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New treatments for hemophilia A are emerging, including Esperoct, approved by the FDA as a prophylactic treatment. Other innovative approaches in clinical trials include extended half-life replacement factors, antibodies, anti-thrombin inhibitors, and gene therapies like SB-525. These advancements aim to improve patients' quality of life by reducing bleeding episodes.

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Hemophilia patients are taking heart from a number of innovative treatment approaches that have reached the clinical trials stage. Researchers at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia offered a rundown on the advances in an article in the journal Blood titled “Novel approaches to hemophilia therapy: successes and challenges.” They include …

Bayer has filled a Biologics License Application (BLA) with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) requesting marketing approval for its long-acting human Factor VIII therapy, BAY94-9027, to treat hemophilia A. The therapy is designed to allow for dosing at intervals as long as once every seven days. The…

Self-reported health outcomes of hemophilia patients provide useful and clinically valuable data on the efficacy of treatments, a population-based study shows. The study, “Real-world utilities and health-related quality-of-life data in hemophilia patients in France and the United Kingdom,” was published in…

Adult hemophilia patients use hospital emergency departments mainly due to cardiovascular events, while pediatric patients most frequently complain of injuries, according to researchers. U.S. emergency department (ED) visits by hemophilia patients had a national estimated cost of $60 million in 2012, the year studied. These observations resulted from the retrospective and…

An international team has joined efforts to establish guidelines for effectiveness and outcome measurements regarding gene therapies in hemophilia. The CoreHEM project will be led by researchers from McMaster University in Ontario, Canada, in collaboration with the National Hemophilia Foundation (NHF) in the U.S. and the Green Park…