Risk factors for inhibitor formation in haemophilia: a prevalent case-control study.
Publication/Presentation Date
9-1-2009
Abstract
Inhibitor formation is a major complication of haemophilia treatment. In a prevalent case-control study, we evaluated blood product exposure, genotype and HLA type on haemophilia A inhibitor formation. Product exposure was extracted from medical records. Genotype was determined on stored DNA samples by detection of virtually all mutations-SSCP (DOVAM-S) and subcycling PCR. HLA typing was performed by PCR amplification and exonuclease-released fluorescence. Cases experienced higher intensity factor, 455 vs. 200 U per exposure, P < 0.005, more frequent central nervous system (CNS) bleeding, seven of 20 (35.0%) vs. one of 57 (1.7%), P = 0.001 and more commonly from inhibitor families, seven of 20 (35.0%) vs. zero of 57 (0%), P < 0.001, and African-American, 12 of 63 (19.0%) vs. six of 117 (5.1%), P = 0.015. Among the latter, CNS bleeding was more commonly the initial bleed, 60% vs. 0%, P < 0.001, and survival was shorter, 14 vs. 38 yr, P = 0.025. Inhibitor formation was uncommon in those with missense mutations, two of 65 (3.1%) vs. 31 of 119 (26.0%), P = 0.008, and unrelated to factor VIII immunogenic epitope, P = 0.388, or HLA type, P > 0.100. Genotype was not associated with race. Time to immune tolerance was shorter for titresor = 120 BU/mL, six vs. 16 months, P < 0.01, but unaffected by tolerizing dose regimen, P > 0.50. Inhibitor formation is associated with high intensity product exposure, CNS bleeding, African-American race and low frequency of missense mutations. The ideal time to initiate prophylaxis to reduce CNS bleeding and inhibitor formation will require prospective studies.
Volume
15
Issue
5
First Page
1074
Last Page
1082
ISSN
1365-2516
Published In/Presented At
Ragni, M. V., Ojeifo, O., Feng, J., Yan, J., Hill, K. A., Sommer, S. S., Trucco, M. N., Brambilla, D. J., & Hemophilia Inhibitor Study (2009). Risk factors for inhibitor formation in haemophilia: a prevalent case-control study. Haemophilia : the official journal of the World Federation of Hemophilia, 15(5), 1074–1082. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2516.2009.02058.x
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
19563499
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article