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. 2025 Mar 25;9(3):e70111.
doi: 10.1002/hem3.70111. eCollection 2025 Mar.

Mild or moderate hemophilia is not always a mild or moderate bleeding disorder: Back to the clinical phenotype

Affiliations

Mild or moderate hemophilia is not always a mild or moderate bleeding disorder: Back to the clinical phenotype

Francesco Rodeghiero et al. Hemasphere. .

Abstract

In a previous paper, a comprehensive clinicopathologic approach to mild and moderate bleeding disorders (MBD) was proposed by an international working group (IWG) as a part of a project promoted by the European Hematology Association (EHA) on the development of guidelines on the various MBDs. A single pre-diagnosis grade 4 bleeding event according to the ISTH-BAT scale or a comparable event after diagnosis was considered sufficient to classify a patient as affected by a severe bleeding disorder (SBD). In this article, the original IWG integrated by experts and patients' representatives proposed by the European Haemophilia Consortium (EHC) and European Association of Haemophilia and Allied Disorders (EAHAD) applied these criteria to mild and moderate hemophilia A and B to establish the proportion of cases that would be reclassified as SBD taking into account bleeding phenotype, thus improving over the current classification based exclusively on basal factor VIII or IX level. To this aim, publications of unselected cases with bleeding history available from birth to the time of publication were considered to estimate the incidence of a first severe bleeding event. More than 20% of cases with mild or moderate hemophilia met the criteria for SBD by experiencing joint or non-joint severe bleeding events. Furthermore, a significant proportion of patients developed an inhibitor against factor VIII or IX. These results, based on a rigorous methodologic approach, substantiate the criticism of the current classification of hemophilia and argue for the adoption of a new classification that takes into account bleeding phenotype in addition to basal clotting activity.

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Conflict of interest statement

R.A.K., I.B., M.D.D., L.G., P.G., S.M., D.M., P.N., L.P., F.R., D.S., and A.S. declared no conflicts of interest related to the present article. M.M. received honoraria for lecturing and grant reviewing from Novo Nordisk, Takeda, Grifols, and Sanofi. M.V.R. received research funding (to the university) from BioMarin, Sanofi, SPARK, and Takeda; and served on advisory boards for Be Bio, BioMarin, HEMA Biologics, Sanofi, SPARK, and Takeda. K.F. received unrestricted grants/research funding from CSL Behring and SOBI for research unrelated to the current study; and consultancy fees from SOBI, Sanofi, Takeda, Novo Nordisk, and Roche (all fees to the institution); other boards: ISTH Standardization Subcommittee on Factor VIII, Factor XI, and Rare Coagulation Disorders. J.W. received research funding, speakers' fees, or participated in advisory boards for Alnylam, Amgen, AstraZeneca, Bayer AG, CSL Behring, Chugai, LFB, Novartis, Novo Nordisk, Octapharma, Pfizer, Roche, Sanofi, Siemens, SOBI, Takeda, and Werfen. A.T. received speakers' fees or participated in advisory boards for CSL Behring, Novo Nordisk, Roche, Sanofi, SOBI, and Werfen. G.C. received speakers' fees for Company Satellite Symposia/Webinar during scientific meetings for BioMarin, Bioviiix, LFB, Takeda, Roche, Novo Nordisk, Pfizer, CSL Behring, SOBI, and Werfen; other honoraria: during the last 2 years, participated in advisory boards for BioMarin, CSL Behring, LFB, SOBI, Pfizer, Roche, and Takeda. A.C. received grants and fees (paid to his institution) from SOBI, Takeda, LFB, and Novo Nordisk and participated in advisory board for SOBI. N.S.K. conflicts are as follows: Centessa (DSMB member), Pfizer (advisory board), and Novo Nordisk (Chair of Grants Review panel). E.B. received funding from consultancy: Bayer and Octapharma. F.W.G.L. received an unrestricted research grant for the WiN study from CSL Behring and Takeda; and is a consultant for Takeda, CSL Behring, BioMarin, and uniQure (fees to the institution). I.P. received speakers' fees and fees for advisory board meetings from Bayer, CSL Behring, Novo Nordisk, Pfizer, Roche, SOBI, Stago, and Takeda; and unrestricted research support from SOBI and CSL Behring. B. Z. received research funding, speaker fees, or participated in advisory boards for CSL Behring, Takeda, and Biotest. R. L. is an advisory board member of Bayer, CSL Behring, Novo Nordisk, Roche and Takeda, and uniQure. D. L. received research funds from Bayer, BioMarin, Bioverativ, CSL Behring, and Octapharma.

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