Safety and tolerability of subcutaneous immunoglobulin 20% in primary immunodeficiency diseases from two continents

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Abstract

Aim: This pooled analysis evaluated the safety and tolerability of the subcutaneous immunoglobulin 20% product, Ig20Gly, in primary immunodeficiency diseases using data from two Phase II/III studies conducted in North America and Europe. Patients & materials/methods: Patients received Ig20Gly (volumes, ≤60 ml/site; rates, ≤60 ml/h/site). Adverse events (AEs), tolerability and infusion parameters were assessed. Results: Patients (2-83 years; N = 122) received 6676 Ig20Gly infusions. No causally related serious or severe AEs were reported. Thirty-five patients (28.7%) reported 232 causally related local AEs. Twenty-seven patients (22.1%) reported 165 causally related systemic AEs. There was no association between the infusion volume or rate and causally related local AEs. Conclusion: Ig20Gly was well tolerated in a broad population of patients with primary immunodeficiency diseases.

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Suez, D., Kriván, G., Jolles, S., Stein, M., Gupta, S., Paris, K., … Yel, L. (2019). Safety and tolerability of subcutaneous immunoglobulin 20% in primary immunodeficiency diseases from two continents. Immunotherapy, 11(12), 1057–1065. https://doi.org/10.2217/imt-2019-0057

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