Matching articles for "Type 1 Gauchers disease"

In Brief: Velaglucerase (Vpriv) for Gaucher's Disease

   
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • May 3, 2010;  (Issue 1337)
The FDA has approved velaglucerase alfa (Vpriv – Shire), a new formulation of glucocerebrosidase prepared from human fibroblasts, for treatment of the nonneurologic form of Gaucher’s disease (Type 1)....
The FDA has approved velaglucerase alfa (Vpriv – Shire), a new formulation of glucocerebrosidase prepared from human fibroblasts, for treatment of the nonneurologic form of Gaucher’s disease (Type 1). Patients with Gaucher’s disease have a congenital deficiency of glucocerebrosidase that leads to accumulation of glucosylceramide, the end-product of sphingolipid catabolism, in the lysozymes of reticuloendothelial cells in the liver, spleen and bone marrow.Velaglucerase is the second form of the enzyme now available in the US; imiglucerase (Cerezyme – Genzyme), which is produced by recombinant DNA technology from Chinese hamster ovary cells, was marketed earlier but has recently been in short supply.1 These agents are usually given as an IV infusion every 2 weeks. Both velaglucerase and imiglucerase have been shown to increase serum hemoglobin concentrations and platelet counts and decrease the size of the spleen. Velaglucerase contains the exact amino acid sequence of the human enzyme, while imiglucerase has one amino acid difference, but their activities are similar.2 The main difference between them may be in their cost. Cerezyme costs about $200,000 per year, while Vpriv is expected to cost about 15% less.2

1. Differentiation will be key challenge for Shire’s Gaucher disease drug Vpriv. The Pink Sheet. March 8, 2010; 72: 27.
2. B Brumshtein et al. Characterization of gene-activated human acid-beta-glucosidase: crystal structure, glycan composition, and internalization into macrophages. Glycobiology 2010; 20:24.

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Med Lett Drugs Ther. 2010 May 3;52(1337):36 | Show Full IntroductionHide Full Introduction