X-linked agammaglobulinemia medical therapy

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]

Overview

Medical Therapy

The most common treatment for XLA is an intravenous infusion of immunoglobulin (IVIg, human IgG antibodies) every 3-4 weeks, for life. IVIg is a human product extracted and pooled from thousands of blood donations. IVIg does not cure XLA but increases the patient's lifespan and quality of life, by generating passive immunity, and boosting the immune system. With treatment, the number and severity of infections is reduced. With IVIg, XLA patients may a live relatively healthy life. A patient should attempt reaching a state where his IgG blood count exceeds 800 mg/Kg. The dose is based on the patient's weight and IgG blood-count. The dosing rule of thumb is 1g of IVIg for every 2kg of patient's weight.

Muscle injections of immunoglobulin (IMIg) were common before IVIg was prevalent, but are less effective and much more painful, hence, IMIg is now uncommon.

Subcutaneous treatment (SCIg) was recently approved by the FDA, which is recommended in cases of severe adverse reactions to the IVIg treatment.

Antibiotics are another common supplementary treatment. Local antibiotic treatment (drops, lotions) are preferred over systemic treatment (pills) for long term treatment, if possible.

One of the future prospects of XLA treatment is gene therapy, which could potentially cure XLA. Gene therapy technology is still in its infancy and may cause severe complications such as cancer and even death. Moreover, the long term success and complications of this treatment are, as yet, unknown.

It is not recommended and dangerous for XLA patients to receive live attenuated vaccines such as live polio, or the measles, mumps, rubella (MMR vaccine).[1] Special emphasis is given to avoiding the oral live attenuated SABIN-type polio vaccine that has been reported to cause polio to XLA patients. Furthermore, it is not known if active vaccines in general have any beneficial effect on XLA patients as they lack normal ability to maintain immune memory.

There is no special hazard for XLA patients in dealing with pets or outdoor activities.[1] Unlike in other primary immunodeficiencies XLA patients are at no greater risk for developing autoimmune illnesses.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 X-Linked Agammaglobulinemia Patient and Family Handbook for The Primary Immune Diseases. Third Edition. 2001. Published by the Immune Deficiency Foundation

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