Factor VIII Point Mutations with Higher Risk for Inhibitor Development in Mild/Moderate Hemophilia A: A Rapid, Specific Test Panel.

Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 2264-2264
Author(s):  
Jeffrey S. Buzby ◽  
Marianne McDaniel ◽  
Jeralyn C. Tucker ◽  
Shirley A. Williams ◽  
Amit Soni ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2264 The conversion of mild or moderate Factor VIII-deficient patients into those with a severe bleeding disorder can be an alarming consequence of inhibitor development, which is not typically anticipated in these patients. Cross-reactivity of the inhibitor antibodies with the patient's own circulating FVIII can reduce their baseline FVIII activity from that of 5–10% to 0–1%, with severe bleeding diathesis. Immune tolerance can be effective, as with more severely deficient cases. But patients must undergo daily desensitization and use costly bypassing agents. While cross-reactivity of the inhibitor antibodies with the patient's circulating FVIII remains poorly understood, there is growing evidence that mild/moderate hemophilia A patients with specific FVIII point mutations are at greater risk than others for developing this life-threatening complication. Current hypotheses suggest that certain mutations result in greater conformational changes in the patient's circulating FVIII, so that the infused FVIII becomes immunogenic. Based on review of previously published reports and the Haemophilia A Mutation, Structure, Test, and Resource Site (HAMSTeRS) database, we have selected nine point mutations, associated with multiple cases of mild/moderate hemophilia A, where at least 10% of those patients reported have developed inhibitors. Six of the nine are in the FVIII C-domain (Arg2150His, Trp2229Cys, Tyr2105Cys, Asn2286Lys, Pro2300Leu, and Arg2307Gln) and the other three are in the A-domain (Arg593Cys, Arg1997Trp, and Glu1999Gly). As an alternative to complete DNA sequencing or heteroduplex analysis, we have developed a more straightforward panel to rapidly test for these point mutations directly. Specific restriction endonucleases (New England BioLabs) were identified with overlapping recognition sites for each of the nine point mutations. For seven of the mutations, the restriction site is lost if a mutation occurs. For the other two, the restriction site is gained when the mutation is present. We evaluated this panel by digesting PCR amplicons from synthetic, control DNA templates (IDT), representing the wild-type and mutated FVIII exons encompassing each of the nine mutations. Differences between the resulting restriction enzyme digestion patterns were successfully detected with a BioAnalyzer DNA 1000 Kit (Agilent). A pilot study has further tested genomic DNA from eleven pediatric hemophilia A patients, all of whom were negative for each of the nine mutations. The results from testing of a larger bank of pediatric hemophilia A genomic DNA will also be presented. A more rapid, specific molecular screen that could be performed at the initial diagnosis of mild/moderate FVIII deficiency would allow providers to more readily identify those patients at risk for developing a FVIII inhibitor. This form of “personalized medicine” could help to prevent the potentially tragic outcome of inhibitor development, which can last from months to many years, in those patients that unexpectedly convert into a severe bleeding phenotype. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Blood ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 71 (2) ◽  
pp. 344-348 ◽  
Author(s):  
CW McMillan ◽  
SS Shapiro ◽  
D Whitehurst ◽  
LW Hoyer ◽  
AV Rao ◽  
...  

