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Hemophilia A Gene Therapy — Some Answers, More Questions

Lindsey A. George

2023New England Journal of Medicine18 citationsDOI

Abstract

Hemophilia A is an X-linked disorder caused by the loss of coagulation factor VIII function. The phenotype of hemophilia A closely correlates with plasma factor VIII activity and is characterized by spontaneous or trauma-induced bleeding, classically hemarthrosis, that after repeated instances results in disabling hemophilic arthropathy. The current standard care is recurrent intravenous administration of factor VIII or subcutaneous delivery of a bispecific antibody, emicizumab, that mimics some of the functions of activated factor VIII. These therapies convert severe hemophilia A to moderate hemophilia A (characterized by infrequent, spontaneous bleeding) or mild hemophilia A (characterized by bleeding that is typically . . .

Topics & Concepts

HemarthrosisMedicineFactor IXCoagulationArthropathyCoagulopathyGenetic enhancementInternal medicineSurgeryImmunologyGastroenterologyGenePathologyOsteoarthritisGeneticsBiologyAlternative medicineHemophilia Treatment and ResearchVirus-based gene therapy researchCAR-T cell therapy research
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