In persons with congenital severe hemophilia A (HA) living in high-income countries, twice weekly intravenous infusions of extended half-life (EHL) factor VIII (FVIII) products, or weekly/biweekly/monthly subcutaneous injections of emicizumab are the gold standard home treatments to grant days without hurdles and limitations. Once weekly/twice monthly infusions of EHL Factor IX (FIX) products achieve the same target in severe hemophilia B (HB). Gene therapy, which is likely to be licensed for clinical use within 1-2 years, embodies a shift beyond these standards. At an individual patient level, a single functional gene transfer leads to a > 10-yr almost full correction of the hemostatic defect in HB and to a sustained (3-6-yrs) expressio...
Hemophilia is a monogenic disease with robust clinicolaboratory correlations of severity. These attr...
Advancements and debacles have characterized hemophilia treatment over the past 50 years. The 1970s ...
Hemophilia A is an inherited insufficiency of Factor VIII (FVIII), one of the critical clotting fact...
Historically, the standard of care for hemophilia A has been intravenous administration of exogenous...
With liver-directed gene therapy, congenital haemophilia has the potential to progress from an incur...
With liver-directed gene therapy, congenital haemophilia has the potential to progress from an incur...
The last two decades has seen significant progress in the treatment of hemophilia A. The developmen...
In contrast to other diverse therapies for the X-linked bleeding disorder hemophilia that are curren...
Hemophilia is a monogenic mutational disease affecting coagulation factor VIII or factor IX genes. T...
Hemophilia A and B are X-linked monogenic disorders caused by deficiencies in coagulation factor VII...
Hemophilia is a single gene disorder and as a genetical coagulation system problem it is a life-long...
Hemophilia is a monogenic mutational disease affecting coagulation factor VIII or factor IX genes. T...
Factor IX deficiency (hemophilia B) is less common than factor VIII deficiency (hemophilia A) and in...
Factor IX deficiency (hemophilia B) is less common than factor VIII deficiency (hemophilia A) and in...
Gene therapy is rapidly becoming a new therapeutic strategy for haemophilia A and B treatment. In th...
Hemophilia is a monogenic disease with robust clinicolaboratory correlations of severity. These attr...
Advancements and debacles have characterized hemophilia treatment over the past 50 years. The 1970s ...
Hemophilia A is an inherited insufficiency of Factor VIII (FVIII), one of the critical clotting fact...
Historically, the standard of care for hemophilia A has been intravenous administration of exogenous...
With liver-directed gene therapy, congenital haemophilia has the potential to progress from an incur...
With liver-directed gene therapy, congenital haemophilia has the potential to progress from an incur...
The last two decades has seen significant progress in the treatment of hemophilia A. The developmen...
In contrast to other diverse therapies for the X-linked bleeding disorder hemophilia that are curren...
Hemophilia is a monogenic mutational disease affecting coagulation factor VIII or factor IX genes. T...
Hemophilia A and B are X-linked monogenic disorders caused by deficiencies in coagulation factor VII...
Hemophilia is a single gene disorder and as a genetical coagulation system problem it is a life-long...
Hemophilia is a monogenic mutational disease affecting coagulation factor VIII or factor IX genes. T...
Factor IX deficiency (hemophilia B) is less common than factor VIII deficiency (hemophilia A) and in...
Factor IX deficiency (hemophilia B) is less common than factor VIII deficiency (hemophilia A) and in...
Gene therapy is rapidly becoming a new therapeutic strategy for haemophilia A and B treatment. In th...
Hemophilia is a monogenic disease with robust clinicolaboratory correlations of severity. These attr...
Advancements and debacles have characterized hemophilia treatment over the past 50 years. The 1970s ...
Hemophilia A is an inherited insufficiency of Factor VIII (FVIII), one of the critical clotting fact...