| Literature DB >> 21424824 |
Richard L Wasserman1, Isaac Melamed, Lisa Kobrynski, Steven D Strausbaugh, Mark R Stein, Marlies Sharkhawy, Werner Engl, Heinz Leibl, Luba Sobolevsky, David Gelmont, Richard I Schiff, William J Grossman.
Abstract
A multi-center, prospective, open-label study was conducted in primary immunodeficiency disease patients to determine the tolerability and pharmacokinetics of a 10% liquid IgG preparation administered subcutaneously. Forty-nine subjects (3-77 years old) were enrolled. Pharmacokinetic equivalence of subcutaneous treatment was achieved at a median dose of 137% of the intravenous dose, with a mean trough IgG level of 1,202 mg/dL at the end of the assessment period. The overall infection rate during subcutaneous treatment was 4.1 per subject-year. Three acute serious bacterial infections were reported, resulting in a rate of 0.067 per subject-year. A low overall rate of temporally associated adverse events (8%), and a very low rate of infusion site adverse events (2.8%), was seen at volumes up to 30 mL/site and rates ≤ 30 mL/h/site. Thus, subcutaneous replacement therapy with a 10% IgG preparation proved effective, safe and well-tolerated in our study population of subjects with primary immunodeficiency disease.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21424824 DOI: 10.1007/s10875-011-9512-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Immunol ISSN: 0271-9142 Impact factor: 8.317