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Published in: Journal of Clinical Immunology 3/2011

01-06-2011

Efficacy, Safety, and Pharmacokinetics of a 10% Liquid Immune Globulin Preparation (GAMMAGARD LIQUID, 10%) Administered Subcutaneously in Subjects with Primary Immunodeficiency Disease

Authors: Richard L. Wasserman, Isaac Melamed, Lisa Kobrynski, Steven D. Strausbaugh, Mark R. Stein, Marlies Sharkhawy, Werner Engl, Heinz Leibl, Luba Sobolevsky, David Gelmont, Richard I. Schiff, William J. Grossman

Published in: Journal of Clinical Immunology | Issue 3/2011

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Abstract

A multi-center, prospective, open-label study was conducted in primary immunodeficiency disease patients to determine the tolerability and pharmacokinetics of a 10% liquid IgG preparation administered subcutaneously. Forty-nine subjects (3–77 years old) were enrolled. Pharmacokinetic equivalence of subcutaneous treatment was achieved at a median dose of 137% of the intravenous dose, with a mean trough IgG level of 1,202 mg/dL at the end of the assessment period. The overall infection rate during subcutaneous treatment was 4.1 per subject-year. Three acute serious bacterial infections were reported, resulting in a rate of 0.067 per subject-year. A low overall rate of temporally associated adverse events (8%), and a very low rate of infusion site adverse events (2.8%), was seen at volumes up to 30 mL/site and rates ≤30 mL/h/site. Thus, subcutaneous replacement therapy with a 10% IgG preparation proved effective, safe and well-tolerated in our study population of subjects with primary immunodeficiency disease.
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Metadata
Title
Efficacy, Safety, and Pharmacokinetics of a 10% Liquid Immune Globulin Preparation (GAMMAGARD LIQUID, 10%) Administered Subcutaneously in Subjects with Primary Immunodeficiency Disease
Authors
Richard L. Wasserman
Isaac Melamed
Lisa Kobrynski
Steven D. Strausbaugh
Mark R. Stein
Marlies Sharkhawy
Werner Engl
Heinz Leibl
Luba Sobolevsky
David Gelmont
Richard I. Schiff
William J. Grossman
Publication date
01-06-2011
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Clinical Immunology / Issue 3/2011
Print ISSN: 0271-9142
Electronic ISSN: 1573-2592
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10875-011-9512-z

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