Novel Treatment Approaches in Combination with Rituximab for Immune Tolerance Induction in Severe Hemophilia B.

Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 3975-3975 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amanda M. Brandow ◽  
Rowena C. Punzalan ◽  
Karen Stephany ◽  
Craig Helsell ◽  
Joan C. Gill

Abstract Although only 4–5% of patients with severe Hemophilia B (HB) develop factor IX (FIX) antibodies that cause inactivation of transfused FIX concentrate (conc), about 1/3 of these are associated with life-threatening anaphylactic reactions; immune tolerance induction (ITI) with high-dose FIX conc is often unsuccessful. We present individualized novel approaches to ITI in 2 boys with severe HB and high-responding inhibitors. ELISA assays utilizing recombinant FIX (rFIX) to capture patient IgG followed by detection with subclass specific monoclonal antibodies were developed to evaluate the characteristics of the factor IX inhibitors before, during and following ITI. Patient 1, a 2 yo boy, presented with a subdural hemorrhage; his inhibitor titer was 14 BU. He was treated with recombinant VIIa (rVIIa), 200 mcg/kg followed by 100 mcg/kg q2 hours plus rFIX conc (BeneFix), 1000 U/kg prior to and post subdural hematoma evacuation; a continuous infusion, 40U/kg/hour rFIX conc was started. FIX:C was >100%, so rVIIa was discontinued and the rFIX infusion was continued to maintain FIX:C levels above 50%. Rituximab (375 mg/m2 q week x 4) was started. On the 6th day, he developed anamnesis; plasma FIX:C dropped to the 20% range in spite of increases in his rFIX conc drip to 68 u/kg/hour. Investigation of right leg edema revealed a large thrombus involving the popliteal, iliac and inferior vena cava with pulmonary embolism. In order to remove the inhibitor antibody and achieve plasma FIX levels that would allow safe anticoagulation with heparin, plasmapheresis with an immunoadsorption Protein A sepharose column (Fresenius) was undertaken. FIX:C levels were unexpectedly lower immediately following each cycle. Investigation of FIX: Ag and anti-FIX IgG, IgG1 and IgG4 by ELISA assays before and after each cycle revealed the presence of FIX: Ag and specific anti-FIX IgG in the column eluates. After the 5th cycle, increasing FIX:C levels allowed weaning of the rFIX conc; the thromboses completely resolved. The patient currently is on standard prophylactic doses of rFIX conc with expected recoveries with no evidence of inhibitor. Patient 2 was a 9 year old boy with a high responding anaphylactoid inhibitor; he had severe and frequent hemarthroses treated with rVIIa with variable success resulting in significant hemophilic arthropathy. He had previously received 2 courses of rituximab with recurrence of inhibitor 3 weeks post-therapy. Therefore, in order to suppress T-cell as well as B-cell immune responses, after desensitization with increasing infusions of rFIX conc, he was treated with cyclophosphamide (10 mg/kg IV on days 2, 3 and PO on days 4 and 5) a standard course of rituximab (375 mg/m2 on days 1, 8, 15, 22), IVIG (100 mg/kg on days 2–5) initially, and high dose rFIX conc, 100U/kg/day. He is now maintained on every-other monthly doses of rituximab and replacement doses of IVIG. As FIX levels rose during ITI, rFIX conc was weaned; eight months after initiation of ITI, he has expected recoveries of FIX: C on standard prophylactic doses of rFIX conc. Investigation of the nature of the patient’s inhibitors revealed that both patients had high titer IgG1 and IgG 4 anti-factor IX antibodies that disappeared after ITI. Unlike the persistence of non-inhibitory IgG4 factor VIII antibodies reported in some patients with hemophilia A, in these two patients, there was no detectable FIX-specific pan-IgG, IgG1 or IgG4 following ITI. We conclude that novel approaches to ITI can be successfully undertaken in severe HB patients with high titer factor IX inhibitors.

Hematology ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 (1) ◽  
pp. 648-649 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maissaa Janbain ◽  
Steven Pipe

Abstract A 10-year-old boy presents with a history of severe hemophilia A and high-titer inhibitor that had failed high-dose immune tolerance induction (ITI) with a recombinant factor VIII (rFVIII) product and a plasma-derived FVIII product. You are asked by his mother whether he should be tried on ITI with an extended half-life product, in particular, consideration of a rFVIIIFc concentrate.


