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In this simple animated video from CSL Behring US, hemophilia is explained in easy-to-understand language aimed at children and caregivers of newly diagnosed hemophilia patients. MORE: Explaining hemophilia A and hemophilia B The narrator shares the basic difference between hemophilia A and hemophilia B, and that…

Approximately 30,000 males have hemophilia in the U.S., according to estimates from a recent study, which also found that patients with hemophilia are generally young and that the disease is more common in Northeastern and Midwestern states. The study, “Occurrence rates of haemophilia among males in…

Starting or switching to prophylactic, or preventive Hemlibra (emicizumab) may lead to a significant reduction in treatment-associated expenses for hemophilia A patients in the U.S., a real-world study reported. These findings highlight the cost-benefits of using Hemlibra — and may help future cost analysis studies in assessing new…

Hemophilia B patients living in urban mainland China have longer hospitalizations and significantly higher medical costs — including more expensive fees for coagulation factors concentrates — compared with patients with hemophilia A, a retrospective study shows. In fact, people with hemophilia B had inpatient medical costs more than…

A recent clinical trial indicates that replacement therapy with plasma-derived factor VIII is associated with lower incidence for development of inhibitors in patients with severe hemophilia A. The study,“A Randomized Trial of Factor VIII and Neutralizing Antibodies in Hemophilia A,” was published in The New England Journal of…

Novo Nordisk acquired the hemophilia A program and gene-editing technology rights of 2seventy Bio, with 2seventy staffers involved in the program joining Novo Nordisk and continuing to develop the technology to treat a range of diseases other than cancer. 2seventy could receive payments of up to $40…

In the U.S., hemophilia A is estimated to affect one in every 5,000 male births, hemophilia B one in 25,000 male births, and hemophilia C one in every 100,000 people (males and females). Hemophilia A is thus four times more common than hemophilia B, and about 10 times more common than…

Some hemophilia patients may, over time, develop inhibitors which restrict the efficacy of treatment making bleeding episodes more difficult to stop. MORE: Intracranial hemorrhage risk – when to see a doctor According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), although the majority of people living with…