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Emicizumab-mediated haemostatic function in patients with haemophilia A is down-regulated by activated protein C through inactivation of activated factor V.

Koji YadaKeiji NogamiKeiko ShinozawaTakehisa KitazawaKunihiro HattoriKagehiro AmanoKatsuyuki FukutakeMidori Shima
Published in: British journal of haematology (2018)
Activated protein C (APC) inactivates activated factor V (FVa) and moderates FVIIIa by restricting FV cofactor function. Emicizumab is a humanized anti-FIXa/FX bispecific monoclonal antibody that mimicks FVIIIa cofactor function. In recent clinical trials in haemophilia A patients, once-weekly subcutaneous administration of emicizumab was remarkably effective in preventing bleeding events, but the mechanisms controlling the regulation of emicizumab-mediated haemostasis remain to be explored. We investigated the role of APC-mediated reactions in these circumstances. APC dose-dependently depressed thrombin generation (TG) initiated by emicizumab in FVIII-deficient plasmas, and in normal plasmas preincubated with an anti-FVIII antibody (FVIII-depleted). FVIIIa-independent FXa generation with emicizumab was not affected by the presence of APC, protein S and FV. The results suggested that APC-induced down-regulation of emicizumab-dependent TG was accomplished by direct inactivation of FVa. The addition of APC to emicizumab mixed with FVIII-depleted FV-deficient plasma in the presence of various concentrations of exogenous FV demonstrated similar attenuation of TG, irrespective of specific FV concentrations. Emicizumab-related TG in FVIII-depleted FVLeiden plasma was decreased by APC more than that observed with native FVLeiden plasma. The findings indicated that emicizumab-driven haemostasis was down regulated by APC-mediated FVa inactivation in plasma from haemophilia A patients without or with FV defects.
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