The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced the approval of HepaGam B for the prevention of hepatitis B reinfection in certain liver transplant patients. HepaGam B is the first product of its kind (an immune globulin product) approved for this purpose.
“This approval provides a new treatment option for the reduction of hepatitis B recurrence in liver transplant patients with a prior history of this serious disease,” said Jesse Goodman, M.D., M.P.H., director of FDA?s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research. “It is the first immune globulin product–one of several classes of proteins derived from human plasma–approved for this use.”
HepaGam B works by providing an immediate immune response to the virus. This immunity protects patients previously exposed to HBV. Patients must receive injections at the time of their liver transplant and throughout their lives. This product is manufactured from human plasma collected at U.S. licensed plasma centers from healthy donors.
FDA based its approval on the company?s clinical data in a study of HBV-infected persons undergoing full liver transplants, which showed a reduction in the virus recurrence rate from 86 percent to about 13 percent. Adverse reactions were similar to other immune globulin products for other indications and included headache and hypertension.
HepaGam B is manufactured by Cangene Corp. of Winnipeg, Canada.