Blood reviews
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It is well known that 10-20% of severe haemophiliacs are likely to develop inhibitors to factor VIII, usually soon after the commencement of therapy. Two recent inhibitor outbreaks have occurred in patients treated for a number of years on switching to a product subjected to additional virus inactivation. ⋯ However, the development of pre-clinical assays to assess products and processes for neoantigen formation should allow the prevention of inhibitor outbreaks. This review summarizes current in vitro and in vivo approaches to this problem, concluding that most available assays are inadequate for this purpose, with competitive immunoassay and phospholipid binding providing the most hopeful route forward.
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Treatment with coumarin oral anticoagulants, such as warfarin, is effective antithrombotic therapy, but patients treated with these drugs are at significant risk of bleeding. The risk of haemorrhage increases with increasing intensity of anticoagulation and overanticoagulation is common. ⋯ Guidelines for the management of overdose are based on level III and IV evidence and are, therefore, only grade B recommendations at best. Further studies are required to determine the most effective use of products and the dose required for safe reversal of overanticoagulation.