The use of polyelectrolyte-fractionated porcine factor VIII in the treatment of a spontaneously acquired inhibitor to factor VIII
Polyelectrolyte-fractionated porcine factor VIII concentrate is a recent addition to the therapeutic choices for treatment of factor VIII inhibitor patients, but cross-reactivity of the inhibitor with porcine factor VIII limits its usefulness in some cases. Hemophilic patients with inhibitor titers...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Thrombosis research 1989-07, Vol.55 (1), p.51-56 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Polyelectrolyte-fractionated porcine factor VIII concentrate is a recent addition to the therapeutic choices for treatment of factor VIII inhibitor patients, but cross-reactivity of the inhibitor with porcine factor VIII limits its usefulness in some cases. Hemophilic patients with inhibitor titers ≥50 Bethesda units/ml often demonstrate sufficient cross-reactivity (10–20%) to prevent the achievement of a satisfactory plasma factor VIII level and a therapeutic response with porcine factor VIII. We have studied plasma from five women with high-titer, spontaneously acquired factor VIII inhibitors to determine the degree of cross-reactivity with porcine factor VIII. Four of the five had little or no detectable inhibitor to porcine factor VIII despite high titers to human factor VIII (26–143 Bethesda units/ml). One of these patients, with a titer of 53 Bethesda units/ml against human factor VIII, was treated successfully with porcine factor VIII concentrate, given for serious hemorrhagic complications. These studies and other reports support the conclusion that the majority of high-titer spontaneous factor VIII inhibitors exhibit little cross-reactivity with porcine factor VIII and can be treated successfully with this product. |
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ISSN: | 0049-3848 1879-2472 |
DOI: | 10.1016/0049-3848(89)90455-6 |