Abstract

AbstractPediatric thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) is an ultrarare disease. Immune TTP (iTTP) is driven by anti-ADAMTS13 autoantibodies causing an imbalanced von Willebrand factor (VWF):ADAMTS13 axis, and rarer still in children, but potentially life-threatening. Caplacizumab is licensed for iTTP treatment in adults and adolescents aged ≥12 years who weigh ≥40 kg. There is a need to clarify whether caplacizumab can be used in younger children. We retrospectively described caplacizumab use in 16 patients under 18 years of age from the UK TTP Registry, including 4 children aged <12 years. For patients weighing <40 kg (n = 3), caplacizumab was dosed at 5 mg once dailyThe youngest patient was 33 months old at diagnosis. Plasma exchange (PEX) was used in 15 patients, with a median of 5 exchanges required before platelet count normalization (range, 2-9). One patient was managed without PEX. All patients achieved normalization of platelet count (median, 5.5 days; range, 3-28) and ADAMTS13 activity (median, 35 days; range, 8-149), with a median hospital admission of 11 days (range, 5-26). There were no refractory patients. One patient relapsed 9 months after presentation. Bleeding requiring VWF supplementation and reduction of caplacizumab use occurred in 1 patient with severe epistaxis, with no significant intracranial or gastrointestinal bleeding. We demonstrated the efficacy and safety of caplacizumab in the pediatric population, which is synonymous with the adult trial data: primarily, reduction of PEX compared with the precaplacizumab era. This has implications for the intensification and duration of admission, particularly relevant in pediatric care.

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