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Hemlibra is approved in the EU for moderate hemophilia A without inhibitors. Moderate hemophilia A patients experience significant bleeds and joint issues, indicating an unmet medical need. Gene therapies, including RNA-based and combined gene/cell therapies, show promise in treating hemophilia A by restoring factor VIII levels in mouse models.

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The European Commission has approved Hemlibra (emicizumab) as a routine preventive treatment for people with moderate hemophilia A without inhibitors. “We welcome the European Commission’s decision to approve Hemlibra also for people with moderate hemophilia A in the EU,” said Levi Garraway, MD, PhD, Roche’s chief medical officer…

Cells derived from hemophilia A patients — genetically reprogrammed to produce a functional clotting factor VIII (FVIII) that’s missing or not working in people with the blood disease — were successfully grafted into hemophiliac mice, restoring blood levels of FVIII and significantly improving…

Scientists found the immune signaling protein BAFF can promote the formation of neutralizing antibodies, or inhibitors, against blood clotting factor VIII (FVIII), which can lower the effectiveness of FVIII replacement therapies used to treat people with hemophilia A.  They also discovered that hemophilia A…

Low-dose immune tolerance induction (ITI) — a type of treatment that can be used to eliminate inhibitors that limit the effectiveness of replacement therapies — achieved partial success in 80% of children with severe hemophilia A and high inhibitor levels, according to a recent study. The study, “…