Haemophilia therapy has undergone very rapid evolution in the last 10 years. The major limitation of current replacement therapy is the short half-life of factors VIII and IX. These half-lives have been extended by the addition of various moieties, allowing less frequent infusion regimens. Entirely novel approaches have also entered the clinic, including a bispecific antibody that mimics factor VIII and strategies that rebalance the haemostatic mechanism by reducing antithrombin through inhibition of synthesis. These two treatments are available by subcutaneous injection at infrequent intervals and both can be used in patients with neutralising antibodies (inhibitors). Finally, a cure may be on the horizon with preliminary evidence of succe...
The development of a new generation of coagulation factors with improved pharmacokinetic profile wil...
Historically, the bleeding episodes in subjects with coagulation disorders were treated with substit...
Hemophilia is a genetic disease caused by a deficiency of one of the coagulation proteins. The term ...
Hemophilia A is an inherited insufficiency of Factor VIII (FVIII), one of the critical clotting fact...
Hemophilia A is an inherited insufficiency of Factor VIII (FVIII), one of the critical clotting fact...
For decades, the monogenetic bleeding disorders hemophilia A and B (coagulation factor VIII and IX d...
Recently new opportunities are emerging for improving the way patients with Haemophilia A are treate...
Abstract Mainstay haemophilia treatment, namely intravenous factor replacement, poses several clinic...
Hemophilia is a single gene disorder and as a genetical coagulation system problem it is a life-long...
Factor IX deficiency (hemophilia B) is less common than factor VIII deficiency (hemophilia A) and in...
Hemophilia A (HA) and B (HB) are X-linked bleeding disorders caused by mutations in the F8 or F9 gen...
Factor IX deficiency (hemophilia B) is less common than factor VIII deficiency (hemophilia A) and in...
During the last two decades major advances have been achieved in the management of haemophilia. Mode...
Marcus E Carr,1,2 Bartholomew J Tortella3,4 1Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Rutgers University,...
Hemophilia A (HA) and B (HB) are X-linked bleeding disorders caused by mutations in the F8 or F9 gen...
The development of a new generation of coagulation factors with improved pharmacokinetic profile wil...
Historically, the bleeding episodes in subjects with coagulation disorders were treated with substit...
Hemophilia is a genetic disease caused by a deficiency of one of the coagulation proteins. The term ...
Hemophilia A is an inherited insufficiency of Factor VIII (FVIII), one of the critical clotting fact...
Hemophilia A is an inherited insufficiency of Factor VIII (FVIII), one of the critical clotting fact...
For decades, the monogenetic bleeding disorders hemophilia A and B (coagulation factor VIII and IX d...
Recently new opportunities are emerging for improving the way patients with Haemophilia A are treate...
Abstract Mainstay haemophilia treatment, namely intravenous factor replacement, poses several clinic...
Hemophilia is a single gene disorder and as a genetical coagulation system problem it is a life-long...
Factor IX deficiency (hemophilia B) is less common than factor VIII deficiency (hemophilia A) and in...
Hemophilia A (HA) and B (HB) are X-linked bleeding disorders caused by mutations in the F8 or F9 gen...
Factor IX deficiency (hemophilia B) is less common than factor VIII deficiency (hemophilia A) and in...
During the last two decades major advances have been achieved in the management of haemophilia. Mode...
Marcus E Carr,1,2 Bartholomew J Tortella3,4 1Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Rutgers University,...
Hemophilia A (HA) and B (HB) are X-linked bleeding disorders caused by mutations in the F8 or F9 gen...
The development of a new generation of coagulation factors with improved pharmacokinetic profile wil...
Historically, the bleeding episodes in subjects with coagulation disorders were treated with substit...
Hemophilia is a genetic disease caused by a deficiency of one of the coagulation proteins. The term ...