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Hemophilia A

Haemophilia A (also spelt Hemophilia A or Hæmophilia A) is a blood clotting disorder caused by a mutation of the factor VIII gene, leading to a deficiency in Factor VIII. It is the most common hemophilia. Inheritance is X-linked; hence, males are affected while females are carriers or very rarely display a mild phenotype. 1 in 10,000 males are affected. more...

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Signs and symptoms

Hemophilia leads to a severely increased risk of bleeding from common injuries. The sites of bleeding are:

  • joints
  • muscles
  • digestive tract
  • brain

The muscle and joint haemorrhages are quite typical of haemophilia, while digestive tract and cerebral haemorrhages are also germane to other coagulation disorders.

Diagnosis

The diagnosis may be suspected as coagulation testing reveals an increased PTT in the context of a normal PT and bleeding time. The diagnosis is made in the presence of very low (<10 IU) levels of factor VIII. A family history is frequently present, although not essential. Nowadays, genetic testing may also be performed.

The most important differential diagnosis is that of hemophilia B (also known as Christmas disease) or von Willebrand disease. The former is usually considered if factor VIII levels are normal in a person with a haemophilia phenotype. The latter is excluded on routine testing for that condition.

A very small minority of patients has antibodies against factor VIII that impair its functioning. Management of these patients is more complicated (see below).

Therapy

Most haemophilia patients require regular supplementation with intravenous recombinant factor VIII. This is highly individually determined. Apart from "routine" supplementation, extra factor concentrate is given around surgical procedures and after trauma. In children, an easily accessible intravenous port (e.g. Port-a-Cath) may have to be inserted to minimise frequent traumatic intravenous cannulation.

Some may manage on desmopressin, if the clotting factor is still partially active.

A particular therapeutic conundrum is the development of "inhibitor" antibodies against factor VIII due to frequent infusions. These probably develop as the body recognises the factor VIII as foreign, as the body does not have its own "copy". The problem is that in these patients, factor VIII infusions are ineffective. Recently activated factor VII (NovoSeven®) has become available as a treatment for haemorrhage in patients with haemophilia and factor inhibitors.

Read more at Wikipedia.org


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Genetically altered cells ease hemophilia - Brief Article
From Science News, 6/9/01 by N. Seppa

People with severe hemophilia live in fear of cuts and bruises, which bleed profusely and require prompt injections of expensive medication. Worse yet, these people often experience spontaneous bleeding inside their joints, even without apparent injury.

Scientists now report that a new form of gene therapy provides some protection against bleeding. The gains are modest, not all patients improved, and the benefits don't appear to last. But the treatment reduced the use of clotting medicine in some patients and didn't cause any serious side effects.

If any disease seems susceptible to gene therapy, it's hemophilia. A lone mutation can leave a person bereft of one of the proteins essential for proper blood clotting. Thus, replacing a single faulty gene would seem enough to reverse the disease. However, delivering genes has proved difficult (SN: 5/13/00, p. 309). Now, people with hemophilia typically treat themselves with injections of purified clotting protein.

In the recent study, scientists removed a piece of skin from the arms of six people with severe hemophilia A. In this condition, a person produces inadequate amounts of a clotting protein called factor VIII.

The scientists impregnated some of the excised cells with plasmids--rings of bacterial DNA--that they had altered to carry a gene encoding factor VIII. The researchers then reproduced the cells that had taken up the desired gene and that, unlike natural skin cells, made factor VIII.

Study participants received injections of these genetically engineered copies of their own cells into midsection fatty tissue. Three participants each received 100 million such cells, and three others each received 400 million, says study coauthor Richard F Selden, a geneticist who heads Transkaryotic Therapies in Cambridge, Mass. He collaborated with researchers at Harvard Medical School in Boston. The team's report appears in the June 7 NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE.

Periodic blood tests over the next year revealed that all three patients in the high-dose group and one in the low-dose group sometimes had factor VIII concentrations that the researchers interpreted as higher than those shown at the start of the study. At some visits, the reimplanted cells were producing as much as 2 to 4 percent of normal factor VIII amounts.

"You don't need a lot [of factor VIII] to make a big difference in a person's everyday life," says hematologist Carol K. Kasper of the University of Southern California in Los Angeles.

People lacking the protein face up to 30 bouts a year of spontaneous bleeding into their joints, as indicated by swelling. The two patients in whom the therapy had the strongest effect reported no need to treat themselves for spontaneous bleeding for roughly 10 months beginning shortly after treatment. Then, however, the effect seemed to wear off.

Still, Selden admits to being "thrilled" with the results since this is the first gene therapy for hemophilia A in people.

"I think these results are exciting," says Katherine A. High, a hematologist at Children's Hospital in Philadelphia. "They confirm [that] even low levels of circulating clotting factor can have an ameliorating effect on this disease."

Not everyone agrees that the study was informative, however. Christopher E. Walsh, a hematologist at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, points out that the increases in factor VIII were small. "They are really at the limits of detection," he says. Also, there was no placebo group in the study. Participants might have expected to feel better and been less likely to treat themselves for internal bleeding, Walsh says.

COPYRIGHT 2001 Science Service, Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2001 Gale Group

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