Showing 2487 results for "hemophilia A/page/223/about:blank"

Filter By

A significant proportion of bleeds in people with hemophilia A are left untreated, according to an analysis of data from an observational study. Because only treated bleeds are typically reported in clinical trials, these findings suggested the full disease burden is not adequately captured in many studies. As such,…

Nearly all medical directors at hemophilia treatment centers in the U.S. said they would consider starting preventive Hemlibra (emicizumab-KXWH) in untreated infants with hemophilia A, ages 12 months and younger, a survey study reports. Most respondents also said they’d transition from FVIII replacement therapies, used on-demand to treat…

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has placed a clinical hold on the Phase 3 trial evaluating SB-525 (giroctocogene fitelparvovec), an investigational gene therapy for hemophilia A. This pause in study recruitment and dosing was taken to give the agency time to review changes to the AFFINE…

Greater awareness of hemophilia and its symptoms is associated with better adherence to treatment by patients, and those with more severe disease are most likely to use a treatment as prescribed, a study based on a new questionnaire shows. Responses were seen to validate this questionnaire, which addresses…

People in France with severe hemophilia A who switched to Elocta (efmoroctocog alfa) — an extended half-life replacement therapy — had fewer infusions and a reduced rate of joint bleeds, a real-world study reports. Notably, those who switched to Elocta had a higher bleeding rate, including joint bleeds,…

BioMarin Pharmaceutical has completed enrollment in GENEr8-3, a Phase 3b study evaluating its investigational gene therapy Roctavian (valoctocogene roxaparvovec) in combination with corticosteroids in men with severe hemophilia A. Top-line data from the 52-week (one year) study are expected to be released in early 2023, according to a…

Hemophilia is a genetic disorder that prevents blood clotting. Most common in men, there are two main types of hemophilia: hemophilia A and B. Below is a curated list of recommended reads for family members, friends and carers of patients with hemophilia, with help from Good Reads and Alibris.