Hematology ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 (1) ◽  
pp. 405-406 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael U. Callaghan ◽  
Patrick F. Fogarty

Abstract An 18-year-old man has severe hemophilia A that has been complicated by a high-titer inhibitory antibody (peak 170 BU/mL). He had previously failed a trial of immune tolerance induction (ITI) using daily high-dose (100 units/kg/d) factor VIII (FVIII) for 20 months and would like to know if immunomodulatory agents, with or without another course of ITI, might eradicate the inhibitor.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 4051-4051
Author(s):  
Hiroyoshi Watanabe ◽  
Tsutomu Watanabe ◽  
Toshihiro Onishi ◽  
Kazumi Okamura ◽  
Shoji Kagami ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Inhibitor formation is a severe complication of hemophilia B associated with poor response to factor replacement and uncontrolled bleeding, although an inhibitor formation in hemophilia B is a rare event compared to hemophilia A. Currently, immune tolerance is the only proven method for inhibitor eradication. However, immune tolerance induction in patients with hemophilia B is a rare occurrence. We report a case of a hemophilia B patient who had a reduction of inhibitor titer during continual use of FEIBA. Case report: Patient is an 11-year-old boy with severe FIX deficiency and high titer inhibitor (historical peak: 65 BU/mL) since age 3 years. Since inhibitor formation, the patient had received FEIBA or FVIIa on demand. FVIIa became therapeutically not effective in 1999 October, and bleeding frequency increased as he developed a target joint. In 1999 November, 2002 February, and 2004 September, he received high dose of FIX concentrate for neutralization of inhibitor and then cyclophosphamide for 8 weeks. We achieved only a transient effect in reducing the inhibitor titer. The inhibiter titer fluctuated between 20 and 60 BU/mL. Since 2005 January, subsequently, he had received FEIBA 1,000–2,000 IU per dose (30–50 units/kg) on demand. He needed FEIBA twice or thrice a week, and continued to receive this dose till now. The inhibitor titer was gradually getting lower after a transient rise up to 39 BU/mL on 2005 February. On 2006 February, the inhibitor titer became below 1.0 BU/mL, and finally undetectable on 2006 March, despite the longevity of the inhibitor (8 years). Factor IX recovery was normalized, and bleeding frequency dramatically decreased. Elimination of the inhibitor by the continued administration of FEIBA was observed. Anaphylactic reaction and the development of nephrotic syndrome were not seen. Conclusion: The continuing use of FEIBA safely and effectively might decrease the inhibitor titer and the frequency of bleeding episodes in hemophilia B patients. This case may provide us the optimization of the FEIBA dose, and duration of treatment for inducing tolerance by using FEIBA.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 1046-1046
Author(s):  
Michael U. Callaghan ◽  
Indira Warrier ◽  
Madhvi Rajpurkar ◽  
Jeanne Lusher

Abstract Aim: To study the characteristics, treatment, and outcome of patients with hemophilia with inhibitors who have undergone immune tolerance induction (ITI) at the Children’s Hospital of Michigan over the past 14 years. Methods: In compliance with local IRB regulations, patient charts and laboratory databases were reviewed and salient data extracted. 28 boys underwent 29 attempts at immune tolerance induction. Results: Hemophilia A 26 boys with severe hemophilia A with inhibitors underwent 27 trials of ITI. In this cohort of 26 patients the average age at which patients developed an inhibitor was 22 months and the average age at start of ITI was 5 years 4 months (range 2 months to 17 years 5 months). The average number of exposure days prior to inhibitor development was 10 (1–47). The average time between development of an inhibitor and initiation of ITI was 43 months, with no difference between those who successfully completed ITI and those who did not. Six patients had low titer inhibitors (0.8–6.5 BU) and successfully completed ITI using a modified low dose ITI regimen of factor infusions 3–7 times per week. 20 of the patients with high titer inhibitors (6.4–1280 BU) were treated with daily infusions of 50–200 units/kg/d of factor VIII (FVIII) products. For ITI, 4 patients received high purity plasma derived FVIII (PD-FVIII) and 21 received recombinant FVIII (rFVIII) and one received both. In patients who became tolerized to FVIII, the average time to achieve an inhibitor titer of 0 Bethesda Units (BU) was 211 days. In those who were unable to achieve tolerance, the average length of the trial was 263 days. 21 of the ITI trials employed a central venous catheter and in 5 patients ITI was stopped after removal of the line because of recurrent infections. 14 boys received FEIBA, rFVIIa, or porcine FVIII for bleeding episodes during ITI; 8 of them failed ITI and one is still on therapy. Seven trials of ITI were in Caucasian patients (26 %), 17 in African American (AA) (63 %), and 3 in Middle Eastern patients (11 %). 19 patients achieved complete tolerance (73 %), 6 patients failed (23 %), one failed twice, and one patient continues on therapy. All but 2 patients who successfully completed ITI went on prophylaxis with FVIII. All patients who successfully completed ITI have maintained tolerance with a mean follow-up of 101 months (range 7–168). Table I: Hemophilia A Failed ITI Successful ITI *One still ongoing Number of trials* 7 (23 %) 19 (73 %) African Americans 7 (41 %) 10 (59 %) Non-AA 0 10 (100 %) Historical Peak Titer (mean) 345 BU 47 BU Titer at Start of ITI (mean) 62 BU 5 BU Peak Titer on ITI (mean) 168 BU 46 BU Age at inhibitor development (mean) 26 months 12 months ITI with PD-FVIII 1 4 ITI with rFVIII 7 15 Hemophilia B During this time period, 2 boys with severe hemophilia B underwent ITI. Both had severe allergic reactions at the time of inhibitor development; both underwent desensitization successfully but both failed ITI. Both started ITI with plasma derived factor nine at age 15 months. One developed nephrotic syndrome while on ITI. Conclusions: Most patients with Hemophilia A were able to achieve and maintain tolerance (73%). Higher titer inhibitors, hemophilia B, younger age at development of inhibitor, AA race and treatment of bleeds with bypass agents or porcine factor while on ITI were risk factors for ITI failures. Loss of central venous access with recurrent infections was also a common reason for ITI failure.


