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. 2000 Jan;83(1):65-9.

The half-life of infused factor VIII is shorter in hemophiliac patients with blood group O than in those with blood group A

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  • PMID: 10669157

The half-life of infused factor VIII is shorter in hemophiliac patients with blood group O than in those with blood group A

A J Vlot et al. Thromb Haemost. 2000 Jan.

Abstract

A considerable inter-individual variation in half-life of infused factor VIII is observed among patients with hemophilia A. The factors contributing to this wide range in factor VIII half-life are not known in detail. We analysed the pharmacokinetics of infused factor VIII in 32 patients with hemophilia A, comprising 20 brothers from 10 families, 3 and 4 brothers from 2 families, and 5 patients from 5 single families, respectively. Multiple linear regression analysis was used to assess the effect of several variables on factor VIII half-life. We found that the pre-infusion von Willebrand factor antigen levels (vWF:Ag) were positively correlated with factor VIII half-life (r = 0.52, p = 0.002), i.e., each variable was associated with about 27% of the variance of the other. In fraternal pairs, familial clustering was significant for ABO blood group (p < 0.001), but could not be detected for factor VIII half-lives or pre-infusion vWF:Ag levels. vWF:Ag level (p = 0.001) and ABO blood group (p = 0.003) significantly determined factor VIII half-life, whereas age, length, bodyweight, the presence or absence of a factor VIII gene inversion, and Rhesus phenotype did not. Patients with blood group O exhibited a statistically significant shorter factor VIII half-life than patients with blood group A (15.3 versus 19.7 h, respectively) (p = 0.003). Patients with blood group A and O differ in respect to the presence of anti-A antibodies in the latter. It is possible that these anti-A antibodies interact with endogenous vWF, thus affecting the half-life time of the factor VIII/vWF complex.

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