» Articles » PMID: 30887008

Navigating Speed Bumps on the Innovation Highway in Hemophilia Therapeutics

Overview
Journal Hemasphere
Publisher Wiley
Specialty Hematology
Date 2019 Mar 20
PMID 30887008
Citations 3
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The unprecedented emergence of novel therapeutics for both hemophilia A and B during the last half decade has been accompanied by the promise of even more extraordinary progress in ameliorative and curative strategies for both disorders. Paradoxically, the speed of innovation has created new dilemmas for persons with hemophilia and their physicians with respect to optimizing individual choices from the expanding menu of standard and novel therapies and approaches to symptom or risk reduction, and ultimately, to normalizing the hemophilia phenotype. Among the most disruptive new approaches, challenges remain in the form of the adverse reactions that have been observed with nonfactor therapies, as well as in the uncertain long-term safety profile of potentially curative gene therapy. Together, these challenges have generated uncertainty as to how to adopt novel therapies and treatment strategies across a diverse patient population, creating speed bumps on the hemophilia innovation highway. It is from this perspective that this article discusses the current state of gene therapy and bleeding prophylaxis for hemophilia A and B, as well as prevention and treatment of the factor VIII inhibitor phenotype in hemophilia A. It further posits that these speed bumps may provide important clues to the mechanistic understanding of both symptom manifestation and resilience within the hemophilia phenotype, as well as opportunities to reconsider and reconfigure the current paradigms for symptom prediction and individualized therapeutic decision making.

Citing Articles

Genomic Landscape of Chromosome X Factor VIII: From Hemophilia A in Males to Risk Variants in Females.

Morris O, Morris M, Jobe S, Bhargava D, Krueger J, Arora S Genes (Basel). 2025; 15(12.

PMID: 39766791 PMC: 11675246. DOI: 10.3390/genes15121522.


Effects of Shear Stress on Production of FVIII and vWF in a Cell-Based Therapeutic for Hemophilia A.

Trevisan B, Morsi A, Aleman J, Rodriguez M, Shields J, Meares D Front Bioeng Biotechnol. 2021; 9:639070.

PMID: 33732691 PMC: 7957060. DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2021.639070.


Challenges and key lessons from the design and implementation of an international haemophilia registry supported by a pharmaceutical company.

Hay C, Shima M, Makris M, Jimenez-Yuste V, Oldenburg J, Fischer K Haemophilia. 2020; 26(6):966-974.

PMID: 33094894 PMC: 7894355. DOI: 10.1111/hae.14144.


Defining the Optimal FVIII Transgene for Placental Cell-Based Gene Therapy to Treat Hemophilia A.

El-Akabawy N, Rodriguez M, Ramamurthy R, Rabah A, Trevisan B, Morsi A Mol Ther Methods Clin Dev. 2020; 17:465-477.

PMID: 32258210 PMC: 7109377. DOI: 10.1016/j.omtm.2020.03.001.

References
1.
Zhang Y, Roberts J, Tortorici M, Veldman A, St Ledger K, Feussner A . Population pharmacokinetics of recombinant coagulation factor VIII-SingleChain in patients with severe hemophilia A. J Thromb Haemost. 2017; 15(6):1106-1114. DOI: 10.1111/jth.13662. View

2.
Mancuso M, Mannucci P, Rocino A, Garagiola I, Tagliaferri A, Santagostino E . Source and purity of factor VIII products as risk factors for inhibitor development in patients with hemophilia A. J Thromb Haemost. 2012; 10(5):781-90. DOI: 10.1111/j.1538-7836.2012.04691.x. View

3.
van Velzen A, Eckhardt C, Hart D, Peters M, Rangarajan S, Mancuso M . Inhibitors in nonsevere haemophilia A: outcome and eradication strategies. Thromb Haemost. 2015; 114(1):46-55. DOI: 10.1160/TH14-11-0940. View

4.
Franchini M, Lippi G . Prevention of inhibitor development in hemophilia A in 2016. A glimpse into the future?. Thromb Res. 2016; 148:96-100. DOI: 10.1016/j.thromres.2016.10.024. View

5.
Lusher J, Blatt P, Penner J, Aledort L, Levine P, White G . Autoplex versus proplex: a controlled, double-blind study of effectiveness in acute hemarthroses in hemophiliacs with inhibitors to factor VIII. Blood. 1983; 62(5):1135-8. View