Impact of Adopting Population Pharmacokinetics for Tailoring Prophylaxis in Haemophilia A Patients

  • Michaela Stemberger
  • Felix Kallenbach
  • Elisabeth Schmit
  • Alanna McEneny-King
  • Federico Germini
  • Cindy H T Yeung
  • Andrea N Edginton
  • Sylvia von Mackensen
  • Karin Kurnik
  • Alfonso Iorio

Abstract

BACKGROUND:  Performing individual pharmacokinetics (PK) studies in clinical practice can be simplified by adopting population PK-based profiling on limited post-infusion samples. The objective of this study was to assess the impact of population PK in tailoring prophylaxis in patients with haemophilia A.

PATIENTS AND METHODS:  Individual weekly treatment plans were developed considering predicted plasma factor activity levels and patients' lifestyle. Patients were trained using a visual traffic-light scheme to help modulate their level of physical activity with respect to factor infusions timing. Annualized joint bleeding rate (ABJR), haemophilia-specific quality of life questionnaire for adults (Haemo-QoL-A) and factor utilization were measured for 12 months before and after tailoring, compared within patients and analysed separately for those previously on prophylaxis (P), situational prophylaxis (SP) or on-demand (OD).

RESULTS:  Sixteen patients previously on P, 10 on SP and 10 on OD were enrolled in the study. The median (lower, upper quartile) ABJR changed from 2.0 (0, 4.0) to 0 (0, 1.6) for P (p = 0.003), from 2.0 (2.0, 13.6) to 3.0 (1.4, 7.2) for SP (p = 0.183) and from 16.0 (13.0, 25.0) to 2.3 (0, 5.0) for OD (p = 0.003). The Haemo-QoL-A total score improved for 58% of P, 50% of SP and 29% of OD patients. Factor utilization (IU/kg/patient/year) increased by 2,400 (121; 2,586) for P, 1,052 (308; 1,578) for SP and 2,086 (1,498; 2,576) for OD. One of 138 measurements demonstrated a factor activity level below the critical threshold of 0.03 IU/mL while the predicted level was above the threshold.

CONCLUSION:  Implementing tailored prophylaxis using a Bayesian forecasting approach in a routine clinical practice setting may improve haemophilia clinical outcomes.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0340-6245
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 03.2019

Anmerkungen des Dekanats

Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.

PubMed 30685872