Non-genetic risk factors in haemophilia A inhibitor management: the danger theory and the use of animal models

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Non-genetic risk factors in haemophilia A inhibitor management : the danger theory and the use of animal models. / Löfgren, Karin Maria; Søndergaard, H.; Skov, Søren; Wiinberg, Bo.

In: Haemophilia, Vol. 22, No. 5, 09.2016, p. 657-666.

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Löfgren, KM, Søndergaard, H, Skov, S & Wiinberg, B 2016, 'Non-genetic risk factors in haemophilia A inhibitor management: the danger theory and the use of animal models', Haemophilia, vol. 22, no. 5, pp. 657-666. https://doi.org/10.1111/hae.13075

APA

Löfgren, K. M., Søndergaard, H., Skov, S., & Wiinberg, B. (2016). Non-genetic risk factors in haemophilia A inhibitor management: the danger theory and the use of animal models. Haemophilia, 22(5), 657-666. https://doi.org/10.1111/hae.13075

Vancouver

Löfgren KM, Søndergaard H, Skov S, Wiinberg B. Non-genetic risk factors in haemophilia A inhibitor management: the danger theory and the use of animal models. Haemophilia. 2016 Sep;22(5):657-666. https://doi.org/10.1111/hae.13075

Author

Löfgren, Karin Maria ; Søndergaard, H. ; Skov, Søren ; Wiinberg, Bo. / Non-genetic risk factors in haemophilia A inhibitor management : the danger theory and the use of animal models. In: Haemophilia. 2016 ; Vol. 22, No. 5. pp. 657-666.

Bibtex

@article{512ffb4dd1664b62923c863965155cd4,
title = "Non-genetic risk factors in haemophilia A inhibitor management: the danger theory and the use of animal models",
abstract = "In haemophilia A (HA) management, antidrug antibodies, or inhibitors, are a serious complication that renders factor VIII (FVIII) replacement therapy ineffective, increases morbidity and reduces quality of life for affected patients. Inhibitor development aetiology is multifactorial and covers both genetic and therapy related risk factors. Many therapy-related risk factors have proven difficult to confirm due to several confounding factors and the small study populations available. However, clinical studies indicate that e.g. on-demand treatment and surgery affect inhibitor development, and explanations for this association are being investigated. A potential explanation is the danger signal effect, where the immune response is activated by endogenous or exogenous danger or damage signals present at the time and site of FVIII administration. The danger theory explains how alarm signals from stressed, injured or dying cells can activate an immune reaction, without the involvement of foreign antigens. Bleeds, trauma, surgery or concomitant infection could be events initiating danger signalling in HA patients, resulting in an immune reaction towards administered FVIII that otherwise would pass unnoticed. This role of danger in HA inhibitor formation has previously been suggested, but a thorough discussion of this subject is lacking. The present review will discuss the potential role of danger signals in haemophilia and inhibitor development, with focus on treatment related risk factors with a suspected danger signal aetiology; on-demand treatment, treatment during major bleeds or surgery, and treatment during infection or vaccination. Clinical studies as well as animal experiments addressing these factors will be reviewed.",
keywords = "animal models, antidrug antibodies, danger theory, haemophilia A, inhibitors, risk factors",
author = "L{\"o}fgren, {Karin Maria} and H. S{\o}ndergaard and S{\o}ren Skov and Bo Wiinberg",
year = "2016",
month = sep,
doi = "10.1111/hae.13075",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
pages = "657--666",
journal = "Haemophilia, Supplement",
issn = "1355-0691",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Non-genetic risk factors in haemophilia A inhibitor management

T2 - the danger theory and the use of animal models

AU - Löfgren, Karin Maria

AU - Søndergaard, H.

AU - Skov, Søren

AU - Wiinberg, Bo

PY - 2016/9

Y1 - 2016/9

N2 - In haemophilia A (HA) management, antidrug antibodies, or inhibitors, are a serious complication that renders factor VIII (FVIII) replacement therapy ineffective, increases morbidity and reduces quality of life for affected patients. Inhibitor development aetiology is multifactorial and covers both genetic and therapy related risk factors. Many therapy-related risk factors have proven difficult to confirm due to several confounding factors and the small study populations available. However, clinical studies indicate that e.g. on-demand treatment and surgery affect inhibitor development, and explanations for this association are being investigated. A potential explanation is the danger signal effect, where the immune response is activated by endogenous or exogenous danger or damage signals present at the time and site of FVIII administration. The danger theory explains how alarm signals from stressed, injured or dying cells can activate an immune reaction, without the involvement of foreign antigens. Bleeds, trauma, surgery or concomitant infection could be events initiating danger signalling in HA patients, resulting in an immune reaction towards administered FVIII that otherwise would pass unnoticed. This role of danger in HA inhibitor formation has previously been suggested, but a thorough discussion of this subject is lacking. The present review will discuss the potential role of danger signals in haemophilia and inhibitor development, with focus on treatment related risk factors with a suspected danger signal aetiology; on-demand treatment, treatment during major bleeds or surgery, and treatment during infection or vaccination. Clinical studies as well as animal experiments addressing these factors will be reviewed.

AB - In haemophilia A (HA) management, antidrug antibodies, or inhibitors, are a serious complication that renders factor VIII (FVIII) replacement therapy ineffective, increases morbidity and reduces quality of life for affected patients. Inhibitor development aetiology is multifactorial and covers both genetic and therapy related risk factors. Many therapy-related risk factors have proven difficult to confirm due to several confounding factors and the small study populations available. However, clinical studies indicate that e.g. on-demand treatment and surgery affect inhibitor development, and explanations for this association are being investigated. A potential explanation is the danger signal effect, where the immune response is activated by endogenous or exogenous danger or damage signals present at the time and site of FVIII administration. The danger theory explains how alarm signals from stressed, injured or dying cells can activate an immune reaction, without the involvement of foreign antigens. Bleeds, trauma, surgery or concomitant infection could be events initiating danger signalling in HA patients, resulting in an immune reaction towards administered FVIII that otherwise would pass unnoticed. This role of danger in HA inhibitor formation has previously been suggested, but a thorough discussion of this subject is lacking. The present review will discuss the potential role of danger signals in haemophilia and inhibitor development, with focus on treatment related risk factors with a suspected danger signal aetiology; on-demand treatment, treatment during major bleeds or surgery, and treatment during infection or vaccination. Clinical studies as well as animal experiments addressing these factors will be reviewed.

KW - animal models

KW - antidrug antibodies

KW - danger theory

KW - haemophilia A

KW - inhibitors

KW - risk factors

U2 - 10.1111/hae.13075

DO - 10.1111/hae.13075

M3 - Review

C2 - 27562315

VL - 22

SP - 657

EP - 666

JO - Haemophilia, Supplement

JF - Haemophilia, Supplement

SN - 1355-0691

IS - 5

ER -

ID: 169437675