1. The Half-life of Infused Factor VIII Is Shorter in Hemophiliac Patients with Blood Group 0 than in those with Blood Group A
- Author
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J. J. Sixma, E. Haan, Eveline P. Mauser-Bunschoten, C. L. J. J. Kruitwagen, A. J. Vlot, H. M. Van Den Berg, and A. G. Zarkova
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medicine.medical_specialty ,biology ,business.industry ,Half-life ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,Thrombosis ,Experimental diagnostics and therapy of malignancies ,Endocrinology ,Von Willebrand factor ,Pharmacokinetics ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Internal medicine ,Immunology ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Coagulopathy ,Antibody ,business ,Rh blood group system ,Perfusion - Abstract
SummaryA considerable inter-individual variation in half-life of infused factor VIII is observed among patients with hemophilia A. The factors contributing to this wide range in factor VIII half-life are not known in detail. We analysed the pharmacokinetics of infused factor VIII in 32 patients with hemophilia A, comprising 20 brothers from 10 families, 3 and 4 brothers from 2 families, and 5 patients from 5 single families, respectively. Multiple linear regression analysis was used to asses the effect of several variables on factor VIII half-life. We found that the pre-infusion von Willebrand factor antigen levels (vWF:Ag) were positively correlated with factor VIII half-life (r = 0.52, p = 0.002), i. e., each variable was associated with about 27% of the variance of the other. In fraternal pairs, familial clustering was significant for AB0 blood group (p < 0.001), but could not be detected for factor VIII half-lives or pre-infusion vWF:Ag levels. vWF:Ag level (p = 0.001) and AB0 blood group (p = 0.003) significantly determined factor VIII half-life, whereas age, length, bodyweight, the presence or absence of a factor VIII gene inversion, and Rhesus phenotype did not. Patients with blood group 0 exhibited a statistically significant shorter factor VIII half-life than patients with blood group A (15.3 versus 19.7 h, respectively) (p = 0.003). Patients with blood group A and 0 differ in respect to the presence of anti-A antibodies in the latter. It is possible that these anti-A antibodies interact with endogenous vWF, thus affecting the half-life time of the factor VIII/vWF complex.
- Published
- 2000
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