During a 4-year multicenter cooperative study of acquired factor VIII inhibitors in persons with hemophilia A, new inhibitors were detected in 31 of 1,306 patients who entered the study without an inhibitor or the history of an inhibitor. The incidence of new inhibitors was eight per 1,000 patient-years of observation. The factor VIII:C level before inhibitor development was less than or equal to 0.03 U/mL in 29 individuals and 0.06 U/mL and 0.07 U/mL in the remaining two. Factor VIII:Ag levels were measured in 27 individuals and were less than 0.03 U/mL in 23 and 0.05 to 0.11 U/mL in the remaining four. Maximum inhibitor levels ranged from 1.0 to 9,044 Bethesda U/mL. In seven patients under the age of 20, relatively weak inhibitors (none higher than 4.3 Bethesda U/mL) were detected on only a single occasion despite continued factor VIII challenge. In the other 24 patients with inhibitors detected on multiple occasions, 50% had appeared by age 20 and 71% by age 30. Seventeen of the 31 inhibitors, including 12 of 15 with maximum values greater than 10 Bethesda U/mL, developed within 75 exposure days to factor VIII.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 4060-4060
Author(s):  
Andrea Gerhardt ◽  
Dirk Grotemeyer ◽  
Wilhelm Sandmann ◽  
Rudiger E. Scharf ◽  
Rainer B. Zotz

Abstract In mild hemophilia A the development of inhibitors is a serious but infrequently reported complication (3–13%) occurring more commonly later in life, often following intensive factor VIII replacement for surgery or trauma. Due to cross-reactivity with endogenous factor VIII:C, the development of inhibitors in most patients with mild hemophilia A results in a fall in the endogenous level of factor VIII:C, converting patients to severe phenotype (FVIII:C<1%). Antibodies inhibiting allogenic (wild-type) but not autologous factor VIII are exceptional. In contrast to severe hemophilia A, little is known regarding risk factors for inhibitor development in mild hemophilia A and specifically regarding factor exposure (amount and intensity of factor VIII, episodic bolus injections versus continuous infusion, type of factor VIII, and context in which exposure occurs). We report on a 61-year-old patient with mild hemophilia A associated with a Arg2150His mutation in the C1 domain of factor VIII. The baseline factor VIII:C level is 5.2%. Age at initial exposure to allogenic factor VIII (cryoprecipitate) in 1975 was 31 years, age at initial exposure to recombinant factor VIII (first generation product) in 1996 was 51 years. In 1996 coronary-artery bypass grafting was performed because of coronary heart disease. The procedure was covered by factor VIII replacement therapy with episodic bolus injections. From 1996 to 2004 the patient was on demand treatment and received a total of 160 bolus injections of factor VIII (first generation product). At this time, there was no inhibitor development. In 2004 the patient was switched from first to third generation recombinant product (same cell line). Until April 2005 he received 25 factor VIII bolus injections without inhibitor development. In April 2005 a femoro-popliteal bypass using autogenous long saphenous vein graft was performed for treatment of peripheral arterial disease (Fontaine stage IIb). Again, the procedure was covered by factor VIII replacement therapy with episodic bolus injections. The patient never received continuous factor VIII infusions. On day 4 a high titer inhibitor (23 Bethesda-Units) developed. Since the patient showed a stable factor VIII activity of ~ 5% due to a missing inhibitor cross-reactivity with endogenous factor VIII, he had only a mild bleeding tendency without the need for application of factor VIII bypassing products. This case report describes a patient who developed a high titer factor VIII antibody inhibiting allogeneic but not autologous factor VIII after switching from a first to a third generation recombinant factor VIII product. The inhibitor development may be triggered by a more intense bolus infusion due to surgery. Mild hemophilia patients with a C1 domain Arg2150His mutation maintain significant factor VIII activity despite the development of high titer anti-factor VIII antibody. This immune response to factor VIII might represent a unique opportunity to study mechanisms of alloimmunization and autoimmunization.


Blood ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 71 (2) ◽  
pp. 344-348 ◽  
Author(s):  
CW McMillan ◽  
SS Shapiro ◽  
D Whitehurst ◽  
LW Hoyer ◽  
AV Rao ◽  
...  