2015 ◽  
Vol 26 (5) ◽  
pp. 580-582 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryoji Kobayashi ◽  
Hirozumi Sano ◽  
Daisuke Suzuki ◽  
Kenji Kishimoto ◽  
Kazue Yasuda ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 3156-3156
Author(s):  
Xiaomei Wang ◽  
Babak Moghimi ◽  
Irene Zolotukhin ◽  
Ou Cao ◽  
Roland W Herzog

Abstract Abstract 3156 At present, the most serious complication in hemophilia therapy is the development of neutralizing antibodies (inhibitors) to intravenous administrated recombinant protein, which compromises therapy, creates immune-toxicity, and increases costs. Although inhibitor formation is less frequent in hemophilia B, it is more prevalent in severe hemophilia B patients, often with additional consequences - up to 50% patients with inhibitors to factor IX (F.IX) develop anaphylactic reactions. These further increase risks of morbidity and mortality. Available bypass therapy is expensive and at risk for thrombosis. Clinical immune tolerance induction (ITI) protocols are lengthy, expensive, and are often terminated in hemophilia B due to anaphylactic reactions or nephrotic syndrome. Therefore, effective protocols to induce immune tolerance to F.IX are urgently needed. B cells have been identified as antigen presenting cells with potentially immune suppressive/regulatory roles. Upon gene transfer, primary B cells were found to induce tolerance to the expressed transgene product. Hence, we use autologous gene-modified primary B cells expressing F.IX antigen fused with immunoglobulin-G heavy chain in a murine model of hemophilia B. Our murine hemophilia B model is unique in both developing high-titer inhibitors and fatal anaphylactic reactions to protein replacement therapy. Retroviral transduced B cells, expressing either full-length or shorter version of F.IX, markedly reduced inhibitor titers up to 30-fold and completely prevented fatal anaphylactic reactions. After 7 weeks of treatment with recombinant human F.IX (IV, 1 IU/mouse, once per week), mice receiving control B cells (n=6) had developed inhibitor titers of 23±8 BU, and 50% died after the last injection. Mice tolerized to F.IX by B cell transplant (n=7) had formed <1 BU, essentially undetectable by this assay, and all survived without anaphylactic reactions. We also tested the B cell-based therapy in already primed mice. Animals receiving B cells expressing the F.IX-IgG fusion successfully reversed the inhibitor and total anti-F.IX IgG titers markedly, whereas animals receiving B cells expressing IgG control had insignificant changes of inhibitor/antibody levels. Our data suggested that B cell-based gene therapy is a promising strategy in not only prevention but also treatment of inhibitors against F.IX. Besides retroviral gene transfer, we tested alternative methods such as DNA nucleofection. Interestingly, although achieving higher gene transfer efficiency, nucleofection of the plasmid encoding the retroviral expression cassette increased rather than decreased immune responses to F.IX. This was likely caused by activation of innate immune mediators and inflammatory cytokine expression as indicated by expression array analysis. Among the 29 genes tested, IL-6 and type I IFN were significantly upregulated in nucleofected B cells compared with retroviral infected B cells, which was further confirmed by ELISA. IL-6 and type I IFN are known to abrogate tolerance such as in transplant rejection and anti-tumor immunity. We suspected that the endosomal DNA sensor TLR9 may induce these cytokines in response to nucleofection. Consistent with this hypothesis, using a TLR9 inhibitory oligodeoxynucleotide (ODN 2088), we significantly reduced nucleofection-associated IL-6 and type I IFN production compared to passive ODN control. These data provide insights into the mechanisms that control the immune phenotype of gene-modified primary B cells, which become tolerogenic under conditions of limited innate responses and immunogenic upon activation of inflammatory and IFN I gene expression. Disclosures: Herzog: Genzyme Corp.: Royalties, AAV-FIX technology, Royalties, AAV-FIX technology Patents & Royalties.


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