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Haemophilic arthropathy is one of the major complications of severe haemophilia. In order to maintain plasma clotting factor activity levels above 1% and avoid spontaneous joint bleeds and other serious bleeding events, prophylactic factor replacement therapy is used. Because of the high cost and limited availability of clotting factor concentrates, dosing is a crucial issue for prophylaxis therapy. Several studies reported a better correlation between clinical bleeding tendency of patients with haemophilia and thrombin generation assay results compared to FVIII/FIX levels. However there is no specific data showing that thrombin generation may be a better indicator of the clinical efficacy of prophylaxis compared to the conventional FVIII measurement.
The main objective of this open, multicentre, prospective study is to compare trough thrombin generation capacity and FVIII levels in severe haemophilia patients and compare these two laboratory results with:
This project requires no change in term of type of treatment : During the study, each patient will be treated by his usual clotting factor at the usual regimen (frequency and dosage).
The clinical outcome with the usual prophylaxis regimen will be correlated to TGA results
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50 participants in 1 patient group
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Yesim DARGAUD, Pr
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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