
Caveats regarding gene therapy for the two diseases that still need consideration include: “long-term safety results are still not available and eligibility criteria still needs to be explored outside clinical trials,” she said.
Furthermore, “costs and sustainability are also an issue,” Dr. Colombatti added.
The price of gene therapy is not cheap. With beti-cel priced at more than $2 million for the treatment, its manufacturer, Bluebird Bio, has reportedly already indicated that it will not pursue marketing in Europe because of unfavorable reimbursement policies, and a similar high price is anticipated for exa-cel.
Overall, however, the findings bode well for groundbreaking improvements in treatment of the two red blood cell disorders, Michael J. Eckrich, MD, MPH, medical director of pediatric stem cell transplant & cellular therapy at Atrium Health Levine Children’s Hospital Cancer and Blood Disorders in Charlotte, N.C., said in an interview.
“I do think that this is transformative therapy and will change our approach for patients with severe sickle cell disease in need of transplant,” said Dr. Eckrich, who has also been an investigator on the research of exa-cel for sickle cell disease.
“It might not be hard to imagine, that with the progress in gene therapies and gene editing, that allogeneic transplant will soon become obsolete for patients with sickle cell disease and beta-thalassemia.”
Dr. Locatelli is on the advisory board for Vertex Pharma and the speaker’s bureau for BluebirdBio. Dr. Frangoul and Dr. Colombatti are or have been consultants for Vertex Pharma.
FROM EHA 2023
FDA approves first gene therapy for hemophilia A
Valoctocogene roxaparvovec, a one-time, single-dose IV infusion, is the first gene therapy approved in the United States for severe hemophilia A and will cost around $2.9 million. BioMarin has said the price tag reflects “the possibility of freedom from years” of infusions, which come to about $800,000 each year.
However, last December, the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) set the upper bounds for the gene therapy at about $1.96 million. The extent to which the gene therapy will provide freedom from infusions, for how long, and in which patients are not completely understood.
Hemophilia A is caused by a mutation in the gene that produces a protein called coagulation factor VIII, which is essential for blood clotting. Valoctocogene roxaparvovec delivers a functional gene to liver cells via an adeno-associated virus serotype 5; the gene instructs the cells to make the missing clotting factor.
“Adults with severe hemophilia A face a lifelong burden, with frequent infusions and a high risk of health complications, including uncontrolled bleeding and irreversible joint damage,” Steven Pipe, MD, professor of pediatrics and pathology at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and an investigator for the phase 3 study that led to the approval, said in a statement. The approval of valoctocogene roxaparvovec “has the potential to transform the way we treat adults based on years of bleed control following a single, one-time infusion.”
About 6,500 U.S. adults live with severe hemophilia A, and BioMarin said it anticipates approximately 2,500 will be eligible to receive the gene therapy following the approval. The U.S. indication is limited to patients without a history of factor VIII inhibitors and without detectable antibodies to the adeno-associated virus serotype 5.
Last August, the European Medicines Agency authorized the gene therapy for use in Europe, but according to Forbes and PharmaPhorum, uptake in Europe has been delayed because of reimbursement issues, given the cost of treatment and clinical uncertainties.
Data to date, however, are promising for most patients. Approval was based on BioMarin’s open-label, single-arm GENEr8-1 study in 134 men with severe congenital hemophilia A. Patients received a single infusion of 6 x 1013 vector genomes per kilogram.
Among the 132 patients available for 2-year evaluation, median factor VIII activity was in the range for mild hemophilia (6%-39% of normal) with an 84.5% reduction in bleeding events from baseline.
More than 80% of participants had no bleeding events requiring treatment, and there was a 98% reduction from baseline in mean use of exogenous factor VIII.
Overall, at 2 years, only 4.5% of patients had factor VIII activity consistent with severe hemophilia A; 9.1% had activity consistent with moderate disease; 59.8% had activity consistent with mild disease, and 26.5% had activity in the normal range above 40 IU/dL.
Trial investigators estimated that the typical half-life of the transgene-derived factor VIII production system is 123 weeks.
