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The primary goal of this observational study is to determine if:
Persons with hemophilia and their caregivers will complete questionnaires at baseline, three months, six months, and one week after six months.
Full description
Hemophilia A is an inherited bleeding disorder that affects 1/5000 live male births. Advances in hemophilia care through the development of recombinant standard and extended half-life (SHL and EHL, respectively) clotting factor concentrates (CFCs) have improved disease management; however, the burden of frequent administration of intravenous CFCs can contribute to negative physical and psychosocial outcomes in both the patient and their family. A new non-factor hemostatic agent (emicizumab) allows for subcutaneous injections, given on a schedule that ranges from once weekly to once monthly. Given the very high cost of preventive treatments ("prophylaxis") as advances in care of persons with hemophilia are made (e.g., EHL CFCs, emicizumab), it is imperative that the potential health outcome benefits of these treatments are assessed using relevant validated outcome measures. There are two patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) that have been previously validated for use in boys with hemophilia using SHL or EHL CFCs and their parents: the Canadian Hemophilia Outcomes-Kids Life Assessment Tool version 3 (CHO-KLAT 3.0) assessing health-related quality of life for boys with hemophilia A ages 4-18, and the Hemophilia Family Impact Tool version 1.1 (H-FIT 1.1) assessing burden of caring for a child with hemophilia for parents of boys with hemophilia A ages 0-18 years. However, their use in the context of emicizumab has not been evaluated. As such, the primary aim of this study is to determine if health-related quality of life of boys with moderate/severe hemophilia A who are followed in Canadian pediatric HTCs is significantly different for boys receiving an intravenously administered factor replacement product compared to a subcutaneously administered non-factor replacement product, and to determine if burden of caring for a boy with moderate/severe hemophilia A is significantly different for parents/caregivers of boys with moderate/severe hemophilia A receiving an intravenously administered factor replacement product compared to a subcutaneously administered non-factor replacement product, as measured at the 3 month time-point.
Secondary aims include:
Lastly, the investigators will explore the HRQoL and impact of hemophilia on boys with moderate/severe hemophilia A complicated by FVIII inhibitors, and their families. The investigators will also explore the use of the EmiPref and Parental Needs Scale for Rare Diseases (PNF-RD) in parents of boys with moderate/severe hemophilia to investigate their relationship with the disease-specific CHO-KLAT 3.0 and H-FIT 1.1, respectively.
The CHO-KLAT 3.0 is a validated, child-centric HRQoL measure for use in boys with hemophilia between the ages of 7-18 (self-report), and between the ages of 4-18 (parent-proxy report). The H-FIT 1.0 was developed to determine the impact of caring for a child with hemophilia from birth to 18 years on the family, and is especially relevant during the early years of diagnosis and initiation of primary prophylaxis. The H-FIT 1.1 was adapted following modifications during cognitive debriefing (ongoing). Additional tools that will be included in this study are the Pediatric Quality of Life-Core Module (PedsQL-Core), the Pediatric Quality of Life-Family Impact Module (PedsQL-FIM), the Parental Needs Scale for Rare Diseases (PNS-RD), and the Emicizumab Preference Survey (EmiPref). The PedsQL-Core is a validated, generic tool designed to measure the impact of having a chronic health condition on quality of life and will be used to determine construct validity of the hemophilia-specific CHO-KLAT 3.0. The PedsQL-FIM is a validated, generic tool designed to measure the impact of caring for a child with a chronic health condition on parents and the family and will be used to determine construct validity of the hemophilia-specific H-FIT 1.1. The PNS-RD is a measure of the supportive care needs of parents of children with rare diseases and its relationship with the H-FIT 1.1 will be explored. The EmiPref is an industry (Roche)-developed tool used to assess patients' treatment preference and will be used to examine patients' satisfaction with emicizumab compared to previous treatments. These measures will be translated into French (Canadian) prior to commencing data collection (Phase 1). Cognitive debriefing will be completed with boys (n=8) and parents (n=8) at one French-speaking site in Quebec to confirm the translated measures are clear and relevant. Questionnaires will be administered in a random order to account for order effects.
For all groups, reliability data will also be collected with a repeat administration of the CHO-KLAT 3.0 and H-FIT 1.1 within 7 days of the 6-month time point in study subjects in a non-bleeding state (by self-report on the study case report form) for a minimum of 2 weeks prior to the administration of the questionnaires, since reliability can only be determined if the health status of the participant has not changed between administrations. Only one parent/guardian will be requested to complete the questionnaires per family.
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Inclusion criteria
Boys with moderate/severe hemophilia A, with or without FVIII inhibitors, age 7-18 years,
Parents/caregivers of boys with moderate/severe hemophilia A with or without FVIII inhibitors between the ages of 0-18 years.
Moderate or severe hemophilia A, defined as FVIII activity level ≤5%.
Ability to understand the purpose and risks of the study and provide signed and dated informed consent and authorization to use protected health information (PHI) in accordance with national and local subject privacy regulations.
Exclusion criteria
Candidates will be excluded from study entry if any of the following criteria exist at the time of screening, or at the time point specified in the individual criterion listed:
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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