Published in:
Open Access
01-04-2016 | Original Article
Quantitative Evidence of Wear-Off Effect at the End of the Intravenous IgG (IVIG) Dosing Cycle in Primary Immunodeficiency
Authors:
Mikhail A. Rojavin, Alphonse Hubsch, John-Philip Lawo
Published in:
Journal of Clinical Immunology
|
Issue 3/2016
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Abstract
Purpose
Intravenous IgG (IVIG) treatment wear-off is commonly experienced by patients, who report increased susceptibility to infection, and decreased quality of life towards the end of their 3- or 4-week dosing cycle, when serum IgG levels approach their trough. We quantified IVIG wear-off in terms of treatment efficacy and patient well-being.
Methods
Data were collected from patients enrolled in three Phase III trials of Sandoglobulin® NF Liquid or Privigen®, treated every 3- or 4- weeks. Pooled analyses of raw patient data compared the rate of infection and other clinical outcomes during the course of the dosing cycle. Subjective symptoms of wear-off were quantified by comparing patient-reported overall well-being scores.
Results
The probability of a first infection in the final week of the IVIG cycle was 1.26 (95 % confidence intervals [CI]: 0.76–2.11; p = 0.3621) and 1.55 (95 % CI: 1.04–2.32; p = 0.0314) times higher than in the first week, for patients on a 3-week cycle and 4-week dosing cycles, respectively. Wear-off, as manifested by a decrease in overall well-being, was experienced in 10 % of all cycles and reported at least once by 61 % of the patients on a 3-week cycle, and 43 % of those on a 4-week cycle.
Conclusions
These findings confirm the existence of decreased efficacy (treatment wear-off) towards the end of a 3–4 week IVIG dosing cycle, and provide a quantifiable evaluation to a phenomenon typically reported anecdotally. For patients experiencing wear-off, increasing the IgG dose or shortening the dosing interval and/or a switch to SCIG may be beneficial.