Among the six men who resumed prophylaxis, most had fewer bleeding events than when they were on prophylaxis before the infusion. All patients developed antibodies to the virus delivery vector, precluding retreatment.
Elevated alanine aminotransferase levels were the most common adverse event, occurring in 88.8% of patients, who were treated with immunosuppressants for a median of 33 weeks. Elevations persisted at 2 years in 29% of patients.
The other most common adverse events were headache (38.1%), nausea (37.3%), and increases in aspartate aminotransferase (35.1%).
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Valoctocogene roxaparvovec, a one-time, single-dose IV infusion, is the first gene therapy approved in the United States for severe hemophilia A and will cost around $2.9 million. BioMarin has said the price tag reflects “the possibility of freedom from years” of infusions, which come to about $800,000 each year.
However, last December, the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) set the upper bounds for the gene therapy at about $1.96 million. The extent to which the gene therapy will provide freedom from infusions, for how long, and in which patients are not completely understood.
Hemophilia A is caused by a mutation in the gene that produces a protein called coagulation factor VIII, which is essential for blood clotting. Valoctocogene roxaparvovec delivers a functional gene to liver cells via an adeno-associated virus serotype 5; the gene instructs the cells to make the missing clotting factor.
“Adults with severe hemophilia A face a lifelong burden, with frequent infusions and a high risk of health complications, including uncontrolled bleeding and irreversible joint damage,” Steven Pipe, MD, professor of pediatrics and pathology at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and an investigator for the phase 3 study that led to the approval, said in a statement. The approval of valoctocogene roxaparvovec “has the potential to transform the way we treat adults based on years of bleed control following a single, one-time infusion.”
About 6,500 U.S. adults live with severe hemophilia A, and BioMarin said it anticipates approximately 2,500 will be eligible to receive the gene therapy following the approval. The U.S. indication is limited to patients without a history of factor VIII inhibitors and without detectable antibodies to the adeno-associated virus serotype 5.
Last August, the European Medicines Agency authorized the gene therapy for use in Europe, but according to Forbes and PharmaPhorum, uptake in Europe has been delayed because of reimbursement issues, given the cost of treatment and clinical uncertainties.
Data to date, however, are promising for most patients. Approval was based on BioMarin’s open-label, single-arm GENEr8-1 study in 134 men with severe congenital hemophilia A. Patients received a single infusion of 6 x 1013 vector genomes per kilogram.
Among the 132 patients available for 2-year evaluation, median factor VIII activity was in the range for mild hemophilia (6%-39% of normal) with an 84.5% reduction in bleeding events from baseline.
More than 80% of participants had no bleeding events requiring treatment, and there was a 98% reduction from baseline in mean use of exogenous factor VIII.
Overall, at 2 years, only 4.5% of patients had factor VIII activity consistent with severe hemophilia A; 9.1% had activity consistent with moderate disease; 59.8% had activity consistent with mild disease, and 26.5% had activity in the normal range above 40 IU/dL.
Trial investigators estimated that the typical half-life of the transgene-derived factor VIII production system is 123 weeks.
Among the six men who resumed prophylaxis, most had fewer bleeding events than when they were on prophylaxis before the infusion. All patients developed antibodies to the virus delivery vector, precluding retreatment.
Elevated alanine aminotransferase levels were the most common adverse event, occurring in 88.8% of patients, who were treated with immunosuppressants for a median of 33 weeks. Elevations persisted at 2 years in 29% of patients.
The other most common adverse events were headache (38.1%), nausea (37.3%), and increases in aspartate aminotransferase (35.1%).
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Valoctocogene roxaparvovec, a one-time, single-dose IV infusion, is the first gene therapy approved in the United States for severe hemophilia A and will cost around $2.9 million. BioMarin has said the price tag reflects “the possibility of freedom from years” of infusions, which come to about $800,000 each year.
However, last December, the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) set the upper bounds for the gene therapy at about $1.96 million. The extent to which the gene therapy will provide freedom from infusions, for how long, and in which patients are not completely understood.
