Doshi Bhavya S, Gangadharan Bagirath, Doering Christopher B, Meeks Shannon L
Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2012;7(10):e48172. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0048172. Epub 2012 Oct 29.
Development of inhibitory antibodies to coagulation factor VIII (fVIII) is the primary obstacle to the treatment of hemophilia A in the developed world. This adverse reaction occurs in 20-30% of persons with severe hemophilia A treated with fVIII-replacement products and is characterized by the development of a humoral and neutralizing immune response to fVIII. Patients with inhibitory anti-fVIII antibodies are treated with bypassing agents including recombinant factor VIIa (rfVIIa). However, some patients display poor hemostatic response to bypass therapy and improved treatment options are needed. Recently, we demonstrated that fVIII inhibitors display widely variable kinetics of inhibition that correlate with their respective target epitopes. Thus, it was hypothesized that for antibodies that display slow rates of inhibition, supplementation of rfVIIa with fVIII would result in improved thrombin generation and be predictive of clinical responses to this novel treatment regimen. In order to test this hypothesis, 10 murine monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) with non-overlapping epitopes spanning fVIII, differential inhibition titers, and inhibition kinetics were studied using a thrombin generation assay. Of the 3 MAbs with high inhibitory titers, only the one with fast and complete (classically defined as "type I") kinetics displayed significant inhibition of thrombin generation with no improvement upon supplementation of rfVIIa with fVIII. The other two MAbs that displayed incomplete (classically defined as "type II") inhibition did not suppress the potentiation of thrombin generation by fVIII. All antibodies that did not completely inhibit fVIII activity demonstrated potentiation of thrombin generation by the addition of fVIII as compared to rfVIIa alone. In conclusion, fVIII alone or in combination with rfVIIa corrects the thrombin generation defect produced by the majority of anti-fVIII MAbs better than single agent rfVIIa. Therefore, combined fVIII/rfVIIa therapy may provide better hemostatic control than current therapy in some patients with anti-fVIII inhibitors.
在发达国家,产生针对凝血因子VIII(fVIII)的抑制性抗体是治疗甲型血友病的主要障碍。这种不良反应发生在20%至30%接受fVIII替代产品治疗的重度甲型血友病患者中,其特征是对fVIII产生体液性和中和性免疫反应。具有抑制性抗fVIII抗体的患者接受包括重组因子VIIa(rfVIIa)在内的旁路制剂治疗。然而,一些患者对旁路治疗的止血反应不佳,需要更好的治疗选择。最近,我们证明fVIII抑制剂表现出广泛可变的抑制动力学,这与它们各自的靶表位相关。因此,有人推测,对于抑制速率较慢的抗体,用fVIII补充rfVIIa将导致凝血酶生成改善,并可预测对这种新治疗方案的临床反应。为了验证这一假设,使用凝血酶生成试验研究了10种小鼠单克隆抗体(MAb),这些抗体具有跨越fVIII的非重叠表位、不同的抑制效价和抑制动力学。在3种具有高抑制效价的MAb中,只有一种具有快速和完全(经典定义为“I型”)动力学的MAb对凝血酶生成有显著抑制作用,用fVIII补充rfVIIa后没有改善。另外两种表现出不完全(经典定义为“II型”)抑制的MAb没有抑制fVIII对凝血酶生成的增强作用。与单独使用rfVIIa相比,所有未完全抑制fVIII活性的抗体通过添加fVIII均表现出凝血酶生成的增强。总之,单独使用fVIII或与rfVIIa联合使用比单一药物rfVIIa能更好地纠正大多数抗fVIII MAb产生的凝血酶生成缺陷。因此,在一些有抗fVIII抑制剂的患者中,联合使用fVIII/rfVIIa治疗可能比目前的治疗提供更好的止血控制。