Abstract
BackgroundThe safety and efficacy of subcutaneous immune globulin 20% (human) solution (Cuvitru; Ig20Gly) for primary immunodeficiency disease (PID) have been demonstrated in 2 pivotal trials. ObjectiveTo describe patient characteristics and infusion parameters of patients with PID initiating Ig20Gly outside of a clinical trial setting. MethodsThis retrospective, observational study analyzed records of patients participating in the HelloCuvitru program, a patient support program in the United States providing Ig20Gly free of charge for the first 4 infusions to patients aged 2 years or older who had PID and no previous experience of Ig20Gly. Data were collected retrospectively from patient records and during nurse visits. ResultsA total of 817 patients (88% of 931 enrolled) completed 4 infusions. At the fourth Ig20Gly infusion, the median (interquartile range) dose was 0.55 (0.46-0.69) g/kg/mo, infusion rate per site was 40 (30.0-50.0) mL, and infusion rate per site was 47 (42.5-53.3) mL/h/site. By the fourth infusion, most patients (58%) received Ig20Gly at 2 infusion sites every 7 (30%) or 14 (25%) days. Median prescribed Ig20Gly dose per month was similar across age groups; median infusion volume per site increased with age. Most patients younger than 18 years received infusions every 14 days; patients aged 18 years or older were more likely to receive infusions weekly. Infusion parameters were similar regardless of whether patients received previous immunoglobulin subcutaneously or intravenously. ConclusionIn this large, real-world population of patients with PID, most Ig20Gly infusions were administered for less than 1 hour and required fewer than 2 infusion sites, consistent with the pivotal trials. Infusion rate per site was similar regardless of age, previous immunoglobulin treatment, or infusion frequency.
Published Version
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