Hemophilia A is caused by a mutation in the gene that produces a protein called coagulation factor VIII, which is essential for blood clotting. Valoctocogene roxaparvovec delivers a functional gene to liver cells via an adeno-associated virus serotype 5; the gene instructs the cells to make the missing clotting factor.
“Adults with severe hemophilia A face a lifelong burden, with frequent infusions and a high risk of health complications, including uncontrolled bleeding and irreversible joint damage,” Steven Pipe, MD, professor of pediatrics and pathology at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and an investigator for the phase 3 study that led to the approval, said in a statement. The approval of valoctocogene roxaparvovec “has the potential to transform the way we treat adults based on years of bleed control following a single, one-time infusion.”
About 6,500 U.S. adults live with severe hemophilia A, and BioMarin said it anticipates approximately 2,500 will be eligible to receive the gene therapy following the approval. The U.S. indication is limited to patients without a history of factor VIII inhibitors and without detectable antibodies to the adeno-associated virus serotype 5.
Last August, the European Medicines Agency authorized the gene therapy for use in Europe, but according to Forbes and PharmaPhorum, uptake in Europe has been delayed because of reimbursement issues, given the cost of treatment and clinical uncertainties.
Data to date, however, are promising for most patients. Approval was based on BioMarin’s open-label, single-arm GENEr8-1 study in 134 men with severe congenital hemophilia A. Patients received a single infusion of 6 x 1013 vector genomes per kilogram.
Among the 132 patients available for 2-year evaluation, median factor VIII activity was in the range for mild hemophilia (6%-39% of normal) with an 84.5% reduction in bleeding events from baseline.
More than 80% of participants had no bleeding events requiring treatment, and there was a 98% reduction from baseline in mean use of exogenous factor VIII.
Overall, at 2 years, only 4.5% of patients had factor VIII activity consistent with severe hemophilia A; 9.1% had activity consistent with moderate disease; 59.8% had activity consistent with mild disease, and 26.5% had activity in the normal range above 40 IU/dL.
Trial investigators estimated that the typical half-life of the transgene-derived factor VIII production system is 123 weeks.
Among the six men who resumed prophylaxis, most had fewer bleeding events than when they were on prophylaxis before the infusion. All patients developed antibodies to the virus delivery vector, precluding retreatment.
Elevated alanine aminotransferase levels were the most common adverse event, occurring in 88.8% of patients, who were treated with immunosuppressants for a median of 33 weeks. Elevations persisted at 2 years in 29% of patients.
The other most common adverse events were headache (38.1%), nausea (37.3%), and increases in aspartate aminotransferase (35.1%).
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Guide explains nonsurgical management of major hemorrhage
A new guide offers recommendations for the nonsurgical management of major hemorrhage, which is a challenging clinical problem.
Major hemorrhage is a significant cause of death and can occur in a myriad of clinical settings.
“In Ontario, we’ve been collecting quality metrics on major hemorrhages to try and make sure that a higher percentage of patients gets the best possible care when they are experiencing significant bleeding,” author Jeannie Callum, MD, professor and director of transfusion medicine at Kingston (Ont.) Health Sciences Centre and Queen’s University, also in Kingston, said in an interview. “There were some gaps, so this is our effort to get open, clear information out to the emergency doctors, intensive care unit doctors, the surgeons, and everyone else involved in managing major hemorrhage, to help close these gaps.”
The guide was published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.
Fast care essential
The guide aims to provide answers, based on the latest research, to questions such as when to activate a massive hemorrhage protocol (MHP), which patients should receive tranexamic acid (TXA), which blood products should be transfused before laboratory results are available, how to monitor the effects of blood transfusion, and when fibrinogen concentrate or prothrombin complex concentrate should be given.
Not all recommendations will be followed, Dr. Callum said, especially in rural hospitals with limited resources. But the guide is adaptable, and rural hospitals can create protocols that are customized to their unique circumstances.
