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Featured researches published by Laszlo Nemes.
Blood | 2012
F. Baudo; Peter William Collins; Angela Huth-Kühne; H. Levesque; Pascual Marco; Laszlo Nemes; Fabio Pellegrini; Lilian Tengborn; Paul Knoebl
Acquired hemophilia A is a rare bleeding disorder caused by autoantibodies to coagulation FVIII. Bleeding episodes at presentation are spontaneous and severe in most cases. Optimal hemostatic therapy is controversial, and available data are from observational and retrospective studies only. The EACH2 registry, a multicenter, pan-European, Web-based database, reports current patient management. The aim was to assess the control of first bleeding episodes treated with a bypassing agent (rFVIIa or aPCC), FVIII, or DDAVP among 501 registered patients. Of 482 patients with one or more bleeding episodes, 144 (30%) received no treatment for bleeding; 31 were treated with symptomatic therapy only. Among 307 patients treated with a first-line hemostatic agent, 174 (56.7%) received rFVIIa, 63 (20.5%) aPCC, 56 (18.2%) FVIII, and 14 (4.6%) DDAVP. Bleeding was controlled in 269 of 338 (79.6%) patients treated with a first-line hemostatic agent or ancillary therapy alone. Propensity score matching was applied to allow unbiased comparison between treatment groups. Bleeding control was significantly higher in patients treated with bypassing agents versus FVIII/DDAVP (93.3% vs 68.3%; P = .003). Bleeding control was similar between rFVIIa and aPCC (93.0%; P = 1). Thrombotic events were reported in 3.6% of treated patients with a similar incidence between rFVIIa (2.9%) and aPCC (4.8%).
Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2012
Paul Knoebl; Pascual Marco; F. Baudo; Peter William Collins; Angela Huth-Kühne; Laszlo Nemes; Fabio Pellegrini; Lilian Tengborn; H. Levesque
Summary. Background: Acquired hemophilia A (AHA) is a rare autoimmune disease caused by autoantibodies against coagulation factor VIII and characterized by spontaneous hemorrhage in patients with no previous family or personal history of bleeding. Although data on several AHA cohorts have been collected, limited information is available on the optimal management of AHA.
Blood | 2012
Peter William Collins; F. Baudo; Paul Knoebl; H. Levesque; Laszlo Nemes; Fabio Pellegrini; Pascual Marco; Lilian Tengborn; Angela Huth-Kühne
Acquired hemophilia A (AHA) is an autoimmune disease caused by an autoantibody to factor VIII. Patients are at risk of severe and fatal hemorrhage until the inhibitor is eradicated, and guidelines recommend immunosuppression as soon as the diagnosis has been made. The optimal immunosuppressive regimen is unclear; therefore, data from 331 patients entered into the prospective EACH2 registry were analyzed. Steroids combined with cyclophosphamide resulted in more stable complete remission (70%), defined as inhibitor undetectable, factor VIII more than 70 IU/dL and immunosuppression stopped, than steroids alone (48%) or rituximab-based regimens (59%). Propensity score-matched analysis controlling for age, sex, factor VIII level, inhibitor titer, and underlying etiology confirmed that stable remission was more likely with steroids and cyclophosphamide than steroids alone (odds ratio = 3.25; 95% CI, 1.51-6.96; P < .003). The median time to complete remission was approximately 5 weeks for steroids with or without cyclophosphamide; rituximab-based regimens required approximately twice as long. Immunoglobulin administration did not improve outcome. Second-line therapy was successful in approximately 60% of cases that failed first-line therapy. Outcome was not affected by the choice of first-line therapy. The likelihood of achieving stable remission was not affected by underlying etiology but was influenced by the presenting inhibitor titer and FVIII level.
