Research and Practice in Thrombosis and Haemostasis (May 2022)
Recombinant porcine factor VIII corrects thrombin generation in vitro in plasma from patients with congenital hemophilia A and inhibitors
Abstract
Abstract Background Neutralizing factor VIII (FVIII) antibodies are a major complication in hemophilia A. Antihemophilic factor VIII (recombinant), porcine sequence (rpFVIII; susoctocog alfa; Baxalta US Inc., a Takeda company) has low cross‐reactivity to anti‐human FVIII antibodies and can provide functional FVIII activity in the presence of FVIII inhibitors. Objectives Evaluate in vitro thrombin generation and clot formation responses to rpFVIII in blood from patients with congenital hemophilia A. Methods In this multicenter study, blood was obtained for in vitro analyses that included human and porcine FVIII inhibitors, low <5 Bethesda units (BU)/ml or high ≥5 BU/ml titer (Nijmegen‐modified Bethesda assay); thrombin generation assay (TGA), clot viscoelasticity (thromboelastography), fibrin clot structure analysis (scanning electron microscopy), and epitope mapping. Results Blood samples were from 20 patients with congenital hemophilia A (FVIII activity <1%, mean [range] inhibitor titers: anti‐human FVIII, 14 [1–427] BU/ml [n = 13 high, n = 6 low, n = 1 data unavailable]); anti‐porcine FVIII, 12 (0–886) BU/ml (n = 11 high, n = 8 low, n = 1 data unavailable). Porcine inhibitor titer and TGA response measured by endogenous thrombin potential showed an inverse correlation (2.7–10.8 U/ml rpFVIII Spearman correlation coefficient: −0.594 to −0.773; p < 0.01). Clot structures in low anti‐porcine inhibitor titer plasmas were similar to those in noninhibitor plasma. Conclusions Recombinant porcine factor VIII demonstrated a dose‐dependent correction of thrombin generation and clot formation in vitro, dependent on the anti‐porcine FVIII inhibitor titer. Procoagulant responses to rpFVIII occurred in plasma containing FVIII inhibitors.
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