Infection rates and tolerability of three different immunoglobulin administration modalities in patients with primary immunodeficiency diseases

Author:

Wasserman Richard L1ORCID,Gupta Sudhir2ORCID,Stein Mark3ORCID,Rabbat Christopher J4ORCID,Engl Werner5ORCID,Leibl Heinz5ORCID,Yel Leman6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Research Department, Allergy Partners of North Texas Research, Dallas, TX 75230, USA

2. School of Medicine, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697, USA

3. Department of Medicine, Allergy Section, Good Samaritan Medical Center, West Palm Beach, FL 33401, USA; Allergy Associates of the Palm Beaches, North Palm Beach, FL 33401, USA

4. Global Medical Affairs, Takeda Development Center Americas, Inc., Bannockburn, IL 60015, USA

5. Baxalta Innovations GmbH, a Takeda company, Vienna, Austria

6. Clinical Medicine, Takeda Development Center Americas, Inc., Cambridge, MA 02139, USA

Abstract

Aim: This post hoc analysis evaluated the efficacy and overall tolerability of immunoglobulin (Ig) treatment modalities (intravenous Ig [iv.Ig], subcutaneous Ig [sc.Ig] and facilitated sc.Ig [fsc.Ig]). Materials & methods: A total of 30 participants with primary immunodeficiency diseases aged ≥2 years sequentially received iv.Ig, sc.Ig and fsc.Ig during consecutive clinical studies. Results: For iv.Ig, sc.Ig and fsc.Ig, rates of validated acute serious bacterial infections/participant-year (0, 0.09 and 0.04, respectively) and all infections/participant year (4.17, 3.68 and 2.42, respectively) were similarly low; rates of systemic and local causally related adverse events/participant-year were 5.60, 1.93 and 0.88, respectively and 0.13, 0.92 and 1.57, respectively. Conclusion: fsc.Ig provided similar efficacy to iv.Ig and sc.Ig. Clinical Trial registration: NCT00546871 , NCT00814320 , NCT01175213 (ClinicalTrials.gov)

Funder

Baxalta US Inc., a Takeda company

Publisher

Future Medicine Ltd

Subject

Oncology,Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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