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Dive into the research topics where Martin Bexon is active.

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Featured researches published by Martin Bexon.


Clinical Immunology | 2014

Long-term efficacy, safety, and tolerability of Hizentra ® for treatment of primary immunodeficiency disease☆

Stephen Jolles; Michael Borte; Robert P. Nelson; Mikhail Rojavin; Martin Bexon; John Philip Lawo; Richard L. Wasserman

Hizentra(®) (20% subcutaneous immunoglobulin [SCIG]) was administered to subjects with primary immunodeficiency disease in two extension studies in the EU and US to assess long-term efficacy and tolerability. Subjects (aged 4-69 years) were treated for 148 weeks in the EU (N = 40; 5405 infusions) and 87 weeks in the US (N = 21; 1735 infusions). Weekly doses were 116.0 mg/kg (EU) and 193.2 mg/kg (US); IgG levels were 7.97 g/L (EU) and 11.98 g/L (US). Annualized rates of serious bacterial infections were 0.05 infections/subject/year (EU) and 0.06 infections/subject/year (US). Rates of any infection were 3.33 infections/subject/year (EU) and 2.38 infections/subject/year (US). The rate of bronchopulmonary infections was higher in the EU study. No treatment-related serious AEs occurred; no subject discontinued because of treatment-related AEs. Self-administered Hizentra afforded sustained effective protection from infections and favorable tolerability during an extended treatment period of up to 3 years.


British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 2017

Quantitative disease progression model of α‐1 proteinase inhibitor therapy on computed tomography lung density in patients with α‐1 antitrypsin deficiency

Michael A. Tortorici; James A. Rogers; Oliver Vit; Martin Bexon; Robert A. Sandhaus; Jonathan Burdon; Joanna Chorostowska-Wynimko; Philip J. Thompson; James M. Stocks; Noel G. McElvaney; Kenneth R. Chapman; Jonathan Edelman

Aims Early‐onset emphysema attributed to α‐1 antitrypsin deficiency (AATD) is frequently overlooked and undertreated. RAPID‐RCT/RAPID‐OLE, the largest clinical trials of purified human α‐1 proteinase inhibitor (A1‐PI; 60 mg kg–1 week–1) therapy completed to date, demonstrated for the first time that A1‐PI is clinically effective in slowing lung tissue loss in AATD. A posthoc pharmacometric analysis was undertaken to further explore dose, exposure and response. Methods A disease progression model was constructed, utilizing observed A1‐PI exposure and lung density decline rates (measured by computed tomography) from RAPID‐RCT/RAPID‐OLE, to predict effects of population variability and higher doses on A1‐PI exposure and clinical response. Dose–exposure and exposure–response relationships were characterized using nonlinear and linear mixed effects models, respectively. The dose–exposure model predicts summary exposures and not individual concentration kinetics; covariates included baseline serum A1‐PI, forced expiratory volume in 1 s and body weight. The exposure–response model relates A1‐PI exposure to lung density decline rate at varying exposure levels. Results A dose of 60 mg kg–1 week–1 achieved trough serum levels >11 μmol l–1 (putative ‘protective threshold’) in ≥98% patients. Dose–exposure–response simulations revealed increasing separation between A1‐PI and placebo in the proportions of patients achieving higher reductions in lung density decline rate; improvements in decline rates ≥0.5 g l–1 year–1 occurred more often in patients receiving A1‐PI: 63 vs. 12%. Conclusion Weight‐based A1‐PI dosing reliably raises serum levels above the 11 μmol l–1 threshold. However, our exposure–response simulations question whether this is the maximal, clinically effective threshold for A1‐PI therapy in AATD. The model suggested higher doses of A1‐PI would yield greater clinical effects.


Journal of Clinical Immunology | 2012

Higher Doses of Subcutaneous IgG Reduce Resource Utilization in Patients with Primary Immunodeficiency

Elie Haddad; Melvin Berger; E.C.Y. Wang; Christopher A. Jones; Martin Bexon; Jeffrey S. Baggish


Postgraduate Medicine | 2013

Pharmacokinetic Modeling and Simulation of Biweekly Subcutaneous Immunoglobulin Dosing in Primary Immunodeficiency

Cornelia B. Landersdorfer; Martin Bexon; Jonathan Edelman; Mikhail Rojavin; Carl M. J. Kirkpatrick; Jianfeng Lu; Marc Pfister; Jagdev Sidhu


Journal of Clinical Immunology | 2014

Efficacy and Safety of IgPro20, a Subcutaneous Immunoglobulin, in Japanese Patients with Primary Immunodeficiency Diseases

Hirokazu Kanegane; Kohsuke Imai; Masafumi Yamada; Hidetoshi Takada; Tadashi Ariga; Martin Bexon; Mikhail Rojavin; Wilson Hu; Midori Kobayashi; John-Philip Lawo; Shigeaki Nonoyama; Toshiro Hara; Toshio Miyawaki


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2012

Increased Frequency of Infections at the End of the IVIG Dosing Cycle: Effect Characterization from Three Phase III Studies

Martin Bexon; Jeffrey S. Baggish; Mikhail Rojavin; M. Berger; O. Zenker


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2011

The Construction of a Pharmacokinetic Model to Describe Intravenous and Subcutaneous Supplementation of IgG in Patients with Primary Immunodeficiency (PID)

Martin Bexon; Mikhail Rojavin; Stephen Jolles; Simon J. Ellis; J. Sawyer


European Respiratory Journal | 2015

Safety of bi-weekly infusion of A1-PI augmentation therapy in RAPID

Niels Seersholm; Robert A. Sandhaus; Kenneth R. Chapman; Jonathan Burdon; Eeva Piitulainen; James M. Stocks; Michael A. Tortorici; Tanja Rosenberg; Oliver Vit; Martin Bexon; Jonathan Edelman; N. Gerard McElvaney


European Respiratory Journal | 2014

Integrated safety across six clinical trials of alpha-1 augmentation therapy

Robert A. Sandhaus; Kenneth R. Chapman; Jonathan Burdon; Eeva Piitulainen; Niels Seersholm; James M. Stocks; Jonathan Edelman; Martin Bexon; Liping Huang; N. Gerard McElvaney


European Respiratory Journal | 2015

Population pharmacokinetics of A1-PI in patients with Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency

Michael A. Tortorici; Oliver Vit; Martin Bexon; Robert A. Sandhaus; Jonathan Burdon; Eeva Piitulainen; Niels Seersholm; James M. Stocks; N. Gerard McElvaney; Kenneth R. Chapman; Jonathan Edelman

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James M. Stocks

University of Texas Health Science Center at Tyler

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Jonathan Burdon

St. Vincent's Health System

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Robert A. Sandhaus

University of Colorado Denver

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