Disease Burden, Clinical Outcomes, and Quality of Life in People with Hemophilia A without Inhibitors in Europe: Analyses from CHESS II/CHESS PAEDs
Authors
Chowdary, PratimaOfori-Asenso, Richard
Nissen, Francis
Ferri Grazzi, Enrico
Aizenas, Martynas
Moreno, Katya
Burke, Tom
Nolan, Beatrice
O'Hara, Jamie
Khair, Kate
Affiliation
Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust; Roche Products; F. Hoffmann-La Roche; HCD Economics; University of Chester; Children's Health Ireland at Crumlin; HaemnetPublication Date
2024-04-15
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Introduction: Limited data relating to treatment burden, quality of life, and mental health burden of hemophilia A (HA) are currently available. Aim: To provide a comprehensive overview of unmet needs in people with HA (PwHA) using data generated from the Cost of Haemophilia in Europe: a Socioeconomic Survey-II (CHESS II) and CHESS in the pediatric population (CHESS PAEDs) studies. Methods: CHESS II and CHESS PAEDs are cross-sectional surveys of European males with HA or hemophilia B (HB) aged ≥18 and ≤17 years, respectively. Participants with FVIII inhibitors, mild HA, or HB were excluded from this analysis, plus those aged 18 to 19 years. Annualized bleeding rates (ABRs), target joints, and other patient-reported outcomes were evaluated. Results: Overall, 468 and 691 PwHA with available data for the outcomes of interest were stratified by hemophilia severity and treatment regimen in CHESS II and CHESS PAEDs, respectively. In these studies, 173 (37.0%) and 468 (67.7%) participants received FVIII prophylaxis, respectively; no participants received the FVIII mimetic emicizumab or gene therapy. ABRs of 2.38 to 4.88 were reported across disease severity and treatment subgroups in both studies. Target joints were present in 35.7 and 16.6% of participants in CHESS II and CHESS PAEDS; 43.8 and 23.0% had problem joints. Chronic pain was reported by a large proportion of PwHA (73.9% in CHESS II; 58.8% in CHESS PAEDs). Participants also reported low EQ-5D scores (compared with people without HA), anxiety, depression, and negative impacts on their lifestyles due to HA. Conclusions: These analyses suggest significant physical, social, and mental burdens of HA, irrespective of disease severity. Optimization of prophylactic treatment could help reduce the burden of HA on patients.Citation
Chowdary, P., Ofori-Asenso, R., Nissen, F., Ferri Grazzi, E., Aizenas, M., Moreno, K., Burke, T., Nolan, B., O'Hara, J., & Khair, K. (2024). Disease Burden, Clinical Outcomes, and Quality of Life in People with Hemophilia A without Inhibitors in Europe: Analyses from CHESS II/CHESS PAEDs. TH Open, 8(2), e181-e193. https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0044-1785524Publisher
ThiemeJournal
TH OpenType
ArticleEISSN
2512-9465Sponsors
This analysis was funded by F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd.ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1055/s-0044-1785524