On-demand treatment of hereditary angioedema attacks: Patient-reported utilization, barriers, and outcomes
- PMID: 39694088
- DOI: 10.1016/j.anai.2024.12.012
On-demand treatment of hereditary angioedema attacks: Patient-reported utilization, barriers, and outcomes
Abstract
Background: Hereditary angioedema (HAE) is clinically characterized by recurrent attacks of subcutaneous and submucosal swelling.
Objective: To investigate real-world timing, potential barriers, and impact of delaying on-demand treatment (OD) of HAE attacks.
Methods: Patients with HAE (type I or II) aged 12 years or older with more than or equal to 1 treated (Treated Cohort) or untreated (Untreated Cohort) attack in the past 3 months were recruited by the US HAE Association. Respondents completed a 20-minute, self-reported, online survey about their last HAE attack.
Results: In the Treated Cohort (n = 94), of the 67% who reported treating their attack early, only 26% administered OD in less than 1 hour. Furthermore, 79% (n = 74) reported treatment-related anxiety, which correlated with treatment delay. Time to treatment paralleled changes in attack severity (33% mild attacks treated in <1 hour vs 67% in ≥1 hour, progressed to moderate/severe) and mean duration (<1 hour: 0.7 day; >8 hours: 2.7 days). In the Untreated Cohort (n = 20), 50% of the respondents describing their last untreated attack as mild experienced progression to moderate or severe and 25% reported spread to another site including the larynx and face. Untreated attacks lasted a mean of 2.3 days.
Conclusion: The disparity between survey respondents' perception of treating early and actual time to OD administration is striking. Treatment-related anxiety was a common reason for delaying OD. Increased treatment intervals translated into progression of HAE attack severity, duration, and spread to other sites. Suboptimal management of attacks intensifies the HAE disease burden, underscoring the need for improved treatment options, guidance, and removal of OD administration barriers.
Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Disclosures Dr Christiansen is a member of the US Hereditary Angioedema Association Medical Advisory Board and participated in advisory boards for BioCryst, CSL Behring, and KalVista Pharmaceuticals. Dr O'Connor is a speaker/consultant/advisor or researcher for AbbVie, AstraZeneca, Blueprint, CSL, Grifols, GlaxoSmithKline, KalVista Pharmaceuticals, TEVA, Pharming, and Sanofi; and is the Chief Medical Officer of the Consortium of Independent Immunology Clinics. Dr Craig received research support and was a consultant for Astria, BioCryst, BioMarin, CSL Behring, Intellia, Ionis, KalVista Pharmaceuticals, Pharvaris, and Takeda; received speaker fees from CSL Behring and Takeda; and received travel support from BioCryst, CSL Behring, and Takeda. Dr Radojicic is a member of advisory boards for CSL, KalVista Pharmaceuticals, and Pharvaris. Dr Wedner receives research funds from Arista, BioCryst, BioMarin, GlaxoSmithKline, ImmunoTherapeutics, Ionis, KalVista Pharmaceuticals, Pharvaris, and Takeda; receives consulting fees from Arista, BioMarin, BluePrint, CSL, Grifols, Ionis, KalVista Pharmaceuticals, Pharvaris, and Takeda; and is a speaker for BioCryst, BluePrint, CSL, GlaxoSmithKline, Grifols, and Takeda. Ms Danese and Ms Ulloa received consulting fees from KalVista Pharmaceuticals. Dr Desai, Dr Utter, and Dr Audhya are employees of KalVista Pharmaceuticals. Dr Andriotti is a former employee of KalVista Pharmaceuticals. Dr Busse received consulting fees from ADArx, Astria, Behring, BioCryst, CSL, CVS Specialty, KalVista Pharmaceuticals, Pharvaris, and Takeda.
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