1. Academic Validation
  2. Safety, Immunogenicity, and Hemostatic Efficacy of Nonacog Gamma in Patients With Severe or Moderately Severe Hemophilia B: A Continuation Study

Safety, Immunogenicity, and Hemostatic Efficacy of Nonacog Gamma in Patients With Severe or Moderately Severe Hemophilia B: A Continuation Study

  • Clin Appl Thromb Hemost. 2020 Jan-Dec:26:1076029620950836. doi: 10.1177/1076029620950836.
Jerzy Windyga 1 Oleksandra Stasyshyn 2 Toshko Lissitchkov 3 Vasily Mamonov 4 Margit Serban 5 Luminita Rusen 6 Bettina Ploder 7 Srilatha Tangada 8
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Hemostasis Disorders and Internal Medicine, Institute of Haematology and Transfusion Medicine, Warsaw, Poland.
  • 2 Institute of Blood Pathology and Transfusion Medicine, Lviv, Ukraine.
  • 3 Specialized Hospital for Active Treatment "Joan Pavel," Sofia, Bulgaria.
  • 4 National Research Center for Hematology, Moscow, Russia.
  • 5 Emergency Clinical Hospital for Children "Louis Turcanu," Timisoara, Romania.
  • 6 Prof. Dr. C. T. Nicolau National Institute for Transfusional Hematology, Bucharest, Romania.
  • 7 Baxalta Innovations GmbH, a Takeda company, Vienna, Austria.
  • 8 Baxalta US Inc, a Takeda Company, Cambridge, MA, USA.
Abstract

This phase 3, prospective, open-label, multicenter, continuation study (NCT01286779) investigated the use of a recombinant factor IX (FIX), nonacog gamma (Bax 326, RIXUBIS®) in patients with severe or moderately severe hemophilia B. The study population included 85 patients transitioning from a phase 1/3 pivotal study (NCT01174446), a pediatric study (NCT01488994), and 30 newly recruited patients, naïve to nonacog gamma. Patients received nonacog gamma as prophylaxis treatment (standard, modified or PK-tailored) or on-demand, as determined by the investigator. Treatment was assessed for safety, immunogenicity, hemostatic efficacy and consumption. In this study, after ≥100 exposure days, nonacog gamma resulted in no treatment-related serious adverse events, and no patients developed inhibitory antibodies to FIX. Nonacog gamma was efficacious at controlling bleeding episodes, with an 89.1% overall hemostatic efficacy rating of excellent or good, and 56% of bleeds resolved with one infusion. The annualized bleeding rate was considerably lower during prophylactic treatment (median ABR of 1.3 in 108 patients) than during on-demand treatment (median ABR of 16.5 in 13 patients). These results show that in previously treated patients and nonacog gamma-naïve patients, long-term use of nonacog gamma had acceptable safety and tolerability, and was efficacious as a prophylactic treatment for the management of bleeding episodes.NCT01286779, EudraCT: 2010-022726-33.

Keywords

continuation study; factor IX; hemophilia B; hemostatic efficacy; nonacog gamma; safety.

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