Drillaud Nicolas, Barbay Virginie, Valentin Jean Baptiste, Jailler Romain, Lebreton Aurélien, Pan-Petesch Brigitte, Marie Castet Sabine, Frotscher Birgit, Frenzel Laurent, Jousse-Joulin Sandrine, Chambost Hervé, Alenäs Mikaela, Fusser Markus, Gandossi Corinne, Zidi Meriem, Mahdout Oussama, Repessé Yohann
CRC-MHC, Haemophilia Treatment Centre, University Hospital, Nantes, France.
Haemophilia Treatment Centre, University Hospital of Rouen Normandie, Rouen, France.
Haemophilia. 2025 Mar;31(2):239-246. doi: 10.1111/hae.70012. Epub 2025 Feb 24.
Haemophilia management aims to prevent bleeding and preserve joint function. Changes in patients' joint health may influence physicians' decisions to adjust treatment. The Haemophilia Joint Health Score (HJHS) and Haemophilia Early Arthropathy Detection with Ultrasound (HEAD-US) score assess joint health but are not routinely used.
To evaluate whether systematic joint examination with HJHS and/or HEAD-US had an impact on treatment management decisions in France, using final data from the A-MOVE study.
A-MOVE (NCT04133883) was a 12-month prospective, multicentre study, which enrolled persons with haemophilia A (all severities, aged 6-40 years) treated prophylactically or on demand with standard/extended half-life FVIII replacement. At baseline, 6 and 12 months, HJHS/HEAD-US and changes in patients' management were assessed.
Eighty-six patients from 20 sites were included in the final analysis; 68 had HJHS/HEAD-US assessments at 12 months. Over 12 months, 24.4% (n = 21/86) of patients experienced an impact on their haemophilia management due to HJHS/HEAD-US scores; these decisions were impacted by HJHS in about half of the patients (52.4%, n = 11/21) and HEAD-US in almost all patients (95.2%, n = 20/21). Both assessments contributed to a change in management decisions in about half of the patients (47.6%, n = 10/21). Twenty-nine patients (33.7%) had haemophilia management decisions impacted by factors other than HJHS/HEAD-US, including physical examination findings (n = 9) and the occurrence of bleeding episodes (n = 8).
Final data from the A-MOVE study show that systematic joint assessments, through functional/physical examination (HJHS) and ultrasound (HEAD-US), may impact treatment management decisions in persons with haemophilia A.
血友病管理旨在预防出血并保留关节功能。患者关节健康状况的变化可能会影响医生调整治疗的决策。血友病关节健康评分(HJHS)和超声检测血友病早期关节病(HEAD-US)评分可评估关节健康状况,但未被常规使用。
利用A-MOVE研究的最终数据,评估采用HJHS和/或HEAD-US进行系统的关节检查是否会对法国的治疗管理决策产生影响。
A-MOVE(NCT04133883)是一项为期12个月的前瞻性多中心研究,纳入了接受标准/延长半衰期FVIII替代物预防性或按需治疗的A型血友病患者(所有严重程度,年龄6-40岁)。在基线、6个月和12个月时,评估HJHS/HEAD-US以及患者管理的变化。
来自20个地点的86名患者纳入最终分析;68名患者在12个月时进行了HJHS/HEAD-US评估。在12个月期间,24.4%(n = 21/86)的患者因HJHS/HEAD-US评分而使其血友病管理受到影响;这些决策在约一半的患者中受HJHS影响(52.4%,n = 11/21),在几乎所有患者中受HEAD-US影响(95.2%,n = 20/21)。两种评估在约一半的患者中促成了管理决策的改变(47.6%,n = 10/21)。29名患者(33.7%)的血友病管理决策受到HJHS/HEAD-US以外因素的影响,包括体格检查结果(n = 9)和出血事件的发生(n = 8)。
A-MOVE研究的最终数据表明,通过功能/体格检查(HJHS)和超声(HEAD-US)进行系统的关节评估可能会影响A型血友病患者的治疗管理决策。