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Get Free AccessUnlabelled Box Essentials • A residual factor VIII synthesis is likely to be protective towards inhibitor (INH) development. • Mutation type‐inhibitor risk association was explored in 231 patients with severe hemophilia A. • A 2‐fold increase in INH development for in silico null vs. non‐null mutations was found. • A 3.5‐fold increase in INH risk for antigen negative vs. antigen positive mutations was found. Summary: Background The type of F8 mutation is the main predictor of inhibitor development in patients with severe hemophilia A. Mutations expected to allow residual synthesis of factor VIII are likely to play a protective role against alloantibody development by inducing immune tolerance. According to the expected full or partial impairment of FVIII synthesis, F8 variants are commonly classified as null and non‐null. Objectives To explore the mutation type–inhibitor risk association in a cohort of 231 patients with severe hemophilia A enrolled in the Survey of Inhibitors in Plasma‐Product Exposed Toddlers (SIPPET) randomized trial. Methods The genetic defects in these patients, consisting of inversions of intron 22 (n = 110) and intron 1 (n = 6), large deletions (n = 16), and nonsense (n = 38), frameshift (n = 28), missense (n = 19) and splicing (n = 14) variants, of which 34 have been previously unreported, were reclassified according to two additional criteria: the functional effects of missense and splicing alterations as predicted by multiple in silico analyses, and the levels of FVIII antigen in patient plasma. Results A two‐fold increase in inhibitor development for in silico null mutations as compared with in silico non‐null mutations (hazard ratio [HR] 2.08, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.84–5.17) and a 3.5‐fold increase in inhibitor development for antigen‐negative mutations as compared with antigen‐positive mutations (HR 3.61, 95% CI 0.89–14.74] were found. Conclusions Our findings confirm an association between the synthesis of minute amounts of FVIII and inhibitor protection, and underline the importance of investigating the residual FVIII antigen levels associated with causative variants in order to understand their clinical relevance.
Silvia Spena, Isabella Garagiola, Antonino Cannavò, Mimosa Mortarino, P.M. Mannucci, Frits R. Rosendaal, Flora Peyvandi, Amal El‐Beshlawy, Mohsen Saleh Elalfy, Vijay Ramanan, Peyman Eshghi, Suresh Hanagavadi, Ramya Varadarajan, Milad Karimi, Mamta Manglani, Cecil Ross, George R. Young, Tulika Seth, Suneel Apte, Dinesh Nayak, Elena Santagostino, Maria Elisa Mancuso, Adriana C. Sandoval Gonzalez, Johnny Mahlangu, Santiago Bonanad, Marcos Cerqueira, Nadia P. Ewing, Christoph Male, Tarek Owaidah, Verónica Soto Arellano, Nathan L. Kobrinsky, S. S. Majumdar, Rosario Garrido, Anupam Sachdeva, Michael A. Simpson, Meenu Thomas, Ezio Zanon, Bülent Antmen, Kaan Kavaklı, Marilyn J. Manco‐Johnson, Miguel J. Martínez, E. Marzouka, M.G. Mazzucconi, Daniela Neme, A. Palomo Bravo, Rodrigo Aguilera, A. Prezotti, Katharina Schmitt, Brian M. Wicklund, Bülent Zülfikar (2018). Prediction of factor VIII inhibitor development in the SIPPET cohort by mutational analysis and factor VIII antigen measurement. Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis, 16(4), pp. 778-790, DOI: 10.1111/jth.13961.
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Type
Article
Year
2018
Authors
50
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
Journal
Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis
DOI
10.1111/jth.13961
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