| Literature DB >> 33112889 |
Timothy C Nichols1, Howard Levy2, Elizabeth P Merricks1, Robin A Raymer1, Martin L Lee3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The rapid clearance of factor IX necessitates frequent intravenous administrations to achieve effective prophylaxis for patients with hemophilia B. Subcutaneous administration has historically been limited by low bioavailability and potency. Dalcinonacog alfa was developed using a rational design approach to be a subcutaneously administered, next-generation coagulation prophylactic factor IX therapy. AIM: This study aimed to investigate the pharmacokinetic, pharmacodynamic, and safety profile of dalcinonacog alfa administered subcutaneously in hemophilia B dogs.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33112889 PMCID: PMC7592742 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0240896
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 3Daily subcutaneous dalcinonacog alfa dosing in hemophilia dogs and consequent blood levels, FIX activity and coagulation results.
(A) WBCT; (B) aPTT; (C) FIX antigen; (D) FIX activity; (E) Correlation between FIX activity and antigen. The decrease in aPTT mirrored the reduction in WBCT. There was a progressive increase in plasma FIX antigen with daily subcutaneous injection of dalcinonacog alfa. The plasma FIX activity correlated well with FIX antigen. aPTT, activated partial thromboplastin time; FIX, factor IX; kg, kilogram; Min, minutes; WBCT, whole blood clotting time.
Hemophilia dogs used in this study.
| Dog | Sex | DOB | First Dose | Age at First Dose | Weight at First Dose |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tony | Male | 18-Dec-11 | 11-May-16 | 4 years and 5 months | 23.0 kg |
| Bennett | Male | 24-Apr-14 | 11-May-16 | 2 years and 1 month | 19.8 kg |
| P07 | Female | 10-Mar-11 | 19-Sep-16 | 5 years and 6 months | 24.5 kg |
| P41 | Male | 18-Dec-11 | 19-Sep-16 | 4 years and 9 months | 21.8 kg |
DOB, date of birth; kg, kilogram.
aThe mutation in the Chapel Hill hemophilia B dogs is a missense mutation (G to A at nucleotide 1477) that results in the substitution of glutamic acid for glycine-379 in the catalytic domain of the Factor IX molecule [43].