“ever since the 1950s, the treatment has been to replace those missing factors firstly with fresh frozen plasma, which was not terribly effective, but was at least this treatment,” says page. “then it became cryoprecipitate, which has a slightly more concentrated form of plasma. and then they separated the factors out of plasma and made clotting factor concentrates.”
medications for blood disorders must strike a fine line — too effective and the clotting factors could actually cause thrombosis or restrict flow through the blood vessels, too weak and the blood won’t coagulate properly whenever there is an injury.
a rare disorder makes it even more difficult to find a treatment, as smaller patient populations can mean fewer resources for clinical trials. helfgott explains that to approach hemophilia treatments, you must look at the many different blood disorders and these clotting pathways as a whole.
“if you take a step back, and if you look not just at the two core diseases, but you look at the adjacent diseases around the core disease, you actually multiply your potential patient population by 10,” says helfgott. ” … and if you then start to look at the biology, you can even increase that number because some common biological patterns and pathways are actually [similar] to other diseases.”