Nonacog Alfa for Prophylaxis and Treatment of Bleeding Episodes in Previously Treated Patients with Moderately Severe or Severe Hemophilia B in India

Author:

Choraria NirmalkumarORCID,Rangarajan SavitaORCID,John M. JosephORCID,Apte Shashikant,Gupta Pritam,Pai Seema,Chand Rohit,Parvatini Shyam,Ramakanth G. S. H.,Rupon Jeremy,Chhabra Amit,Muley Hitesh Bhaskarrao,Simoneau Damien

Abstract

Abstract Purpose Hemophilia B is an X-linked congenital bleeding disorder caused by a deficiency of coagulation factor IX (FIX) clotting activity. This study evaluated safety and efficacy of nonacog alfa, a recombinant human blood coagulation FIX replacement product, in males aged 12–65 years with hemophilia B (FIX activity ≤ 2%) with or without inhibitors in India. Methods In this multicenter, open-label, post-approval phase 4 study, participants were treated for up to 8 weeks, with up to a 4-week screening period and a subsequent post-treatment 28-day safety observation period. Intravenous nonacog alfa 40 IU/kg (range 13–78 IU/kg) was administered at intervals of 3–4 days, in accordance with the approved local product document. Results A total of 25 participants were enrolled and completed the study. No participants developed FIX inhibitors during the study, experienced treatment-related adverse events (AEs) or serious AEs, or developed a thrombotic event and/or hypersensitivity reaction. No participants experienced bleeding events requiring on-demand treatment with nonacog alfa. Seventeen bleeding episodes (16 spontaneous and 1 traumatic) were reported in 10 participants; all occurred post treatment, with the exception of a minor gum-bleeding event, and were managed without treatment. The mean (SD) annualized total factor consumption (TFC) per patient was 224,582 (75,527) IU; the mean (SD) annualized TFC by weight per patient was 3639 (573) IU/kg. Conclusion Nonacog alfa was safe and effective for the prevention of hemorrhagic episodes in Indian males with congenital, severe hemophilia B. No participants developed FIX inhibitors, and no new safety signals were reported.

Funder

Pfizer

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Hematology

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