Care must be “perfect and fast” in the first hour of major injury, said Dr. Callum. “You need to get a proclotting drug in that first hour if you have a traumatic or postpartum bleed. You have to make sure your clotting factors never fail you throughout your resuscitation. You have to be fast with the transfusion. You have to monitor for the complications of the transfusion, electrolyte disturbances, and the patient’s temperature dropping. It’s a complicated situation that needs a multidisciplinary team.”
Bleeding affects everybody in medicine, from family doctors in smaller institutions who work in emergency departments to obstetricians and surgeons, she added.
“For people under the age of 45, trauma is the most common cause of death. When people die of trauma, they die of bleeding. So many people experience these extreme bleeds. We believe that some of them might be preventable with faster, more standardized, more aggressive care. That’s why we wrote this review,” said Dr. Callum.
Administer TXA quickly
The first recommendation is to ensure that every hospital has a massive hemorrhage protocol. Such a protocol is vital for the emergency department, operating room, and obstetric unit. “Making sure you’ve got a protocol that is updated every 3 years and adjusted to the local hospital context is essential,” said Dr. Callum.
Smaller hospitals will have to adjust their protocols according to the capabilities of their sites. “Some smaller hospitals do not have platelets in stock and get their platelets from another hospital, so you need to adjust your protocol to what you are able to do. Not every hospital can control bleeding in a trauma patient, so your protocol would be to stabilize and call a helicopter. Make sure all of this is detailed so that implementing it becomes automatic,” said Dr. Callum.
An MHP should be activated for patients with uncontrolled hemorrhage who meet the clinical criteria of the local hospital and are expected to need blood product support and red blood cells.
“Lots of people bleed, but not everybody is bleeding enough that they need a code transfusion,” said Dr. Callum. Most patients with gastrointestinal bleeds caused by NSAID use can be managed with uncrossed matched blood from the local blood bank. “But in patients who need the full code transfusion because they are going to need plasma, clotting factor replacement, and many other drugs, that is when the MHP should be activated. Don’t activate it when you don’t need it, because doing so activates the whole hospital and diverts care away from other patients.”
TXA should be administered as soon as possible after onset of hemorrhage in most patients, with the exception of gastrointestinal hemorrhage, where a benefit has not been shown.
TXA has been a major advance in treating massive bleeding, Dr. Callum said. “TXA was invented by a Japanese husband-and-wife research team. We know that it reduces the death rate in trauma and in postpartum hemorrhage, and it reduces the chance of major bleeding with major surgical procedures. We give it routinely in surgical procedures. If a patient gets TXA within 60 minutes of injury, it dramatically reduces the death rate. And it costs $10 per patient. It’s cheap, it’s easy, it has no side effects. It’s just amazing.”
Future research must address several unanswered questions, said Dr. Callum. These questions include whether prehospital transfusion improves patient outcomes, whether whole blood has a role in the early management of major hemorrhage, and what role factor concentrates play in patients with major bleeding.
‘Optimal recommendations’
Commenting on the document, Bourke Tillmann, MD, PhD, trauma team leader at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre and the Ross Tilley Burn Center in Toronto, said: “Overall, I think it is a good overview of MHPs as an approach to major hemorrhage.”
The review also is timely, since Ontario released its MHP guidelines in 2021, he added. “I would have liked to see more about the treatment aspects than just an overview of an MHP. But if you are the person overseeing the emergency department or running the blood bank, these protocols are incredibly useful and incredibly important.”
“This report is a nice and thoughtful overview of best practices in many areas, especially trauma, and makes recommendations that are optimal, although they are not necessarily practical in all centers,” Eric L. Legome, MD, professor and chair of emergency medicine at Mount Sinai West and Mount Sinai Morningside, New York, said in an interview.
“If you’re in a small rural hospital with one lab technician, trying to do all of these things, it will not be possible. These are optimal recommendations that people can use to the best of their ability, but they are not standard of care, because some places will not be able to provide this level of care,” he added. “This paper provides practical, reasonable advice that should be looked at as you are trying to implement transfusion policies and processes, with the understanding that it is not necessarily applicable or practical for very small hospitals in very rural centers that might not have access to these types of products and tools, but it’s a reasonable and nicely written paper.”
