Konrad Bork1, Jonathan A Bernstein2, Thomas Machnig3, Timothy J Craig4. 1. Department of Dermatology, University of Mainz, Mainz, Germany. 2. University of Cincinnati Medical Center and Bernstein Clinical Research Center, Cincinnati, Ohio. 3. CSL Behring GmbH, Marburg, Germany. 4. Penn State University College of Medicine, Hershey, Pennsylvania.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hereditary angioedema (HAE) is a rare disease characterized by C1-esterase inhibitor (C1-INH) deficiency, resulting in periodic attacks of acute edema, which can be life-threatening if they occur in the upper airway. No head-to-head comparisons of different treatment options for acute HAE attacks are available. Because immediate symptom relief is critical for potentially life-threatening laryngeal attacks, it is important to determine the treatment option that provides optimal treatment response. OBJECTIVE: Review and compare data from clinical studies that evaluated the efficacy and safety of treatments for laryngeal HAE attacks. METHODS: We conducted an indirect comparison of clinical outcomes from prospective studies for treatment of 881 acute laryngeal attacks with plasma-derived C1-INH concentrate (pdC1-INH) at fixed doses (500 or 1000 U) or a body weight-adjusted dose (20 U/kg), recombinant C1-INH concentrate at a fixed dose (2100 U), or a body weight-adjusted dose (50 U/kg), icatibant (30 mg), or ecallantide (30 mg). Comparisons included time to onset of symptom relief and need for re-dosing or emergency procedures. RESULTS: The median time to onset of symptom relief ranged between 15 min and approximately 2 h, and was shortest with body weight-adjusted doses of pdC1-INH. The proportion of laryngeal attacks with re-dosing ranged between 0% and 72%. No re-dosing was needed after treatment with a single body weight-adjusted dose of pdC1-INH (48 attacks). CONCLUSIONS: Available data suggest that among different HAE treatments, body weight-adjusted pdC1-INH (20 U/kg) provides the most reliable treatment response for treatment of laryngeal HAE attacks.
BACKGROUND: Hereditary angioedema (HAE) is a rare disease characterized by C1-esterase inhibitor (C1-INH) deficiency, resulting in periodic attacks of acute edema, which can be life-threatening if they occur in the upper airway. No head-to-head comparisons of different treatment options for acute HAE attacks are available. Because immediate symptom relief is critical for potentially life-threatening laryngeal attacks, it is important to determine the treatment option that provides optimal treatment response. OBJECTIVE: Review and compare data from clinical studies that evaluated the efficacy and safety of treatments for laryngeal HAE attacks. METHODS: We conducted an indirect comparison of clinical outcomes from prospective studies for treatment of 881 acute laryngeal attacks with plasma-derived C1-INH concentrate (pdC1-INH) at fixed doses (500 or 1000 U) or a body weight-adjusted dose (20 U/kg), recombinant C1-INH concentrate at a fixed dose (2100 U), or a body weight-adjusted dose (50 U/kg), icatibant (30 mg), or ecallantide (30 mg). Comparisons included time to onset of symptom relief and need for re-dosing or emergency procedures. RESULTS: The median time to onset of symptom relief ranged between 15 min and approximately 2 h, and was shortest with body weight-adjusted doses of pdC1-INH. The proportion of laryngeal attacks with re-dosing ranged between 0% and 72%. No re-dosing was needed after treatment with a single body weight-adjusted dose of pdC1-INH (48 attacks). CONCLUSIONS: Available data suggest that among different HAE treatments, body weight-adjusted pdC1-INH (20 U/kg) provides the most reliable treatment response for treatment of laryngeal HAE attacks.
Authors: Marcus Maurer; Markus Magerl; Stephen Betschel; Werner Aberer; Ignacio J Ansotegui; Emel Aygören-Pürsün; Aleena Banerji; Noémi-Anna Bara; Isabelle Boccon-Gibod; Konrad Bork; Laurence Bouillet; Henrik Balle Boysen; Nicholas Brodszki; Paula J Busse; Anette Bygum; Teresa Caballero; Mauro Cancian; Anthony J Castaldo; Danny M Cohn; Dorottya Csuka; Henriette Farkas; Mark Gompels; Richard Gower; Anete S Grumach; Guillermo Guidos-Fogelbach; Michihiro Hide; Hye-Ryun Kang; Allen P Kaplan; Constance H Katelaris; Sorena Kiani-Alikhan; Wei-Te Lei; Richard F Lockey; Hilary Longhurst; William Lumry; Andrew MacGinnitie; Alejandro Malbran; Inmaculada Martinez Saguer; Juan José Matta Campos; Alexander Nast; Dinh Nguyen; Sandra A Nieto-Martinez; Ruby Pawankar; Jonathan Peter; Grzegorz Porebski; Nieves Prior; Avner Reshef; Marc Riedl; Bruce Ritchie; Farrukh Rafique Sheikh; William B Smith; Peter J Spaeth; Marcin Stobiecki; Elias Toubi; Lilian Agnes Varga; Karsten Weller; Andrea Zanichelli; Yuxiang Zhi; Bruce Zuraw; Timothy Craig Journal: World Allergy Organ J Date: 2022-04-07 Impact factor: 5.516