| Literature DB >> 24001010 |
Giuseppe Tagariello1, Alfonso Iorio, Davide Matino, Donata Belvini, Roberta Salviato, Roberto Sartori, Paolo Radossi.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The natural history of inhibitors in patients with haemophilia A not undergoing immune tolerance induction (ITI) is largely unknown. A recent randomized controlled trial suggests that the higher the FVIII dose used for ITI, the faster the clearance and the lower the rate of bleeding, without any difference in the rate of tolerance. We aimed at assessing the rate of spontaneous inhibitor clearance in a large cohort of patients not undergoing ITI.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24001010 PMCID: PMC3766100 DOI: 10.1186/1756-8722-6-63
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Figure 1Flow chart of the cohort of patients seen at Castelfranco Veneto Haemophilia Centre, 1973–2010.
Figure 2The figure shows tests for inhibitors (upper curve) and surgical synovectomy performed at Castelfranco Veneto Haemophilia Centre, 1973–2010. The majority of the tests were performed during the period 1973–1990 when most of the surgical synovectomy programme was developed. The curve shows two peaks, the first during the 70s when the synovectomy programme was more intensive and the second during the mid-80s when patients undergoing synovectomy were overlapped by patients regularly followed up for inhibitor. The last two decades represent the follow up of the patients (right upper curve) and more recent years when surgical synovectomy was completely abandoned and substituted by synoviorthesis (data not reported).
Distribution of patients with and without inhibitor development, high and low responders, transient, slowly resolving and permanent, dependent on the severity of the disease
| | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Without inhibitor | 266 | 50 | 28 | 344 | | | |
| With inhibitor | 168 | 10 | 2 | 180 | | | |
| Transient | 64 (38%) | 5 (50%) | 1 (50%) | 70 (39%) | 8 (10%) | 62 (61%) | - |
| Slowly resolving | 44 (26%) | 2 (20%) | 1 (50%) | 47 (26%) | 15 (19%) | 32 (32%) | 3.6 |
| Permanent | 60 (36%) | 3 (30%) | 0 | 63 (35%) | 56 (71%) | 7 (7%) | 62 |
The condition of HR at the onset confers the highest risk of persistent inhibitor (56 out of 79, 71%) while only a minority of the patients become persistent when the onset is as LR (7 out of 101, 7%).
(*)The OR represents the risk of having a permanent or slow resolving inhibitor for those being HR as compared to those being LR.
Distribution of patients with and without inhibitor, high and low responders, transient, slowly resolving and permanent dependent on the mutation type
| Without inhibitor | 87 | 40 | 68 | 149 | 344 |
| With inhibitor | 69 | 39 | 23 | 49 | 180 |
| Transient | 17 (25%) | 14 (36%) | 10 (44%) | 29 (59%) | 70 (39%) |
| Slowly resolving | 20 (29%) | 6 (15%) | 7 (30%) | 14 (29%) | 47 (26%) |
| Permanent | 32 (46%) | 19 (49%) | 6 (26%) | 6 (12%) | 63 (35%) |
| High Responders | 38 (55%) | 21 (54%) | 7 (30%) | 13 (27%) | 79 (44%) |
| Low Responders | 31 (45%) | 18 (46%) | 16 (70%) | 36 (73%) | 101 (56%) |
Inhibitor resolution (years) in patients with slowly resolving type inhibitors, dependent on inhibitor type response
| N° patients | 15 | 32 | 47 |
| Median (years) | 6 | 3 | 5 |
| Average (years) | 12 | 7,8 | 8,7 |
Multinomial univariate logistic regression
| Inibitor titre § | 1 | 3.63 | 62.0 |
| SE | - | 1.78 | 34.06 |
| Pseudo R-Square | 0.24 | | |
| Chi2 | 94.26 | | |
| P | <0.001 | | |
| Inibitor titre § | 1 | 1.76 | 32.83 |
| SE | - | 1.03 | 19.11 |
| Inversions # | 1 | 1.57 | 1.85 |
| SE | - | 0.94 | 1.40 |
| Nullmutations # | 1 | 0.60 | 1.43 |
| SE | - | 0.41 | 1.15 |
| Pseudo R-Square | 0.24 | | |
| Chi2 | 66.65 | | |
| P | <0.001 |
Model A – Inhibitor titre (180 cases).
Model B Inhibitor titre and gene mutation (131 cases).
§Regression coefficient for high titre versus low titre.
#Regression coefficient versus not null mutations.
We fitted two separate multinomial logistic regression models: one, in the entire population, assessing the probability of developing a transient, slowly resolving or permanent inhibitor associated with the initial inhibitor titre (model A), and another, in those with the mutation available, assessing the risk associated with both the initial inhibitor titre and the gene mutation (model B), even if the model with the gene mutation alone was not significant (probably due to insufficient sample size). We assumed as baseline risk the patient with low titre inhibitor in model A and the patient with low titre inhibitor and not null mutation in model B.
In model A, the relative risk ratio for a patient with a high responding over one with low responding inhibitor to have a slowly resolving inhibitor is 3.63 (95% CI 1.39 – 9.47) and to have a permanent inhibitor is 62 (95% CI 21.12 – 182.00). The relative risk ratio for a permanent over a slow resolving was 17.1 (95% CI 9.02 – 25.11). The predicted probabilities estimated by the model and used to calculate the relative risk ratio are reported in table.
In model B, after adding the gene mutation, the relative risk ratio for a patient with a high responding over one with low responding inhibitor to have a permanent inhibitor over a transient is 32.8 (95% CI 21.5 – 44.1) and over a slowly resolving is 18.6 (95% CI 10.1 – 27.1), with no significant effect associated to the gene mutation. The predicted probabilities estimated by the model and used to calculate the relative risk ratio are reported in table. The full parametric model with the interactions between inhibitor titre and gene mutation (Log likelihood −102.122, LR chi2(10) = 76.87, Prob > chi2 = 0.0000, Pseudo R2 = 0.2734) showed that the effect of the titre was not statistically significant when considered alone; on the contrary, in patients with inversions compared to those with not null mutations a statistically significant and clinically relevant increase in the risk for permanent inhibitors in patients with high titre inhibitors (21.7, 95% CI 1.80 – 263) was found, together with a statistically significant but not clinically relevant increase in patients with low titre inhibitors (0.03,95% CI 0.001–0.73).