No outside funding for the guideline was reported. Dr. Callum has received research funding from Canadian Blood Services and Octapharma. She sits on the nominating committee with the Association for the Advancement of Blood & Biotherapies and on the data safety monitoring boards for the Tranexamic Acid for Subdural Hematoma trial and the Fibrinogen Replacement in Trauma trial. Dr. Tillmann and Dr. Legome reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
A new guide offers recommendations for the nonsurgical management of major hemorrhage, which is a challenging clinical problem.
Major hemorrhage is a significant cause of death and can occur in a myriad of clinical settings.
“In Ontario, we’ve been collecting quality metrics on major hemorrhages to try and make sure that a higher percentage of patients gets the best possible care when they are experiencing significant bleeding,” author Jeannie Callum, MD, professor and director of transfusion medicine at Kingston (Ont.) Health Sciences Centre and Queen’s University, also in Kingston, said in an interview. “There were some gaps, so this is our effort to get open, clear information out to the emergency doctors, intensive care unit doctors, the surgeons, and everyone else involved in managing major hemorrhage, to help close these gaps.”
The guide was published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.
Fast care essential
The guide aims to provide answers, based on the latest research, to questions such as when to activate a massive hemorrhage protocol (MHP), which patients should receive tranexamic acid (TXA), which blood products should be transfused before laboratory results are available, how to monitor the effects of blood transfusion, and when fibrinogen concentrate or prothrombin complex concentrate should be given.
Not all recommendations will be followed, Dr. Callum said, especially in rural hospitals with limited resources. But the guide is adaptable, and rural hospitals can create protocols that are customized to their unique circumstances.
Care must be “perfect and fast” in the first hour of major injury, said Dr. Callum. “You need to get a proclotting drug in that first hour if you have a traumatic or postpartum bleed. You have to make sure your clotting factors never fail you throughout your resuscitation. You have to be fast with the transfusion. You have to monitor for the complications of the transfusion, electrolyte disturbances, and the patient’s temperature dropping. It’s a complicated situation that needs a multidisciplinary team.”
Bleeding affects everybody in medicine, from family doctors in smaller institutions who work in emergency departments to obstetricians and surgeons, she added.
“For people under the age of 45, trauma is the most common cause of death. When people die of trauma, they die of bleeding. So many people experience these extreme bleeds. We believe that some of them might be preventable with faster, more standardized, more aggressive care. That’s why we wrote this review,” said Dr. Callum.
Administer TXA quickly
The first recommendation is to ensure that every hospital has a massive hemorrhage protocol. Such a protocol is vital for the emergency department, operating room, and obstetric unit. “Making sure you’ve got a protocol that is updated every 3 years and adjusted to the local hospital context is essential,” said Dr. Callum.
Smaller hospitals will have to adjust their protocols according to the capabilities of their sites. “Some smaller hospitals do not have platelets in stock and get their platelets from another hospital, so you need to adjust your protocol to what you are able to do. Not every hospital can control bleeding in a trauma patient, so your protocol would be to stabilize and call a helicopter. Make sure all of this is detailed so that implementing it becomes automatic,” said Dr. Callum.
An MHP should be activated for patients with uncontrolled hemorrhage who meet the clinical criteria of the local hospital and are expected to need blood product support and red blood cells.
“Lots of people bleed, but not everybody is bleeding enough that they need a code transfusion,” said Dr. Callum. Most patients with gastrointestinal bleeds caused by NSAID use can be managed with uncrossed matched blood from the local blood bank. “But in patients who need the full code transfusion because they are going to need plasma, clotting factor replacement, and many other drugs, that is when the MHP should be activated. Don’t activate it when you don’t need it, because doing so activates the whole hospital and diverts care away from other patients.”
TXA should be administered as soon as possible after onset of hemorrhage in most patients, with the exception of gastrointestinal hemorrhage, where a benefit has not been shown.
