Association of Patient-Reported Outcomes with Hemophilia A Inhibitor Status and Treatment Product Type
Megan M. Ullman, Marilyn J. Manco-Johnson, Jonathan C. Roberts, Nicole Crook, Randall Curtis, Judith R. Baker, Joanne Wu, Michael B. Nichol

TL;DR
The study found that patients with hemophilia A who use emicizumab and those who have tolerized inhibitors report fewer joint bleeds and better quality of life.
Contribution
This study is novel in comparing PROs among hemophilia A patients based on inhibitor status and treatment type, including the impact of emicizumab.
Findings
Participants with tolerized inhibitors reported the fewest joint bleeds and highest quality-of-life scores.
Emicizumab users had significantly fewer bleeds compared to those on standard or extended half-life factor VIII.
Active inhibitor patients had joint bleeding rates similar to those without inhibitors, likely due to emicizumab use.
Abstract
Objectives: We compared patient-reported outcomes (PROs) in persons with hemophilia A (PwHA) by inhibitor status and prescribed treatment products. Methods: Hematology Utilization Group VIII study enrolled PwHA aged ≥ 2 years to collect PRO data via surveys. A clinical chart review documented the hemophilic severity, inhibitor level and treatment regimen. PROs were compared across inhibitor status and prescribed treatment products. Results: Among 85 enrolled PwHA, 9 (10.6%) had active inhibitors, 22 (25.9%) had tolerized inhibitors, and 54 (63.5%) had no inhibitors. The no-inhibitor group was significantly older (mean: 29.3 ± 13.5 years) than the tolerized (16.3 ± 9.5 years) and active inhibitor (21.9 ± 19.1 years; p = 0.001) groups. A larger proportion of participants with active inhibitors (66.7%) and no inhibitors (53.7%) reported having bleeds in the previous month compared to those…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHemophilia Treatment and Research · Blood properties and coagulation · Myeloproliferative Neoplasms: Diagnosis and Treatment