British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology | 2012
Lilian Tengborn; F. Baudo; Angela Huth-Kühne; Paul Knoebl; H. Levesque; Pascual Marco; Fabio Pellegrini; Laszlo Nemes; Peter William Collins
Please cite this paper as: Tengborn L, Baudo F, Huth‐Kühne A, Knoebl P, Lévesque H, Marco P, Pellegrini F, Nemes L, Collins P on behalf of the EACH2 registry contributors. Pregnancy‐associated acquired haemophilia A: results from the European Acquired Haemophilia (EACH2) registry. BJOG 2012;119:1529–1537.
Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2012
Erich Vinicius De Paula; K. Kavakli; Johnny Mahlangu; Yasmin Ayob; Steven R. Lentz; Massimo Morfini; Laszlo Nemes; Silva Zupančić Šalek; Midori Shima; Jerzy Windyga; Silke Ehrenforth; Ampaiwan Chuansumrit
Summary. Background: A recombinant factor VIIa analog (NN1731; vatreptacog alfa [activated]) was developed to provide safe, rapid and sustained resolution of bleeds in patients with hemophilia and inhibitors. Patients/Methods: This global, prospective, randomized, double‐blinded, active‐controlled, dose‐escalation trial evaluated and compared one to three doses of vatreptacog alfa at 5, 10, 20, 40, and 80 μg kg−1 with one to three doses of recombinant FVIIa (rFVIIa) at 90 μg kg−1 in the treatment of acute joint bleeds in hemophilia patients with inhibitors. The primary endpoint comprised adverse events; secondary endpoints were evaluations of immunogenicity, pharmacokinetics, and efficacy. Results and Conclusions: Overall, 96 joint bleeds in 51 patients (> 12 years of age) were dosed. Vatreptacog alfa was well tolerated, with a low frequency of adverse events. No immunogenic or thrombotic events related to vatreptacog alfa were reported. A high efficacy rate of vatreptacog alfa in controlling acute joint bleeds was observed; 98% of bleeds were controlled within 9 h of the initial dose in a combined evaluation of 20–80 μg kg−1 vatreptacog alfa. The efficacy rate observed for rFVIIa (90%) is consistent with data from published clinical trials. The trial was not powered to compare efficacy, and further trials are needed to investigate the efficacy of vatreptacog alfa as compared with that of rFVIIa. The trial was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (Registration Number: NCT00486278).
Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2012
Paul Knoebl; M Paese; F. Baudo; Peter William Collins; Angela Huth-Kühne; Laszlo Nemes; Fabio Pellegrini; Lilian Tengborn; H. Levesque
Summary. Background: Acquired hemophilia A (AHA) is a rare autoimmune disease caused by autoantibodies against coagulation factor VIII and characterized by spontaneous hemorrhage in patients with no previous family or personal history of bleeding. Although data on several AHA cohorts have been collected, limited information is available on the optimal management of AHA.
Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2012
Paul Knoebl; Pascual Marco; F. Baudo; Peter William Collins; Angela Huth-Kühne; Laszlo Nemes; Fabio Pellegrini; Lilian Tengborn; H. Levesque
Summary. Background: Acquired hemophilia A (AHA) is a rare autoimmune disease caused by autoantibodies against coagulation factor VIII and characterized by spontaneous hemorrhage in patients with no previous family or personal history of bleeding. Although data on several AHA cohorts have been collected, limited information is available on the optimal management of AHA.
Blood | 2010
Laszlo Nemes; Lilian Tengborn; Peter William Collins; F. Baudo; Angela Huth Kuehne; Paul Knoebl; Pascual Marco; H. Levesque
Blood | 2010
Pascual Marco; Peter William Collins; Paul Knoebl; H. Levesque; F. Baudo; Laszlo Nemes; Lilian Tengborn; Angela Huth Kuehne; Fabio Pellegrini
Blood | 2010
Peter William Collins; F. Baudo; Paul Knoebl; H. Levesque; Laszlo Nemes; Fabio Pellegrini; Lilian Tengborn; Angela Huth Kuehne