Abstract During a 4-year multicenter cooperative study of acquired factor VIII inhibitors in persons with hemophilia A, new inhibitors were detected in 31 of 1,306 patients who entered the study without an inhibitor or the history of an inhibitor. The incidence of new inhibitors was eight per 1,000 patient-years of observation. The factor VIII:C level before inhibitor development was less than or equal to 0.03 U/mL in 29 individuals and 0.06 U/mL and 0.07 U/mL in the remaining two. Factor VIII:Ag levels were measured in 27 individuals and were less than 0.03 U/mL in 23 and 0.05 to 0.11 U/mL in the remaining four. Maximum inhibitor levels ranged from 1.0 to 9,044 Bethesda U/mL. In seven patients under the age of 20, relatively weak inhibitors (none higher than 4.3 Bethesda U/mL) were detected on only a single occasion despite continued factor VIII challenge. In the other 24 patients with inhibitors detected on multiple occasions, 50% had appeared by age 20 and 71% by age 30. Seventeen of the 31 inhibitors, including 12 of 15 with maximum values greater than 10 Bethesda U/mL, developed within 75 exposure days to factor VIII.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (15) ◽  
pp. 2333-2336 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giancarlo Castaman ◽  
Karin Fijnvandraat

Abstract The risk for inhibitor development in mild hemophilia A (factor VIII levels between 5 and 40 U/dL) is larger than previously anticipated, continues throughout life, and is particularly associated with certain mutations in F8. Desmopressin may reduce inhibitor risk by avoiding exposure to FVIII concentrates, but the heterogenous biological response to desmopressin, showing large interindividual variation, may limit its clinical use. However, predictors of desmopressin response have been recently identified, allowing the selection of the best candidates to this treatment.


2007 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. O-S-064-O-S-064
Author(s):  
J. Boekhorst ◽  
G. Rastegar Lari ◽  
R. d'Oiron ◽  
J.M. Costa ◽  
I.R.O. Novakova ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 81 (12) ◽  
pp. 3332-3335 ◽  
Author(s):  
K Peerlinck ◽  
FR Rosendaal ◽  
J Vermylen

Abstract The incidence of neutralizing isoantibody formation to infused factor VIII in a cohort of 67 hemophilia A patients, born between January 1, 1971 and April 30, 1990, who had been treated exclusively with lyophilized cryoprecipitate, was 6% (5.3 per 1,000 patient years of observation). The age-dependent cumulative risk was 4.6% at 4 years of age and 6.7% at 8 years of age. Recent reports in patients treated with a variety of more pure concentrates show a much higher incidence of inhibitor formation and tend to be used as a reference when new concentrates are introduced. We believe that a patient group, such as the one studied here, is a more suitable reference population because these patients have been exclusively treated with a single factor VIII preparation.


1981 ◽  
Author(s):  
N Ciavarella ◽  
S Solinas ◽  
D Pilolli ◽  
P Ranieri ◽  
D Corrao ◽  
...  

Twenty-one patients affected by mild and moderate Hemophilia A as well as 9 patients with the classic form of vonWillebrand’s disease (vWD) were given a total of 58 infusions of DDAVP. Concerning Hemophilia a three fold mean raise ( x = 3.0, sem O. 19; range of ratios post/preinfusion 1.35 - 5.55) of factor VIII : C levels was observed after the infusion of 0.3 μg/Kg b.w. A mean raise of 3.44 ( sem 0.48, range 2.20 - 6.7) after the infusion of 0.4/ug/Kg was found. The difference between the two regimens is not statistically significant (p < 0.5). As to the vWD 18 infusions were given. In 6 patients the changes of factor VI1I: C, VIIIR: Ag and VIII: vWF were roughly consensual ( ratios post/preinfusion ranging from 2.2 to 4.0 for VIII: C; from 1.8 to 3.5 for VIHR:Ag and from 3.1 to 6.2 for VIII: vWF). In the remaining 3 patients a very strong response of VIII : C ( ratios post/preinfusion 12.0, 15.1 and 6.5) was observed. Also the other properties related to factor VIII underwent to relevant increase. In one of these patients a modified electrophoretic mobility of factor VIII was found; the other two (father and doughter) had a normal factor VIII mobility after stimulation with DDAVP.


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