45 research outputs found

    A neonatal presentation of factor V deficiency: A case report

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    BACKGROUND: Factor V deficiency is a rare autosomal recessive coagulation disorder. Awareness of presenting features and management is important to avoid bleeding complications associated with mortality and neurodisability. CASE PRESENTATION: A 6-day-old Pakistani boy was admitted with bleeding from the left nipple. His parents were first cousins. A coagulation screen showed a prothrombin time of 41 s (control 14 s), a partial thromboplastin time of 132 s (control 33 s) and a normal thrombin time of 15 s (control 14 s). Factor V activity was <0.01 IU/ml. Oral tranexamic acid was started. At 5 weeks of age the child presented with irritability, lethargy and reduced feeding and a drop of hemoglobin to 5.6 g/dl. A cranial computed tomography scan showed a right intra-cerebral bleed extending from the frontal lobe to the parieto-occipital region with shift of the midline to the left. A regime of 20 ml/kg of fresh frozen plasma four times a week was instituted and has prevented further bleeds up to the present age of 21 months. Neurodevelopment remained normal. CONCLUSION: This case illustrates that in an unusually bleeding newborn of consanguineous parents rare severe homozygous bleeding disorders need to be considered. Nipple bleeding may be the first presentation of a congenital bleeding disorder. In cases of factor V deficiency where factor concentrates are not available long term use of fresh frozen plasma can prevent potentially life threatening bleeding

    Effect of HLA DR epitope de-immunization of Factor VIII \u3ci\u3ein vitro\u3c/i\u3e and \u3ci\u3ein vivo\u3c/i\u3e

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    T cell-dependent development of anti-Factor VIII (FVIII) antibodies that neutralize FVIII activity is a major obstacle to replacement therapy in hemophilia A. To create a less immunogenic therapeutic protein, recombinant FVIII can be modified to reduce HLA binding of epitopes based on predicted anchoring residues. Here, we used immunoinformatic tools to identify C2 domain HLA DR epitopes and predict site-specific mutations that reduce immunogenicity. Epitope peptides corresponding to original and modified sequences were validated in HLA binding assays and in immunizations of hemophilic E16 mice, DR3 and DR4 mice and DR3 Ă— E16 mice. Consistent with immunoinformatic predictions, original epitopes are immunogenic. Immunization with selected modified sequences lowered immunogenicity for particular peptides and revealed residual immunogenicity of incompletely de-immunized modified peptides. The stepwise approach to reduce protein immunogenicity by epitope modification illustrated here is being used to design and produce a functional full-length modified FVIII for clinical use

    Incidence of development of factor VIII and factor IX inhibitors in haemophiliacs

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    The development of factor VIII:C inhibitors remains one of the most serious complications of repeated transfusion in patients with haemophilia A. The proportion of patients affected has been reported to range from 3·6% to 25%, but these figures have been derived mainly from retrospective data and from total numbers of known haemophiliacs instead of number at true risk. The assessment here is based on a prospective study, started in 1976, on the incidence of inhibitor development in haemophiliacs born after 1970 whose FVIII or FIX activity was 5% or less, and who had received replacement therapy at least once. 46 of 63 children with haemophilia A and 13 of 17 with haemophilia B fulfilled the enrolment criteria. Inhibitors developed only in haemophilia A patients who had previously been treated with FVIII products—inhibitor concentrations were high in 12 and low in 3. Inhibitors developed in 24% (15/63) of all haemophilia A patients, and in 52% (14/27) of those with severe disease. The incidence of inhibitor development for all haemophilia patients was 39·1 per 1000 patient-years of observation. All inhibitors were first detected when patients were aged 0·08-5·2 years. The cumulative risk was 33% at age 6 years. The findings indicate that previous reports have underestimated the risk of acquiring FVIII inhibitors. Prospective, standardised studies, especially in children, are needed for the assessment of the true risk of this complication
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