Abstract

Until 1990, congenital hemorrhagic disorders were treated by plasma-derived concentrates. The first recombinant drug, recombinant factor VIII was available after this date and few years later recombinant factor IX could also be proposed to patients. The evolution of market share in France was different between these two drugs: while recombinant factor VIII took a large place in hemophilia A treatment (85%), plasma-derived factor IX represent 50% of the French market. In the next years, the arrival of long-acting antihemophilic factors may lead to the dramatically reduce the amount of plasma-derived antihemophilic factors used to treat hemophilia. For rare bleeding coagulation disorders, plasma-derived concentrates are still widely used, while they are the only concentrates available in most diseases. This situation is unlikely to evolve significantly in the next years.

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