Immunosuppressive treatment for acquired haemophilia: current practice and future directions in Germany, Austria and Switzerland
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BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
19083235
Description
Acquired haemophilia is an autoimmune disorder characterised by autoantibody formation against coagulation factor VIII. Immunosuppressive treatments including steroids, cytotoxic drugs, rituximab or combinations thereof have been used to eradicate autoantibodies. Very few prospective studies exist evaluating the use of these treatments. Here, we performed a survey among 73 physicians from 57 haemophilia treatment centres in order to describe current practice patterns and critical issues for future research in acquired haemophilia. The results demonstrate a high diversity of first- and second-line treatments. Factors influencing treatment decision were underlying disorder, severity of bleeding and inhibitor titre. Frequently used first-line treatments were steroids plus cyclophosphamide (44%) and steroids alone (11%). Second-line treatment was most often rituximab (30%), with or without steroids and/or cyclophosphamide. Most participants indicated to change from first- to second-line treatment after 4 weeks in case of failure to obtain partial remission (31%), continued bleeding (40%) or continued severe bleeding requiring bypass treatment (59%). Immunoadsorption was preferred for first- and second-line treatment by 10% and 9% of participants, respectively. These results highlight critical issues in the field. Open questions and directions for future research are discussed.
Date of Publication
2009
Publication Type
Article
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Tiede, Andreas | |
Huth-Kühne, Angela | |
Oldenburg, Johannes | |
Grossmann, Ralf | |
Geisen, Ulrich | |
Krause, Manuela | |
Brand, Brigit | |
Klamroth, Robert | |
Spannagl, Michael | |
Knöbl, Paul |
Additional Credits
Series
Annals of hematology
Publisher
Springer
ISSN
0939-5555
Access(Rights)
open.access