Successful management of total knee replacement in a high responder hemophilia patient with a history of inhibitor

Joint Authors

Dolatkhah, Roya
Bazavar, Muhammad Rida
Poureisa, Masud
Kermani, Iraj Asvadi
Qara Maliki, Jalal Fayiz
Sanat, Zahrah
Ziaei, Jamal Eivazi
Nikanfar, Ali Rida
Isfahani, Ali
Chavoshi, Sayyid Hadi

Source

Iranian Red Crescent Medical Journal

Issue

Vol. 15, Issue 1 (31 Jan. 2013), pp.18-20, 3 p.

Publisher

Iranian Hospital

Publication Date

2013-01-31

Country of Publication

United Arab Emirates

No. of Pages

3

Main Subjects

Medicine

Topics

Abstract EN

The development of inhibitors against administered clotting factors may render replacement therapy ineffective for some hemophilia patients.

Such patients are therefore at the highest risk of developing arthropathy.

Elective orthopedic surgery (EOS) in hemophilic patients having such inhibitors remains a rare, expensive, and difficult surgery, whose management represents a significant challenge.

We report the case of a 35-year-old man with a severe form of hemophilia A (factor VIII < 1%), who was suffering from repetitive spontaneous hemarthrosis, especially in his knee joints that had consequently become more susceptible to bleeding.

The patient had a history of high levels of factor VIII inhibitor (> 5.0 Bethesda Unit [BU] / ml) as shown by the factor VIII inhibitor assay ; therefore, we began treatment with factor VIIa for his mildto- moderate bleeding (90 μg / kg intravenous bolus injections).

The interval between injections varied with the severity of the hemorrhage in each bleeding episode.

The inhibitor level reduced to 3.1 BU / ml after three months, to 1.6 BU / ml after six months, and disappeared completely after one year of treatment.

We administered factor VIII at a dose of 50 IU/kg every eight hours during the first three post-operative days, then continued administration with a dose of 40 IU / kg every 12 hours for another four days, and observed a very good response to treatment with no bleeding.

Recombinant activated factor VII (rFVIIa) is not an inhibitor-removal strategy, but an inhibitor-bypassing product.

However, in our patient, the treatment of mild-to-moderate bleeding with short-term use of rFVIIa and no exposure to factor VIII caused a gradual reduction in the inhibitor level over a period of 1 year.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Dolatkhah, Roya& Bazavar, Muhammad Rida& Poureisa, Masud& Kermani, Iraj Asvadi& Qara Maliki, Jalal Fayiz& Sanat, Zahrah…[et al.]. 2013. Successful management of total knee replacement in a high responder hemophilia patient with a history of inhibitor. Iranian Red Crescent Medical Journal،Vol. 15, no. 1, pp.18-20.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-329046

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Dolatkhah, Roya…[et al.]. Successful management of total knee replacement in a high responder hemophilia patient with a history of inhibitor. Iranian Red Crescent Medical Journal Vol. 15, no. 1 (2013), pp.18-20.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-329046

American Medical Association (AMA)

Dolatkhah, Roya& Bazavar, Muhammad Rida& Poureisa, Masud& Kermani, Iraj Asvadi& Qara Maliki, Jalal Fayiz& Sanat, Zahrah…[et al.]. Successful management of total knee replacement in a high responder hemophilia patient with a history of inhibitor. Iranian Red Crescent Medical Journal. 2013. Vol. 15, no. 1, pp.18-20.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-329046

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references : p. 20

Record ID

BIM-329046