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Published in: Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases 1/2024

Open Access 01-12-2024 | Fabry Disease | Research

Reducing agalsidase beta infusion time in Fabry patients: low incidence of antibody formation and infusion-associated reactions in an Italian multicenter study

Authors: Renzo Mignani, Claudio Americo, Filippo Aucella, Yuri Battaglia, Vittoria Cianci, Annamaria Sapuppo, Chiara Lanzillo, Fabio Pennacchiotti, Luciano Tartaglia, Giacomo Marchi, Federico Pieruzzi

Published in: Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases | Issue 1/2024

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Abstract

Background

Fabry disease is a rare progressive X-linked lysosomal storage disease caused by mutations in the GLA gene that encodes α-galactosidase A. Agalsidase beta is a recombinant enzyme replacement therapy authorized in Europe at a standard dose of 1.0 mg/kg intravenously every other week at an initial infusion rate of ≤ 0.25 mg/min until patient tolerance is established, after which the infusion rate may be increased gradually. However, specific practical guidance regarding the progressive reduction in infusion time is lacking. This study investigated a new and specific protocol for reducing agalsidase beta infusion time in which a stable dosage of 15 mg/h is infused for the first four months, and the infusion rate is increased progressively from 15 to 35 mg/h for the subsequent four infusions. The shortest infusion time is reached after six months and maintained thereafter. The incidence of infusion-associated reactions (IARs) and the development of anti-drug antibodies were analyzed, and the disease burden and the clinical evolution of the disease at 12 months were evaluated.

Results

Twenty-five of the 31 patients were naïve to enzyme or chaperone treatment at baseline and six patients had been switched from agalsidase alfa. The reduced infusion time protocol was well tolerated. Only one patient exhibited an IAR, with mild symptoms that resolved with low-dose steroids. Six patients globally seroconverted during treatment (4 with a classic phenotype and 2 with late-onset disease). All but three patients were seronegative at month 12. All patients were stable at the study’s end (FAbry STabilization indEX value < 20%); reducing infusion time did not negatively impact clinical outcomes in any patient. The perceived medical assessment showed that the quality of life of all patients improved.

Conclusions

The study demonstrates that reducing agalsidase beta infusion time is possible and safe from both an immunogenic and clinical point of view. The use of a low infusion rate in the first months when the probability of onset of the development of antibodies is higher contributed to very limited seroconversion to antibody-positive status.
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Metadata
Title
Reducing agalsidase beta infusion time in Fabry patients: low incidence of antibody formation and infusion-associated reactions in an Italian multicenter study
Authors
Renzo Mignani
Claudio Americo
Filippo Aucella
Yuri Battaglia
Vittoria Cianci
Annamaria Sapuppo
Chiara Lanzillo
Fabio Pennacchiotti
Luciano Tartaglia
Giacomo Marchi
Federico Pieruzzi
Publication date
01-12-2024
Publisher
BioMed Central
Keyword
Fabry Disease
Published in
Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases / Issue 1/2024
Electronic ISSN: 1750-1172
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-024-03049-5

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