TXA has been a major advance in treating massive bleeding, Dr. Callum said. “TXA was invented by a Japanese husband-and-wife research team. We know that it reduces the death rate in trauma and in postpartum hemorrhage, and it reduces the chance of major bleeding with major surgical procedures. We give it routinely in surgical procedures. If a patient gets TXA within 60 minutes of injury, it dramatically reduces the death rate. And it costs $10 per patient. It’s cheap, it’s easy, it has no side effects. It’s just amazing.”
Future research must address several unanswered questions, said Dr. Callum. These questions include whether prehospital transfusion improves patient outcomes, whether whole blood has a role in the early management of major hemorrhage, and what role factor concentrates play in patients with major bleeding.
‘Optimal recommendations’
Commenting on the document, Bourke Tillmann, MD, PhD, trauma team leader at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre and the Ross Tilley Burn Center in Toronto, said: “Overall, I think it is a good overview of MHPs as an approach to major hemorrhage.”
The review also is timely, since Ontario released its MHP guidelines in 2021, he added. “I would have liked to see more about the treatment aspects than just an overview of an MHP. But if you are the person overseeing the emergency department or running the blood bank, these protocols are incredibly useful and incredibly important.”
“This report is a nice and thoughtful overview of best practices in many areas, especially trauma, and makes recommendations that are optimal, although they are not necessarily practical in all centers,” Eric L. Legome, MD, professor and chair of emergency medicine at Mount Sinai West and Mount Sinai Morningside, New York, said in an interview.
“If you’re in a small rural hospital with one lab technician, trying to do all of these things, it will not be possible. These are optimal recommendations that people can use to the best of their ability, but they are not standard of care, because some places will not be able to provide this level of care,” he added. “This paper provides practical, reasonable advice that should be looked at as you are trying to implement transfusion policies and processes, with the understanding that it is not necessarily applicable or practical for very small hospitals in very rural centers that might not have access to these types of products and tools, but it’s a reasonable and nicely written paper.”
No outside funding for the guideline was reported. Dr. Callum has received research funding from Canadian Blood Services and Octapharma. She sits on the nominating committee with the Association for the Advancement of Blood & Biotherapies and on the data safety monitoring boards for the Tranexamic Acid for Subdural Hematoma trial and the Fibrinogen Replacement in Trauma trial. Dr. Tillmann and Dr. Legome reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
A new guide offers recommendations for the nonsurgical management of major hemorrhage, which is a challenging clinical problem.
Major hemorrhage is a significant cause of death and can occur in a myriad of clinical settings.
“In Ontario, we’ve been collecting quality metrics on major hemorrhages to try and make sure that a higher percentage of patients gets the best possible care when they are experiencing significant bleeding,” author Jeannie Callum, MD, professor and director of transfusion medicine at Kingston (Ont.) Health Sciences Centre and Queen’s University, also in Kingston, said in an interview. “There were some gaps, so this is our effort to get open, clear information out to the emergency doctors, intensive care unit doctors, the surgeons, and everyone else involved in managing major hemorrhage, to help close these gaps.”
The guide was published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.
Fast care essential
The guide aims to provide answers, based on the latest research, to questions such as when to activate a massive hemorrhage protocol (MHP), which patients should receive tranexamic acid (TXA), which blood products should be transfused before laboratory results are available, how to monitor the effects of blood transfusion, and when fibrinogen concentrate or prothrombin complex concentrate should be given.
Not all recommendations will be followed, Dr. Callum said, especially in rural hospitals with limited resources. But the guide is adaptable, and rural hospitals can create protocols that are customized to their unique circumstances.
Care must be “perfect and fast” in the first hour of major injury, said Dr. Callum. “You need to get a proclotting drug in that first hour if you have a traumatic or postpartum bleed. You have to make sure your clotting factors never fail you throughout your resuscitation. You have to be fast with the transfusion. You have to monitor for the complications of the transfusion, electrolyte disturbances, and the patient’s temperature dropping. It’s a complicated situation that needs a multidisciplinary team.”
Bleeding affects everybody in medicine, from family doctors in smaller institutions who work in emergency departments to obstetricians and surgeons, she added.
“For people under the age of 45, trauma is the most common cause of death. When people die of trauma, they die of bleeding. So many people experience these extreme bleeds. We believe that some of them might be preventable with faster, more standardized, more aggressive care. That’s why we wrote this review,” said Dr. Callum.
Administer TXA quickly
The first recommendation is to ensure that every hospital has a massive hemorrhage protocol. Such a protocol is vital for the emergency department, operating room, and obstetric unit. “Making sure you’ve got a protocol that is updated every 3 years and adjusted to the local hospital context is essential,” said Dr. Callum.
Smaller hospitals will have to adjust their protocols according to the capabilities of their sites. “Some smaller hospitals do not have platelets in stock and get their platelets from another hospital, so you need to adjust your protocol to what you are able to do. Not every hospital can control bleeding in a trauma patient, so your protocol would be to stabilize and call a helicopter. Make sure all of this is detailed so that implementing it becomes automatic,” said Dr. Callum.
An MHP should be activated for patients with uncontrolled hemorrhage who meet the clinical criteria of the local hospital and are expected to need blood product support and red blood cells.
“Lots of people bleed, but not everybody is bleeding enough that they need a code transfusion,” said Dr. Callum. Most patients with gastrointestinal bleeds caused by NSAID use can be managed with uncrossed matched blood from the local blood bank. “But in patients who need the full code transfusion because they are going to need plasma, clotting factor replacement, and many other drugs, that is when the MHP should be activated. Don’t activate it when you don’t need it, because doing so activates the whole hospital and diverts care away from other patients.”
TXA should be administered as soon as possible after onset of hemorrhage in most patients, with the exception of gastrointestinal hemorrhage, where a benefit has not been shown.
TXA has been a major advance in treating massive bleeding, Dr. Callum said. “TXA was invented by a Japanese husband-and-wife research team. We know that it reduces the death rate in trauma and in postpartum hemorrhage, and it reduces the chance of major bleeding with major surgical procedures. We give it routinely in surgical procedures. If a patient gets TXA within 60 minutes of injury, it dramatically reduces the death rate. And it costs $10 per patient. It’s cheap, it’s easy, it has no side effects. It’s just amazing.”
Future research must address several unanswered questions, said Dr. Callum. These questions include whether prehospital transfusion improves patient outcomes, whether whole blood has a role in the early management of major hemorrhage, and what role factor concentrates play in patients with major bleeding.
‘Optimal recommendations’
Commenting on the document, Bourke Tillmann, MD, PhD, trauma team leader at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre and the Ross Tilley Burn Center in Toronto, said: “Overall, I think it is a good overview of MHPs as an approach to major hemorrhage.”
The review also is timely, since Ontario released its MHP guidelines in 2021, he added. “I would have liked to see more about the treatment aspects than just an overview of an MHP. But if you are the person overseeing the emergency department or running the blood bank, these protocols are incredibly useful and incredibly important.”
“This report is a nice and thoughtful overview of best practices in many areas, especially trauma, and makes recommendations that are optimal, although they are not necessarily practical in all centers,” Eric L. Legome, MD, professor and chair of emergency medicine at Mount Sinai West and Mount Sinai Morningside, New York, said in an interview.
“If you’re in a small rural hospital with one lab technician, trying to do all of these things, it will not be possible. These are optimal recommendations that people can use to the best of their ability, but they are not standard of care, because some places will not be able to provide this level of care,” he added. “This paper provides practical, reasonable advice that should be looked at as you are trying to implement transfusion policies and processes, with the understanding that it is not necessarily applicable or practical for very small hospitals in very rural centers that might not have access to these types of products and tools, but it’s a reasonable and nicely written paper.”
No outside funding for the guideline was reported. Dr. Callum has received research funding from Canadian Blood Services and Octapharma. She sits on the nominating committee with the Association for the Advancement of Blood & Biotherapies and on the data safety monitoring boards for the Tranexamic Acid for Subdural Hematoma trial and the Fibrinogen Replacement in Trauma trial. Dr. Tillmann and Dr. Legome reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM THE CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION JOURNAL