Octapharma

Standing on the Shoulders of Giants

Dr. Olaf Walter reviews Octapharma’s history
I
was privileged this week to be invited to a special scientific symposium in
Heidelberg, Germany, sponsored by Octapharma. Octapharma is the largest
privately owned plasma manufacturer in the world. It recently launched  the first and only fourth generation recombinant factor VIII (FVIII)  produced in a human cell line without any chemical modification or protein fusion, NUWIQ®, now available in the
US. This unique product is important as it is hoped that a recombinant product
that originates from a human cell line might have low immunogenicity—in other
words, it might not trigger an inhibitor, which is the greatest complication of
hemophilia.
Octapharma
was founded in 1983 by Wolfgang Marguerre; the name comes from the Greek
for the word “eight.” Octapharma manufactured the world’s first plasma-derived FVIII that employed a viral inactivation step using solvent-detergent. I cannot overestimate how important this process is. My own son used product
initially that had no SD or pasteurization and miraculously escaped HIV and
hepatitis C infection.
 
Octapharma
now serves patients in 105 countries with 6,200 employees in 32
countries, of which half are in the US, the largest market for hemophilia
products.
Laurie Kelley with Marcia Boyle,
executive director of the IDF
The
Saturday symposium featured speakers from the US, Denmark, Canada, and Germany,
including our own Dr. Craig Kessler from Georgetown University. While all the speakers
were excellent, I learned a tremendous amount from Dr. Roger Kobayashi, of UCLA
School of Medicine, who is an immunologist. Patients with immune deficiency
share so many of the same concerns as those with hemophilia. Our need for
constant products, safe products, easy to administer and affordable. Dr.
Kobayashi reminded us that physicians like him, and companies like Octapharma, “stand on the shoulders of giants”–those researchers who have come before us. He told us that the very first Nobel Prize was awarded to a doctor who
discovered gamma globulins, proteins that can be used commercially to treat
infections in those with malfunctioning immune systems. He described the pain patients
felt years ago when intramuscular injection were given; the poor children! They
could not walk for days. Finally, intravenous infusions were manufactured and
successfully treated patients with immune deficiency. While he spoke, I had the honor
to be sitting next to Marcia Boyle, the executive director of the Immune Deficiency
Foundation, an exceptional leader who for 32 years has provided education,
advocacy and help to those with immune deficiency in the US. Indeed, Dr.
Kobayashi mentioned her three times in his speech!
We
learned about Alzheimer’s (discovered here in Germany), and Octapharma’s research into treating this
insidious disease, the fifth leading cause of the death in the US. There is
currently no treatment and after hearing Dr. Shawn Kile’s excellent presentation,
I pray that this company discovers a treatment soon. I recently witnessed the devastating
effects of this disease in a dear elderly friend. It strips a person of their
very identify and almost of their humanity. How long will we wait for a
treatment to slow it or stop its progression? Companies like Octapharma work
daily to answer this.
But
I was most interested in Dr. Craig Kessler’s speech on personalized
prophylaxis. Dr. Kessler described how half-lives differ dramatically among
patients and only a pharmacokinetic (PK) test can determine each person’s half-life. That’s the number one place to start with a proper treatment regimen. In
the “old” days, like when we were raising a child with hemophilia, we dosed
by weight and bleed severity only. Now we realize this is not enough. Each person
will have a different half-life. He displayed one slide that showed 66 patients
with half-lives varying up almost 5 hours. Once you know your half-life, you
can find the proper prophylaxis treatment. This might include looking through the vast
array of factor products. Dr. Kessler reminded us that patients want 1) reduced
number of infusions, 2) reduced inhibitor development and 3) to adopt prophy to
their own lifestyle.
Dr.
Kessler reported that NUWIQ® is Octapharma’s new fourth generation recombinant FVIII from a human cell line—the
first such product. Because it is entirely from humans, and not animal cell
lines, this could potentially reduce the rate of inhibitor development and avoid possible
allergic reactions, and allow personalized prophylaxis with fewer
infusions.  He described several
clinical studies with NUWIQ®, including one with 135 previously treated patients,
none of whom developed an inhibitor. We also know that inhibitors can develop
in about 30% of previously untreated patients with factor VIII deficiency, usually
within 20 exposure days. Octapharma designed NUWIQ® to be less immunogenic by using a human cell line. I will want to follow clinical studies closely on the
product to see what else they uncover regarding this.
Laurie Kelley with Octapharma friends

I
was also interested to hear from Dr. Olaf Walter, senior vice president, and MC for the day, that Octapharma is conducting research for a  subcutaneous (under the skin) delivery of factor. I know of two other companies
that are also working on this, and it will again be interesting to watch
developments. As we write in our May issue of PEN, this is the most exciting
time in hemophilia!

The symposium
closed with a delicious lunch and then a black tie gala that evening at the
Heidelberg Castle. It was not only the 33rd anniversary of
Octapharma, but also the 75th birthday of founder and chairman Wolfgang
Marguerre. I have a special indebtedness to Wolfgang, as he is Save One Life’s
largest supporter and also sponsor the largest number of children, 120.

Laurie Kelley with Octapharma Founder and Chairman
and Save One Life’s leading donor Wolfgang Marguerre



The evening was
dazzling, with over 40,000 flowers, 500 guests including Octapharma employees from around the world, 150 wait staff, at least two high quality bands, delicious food and drink. This was a wonderful way to celebrate
the accomplishments of this company and its indefatigable and brilliant
founder. I met up with my hemophilia colleagues, including three of our
top sponsors for Save One Life: Wolfgang, and also Patrick Schmidt, CEO of FFF
Enterprises, Neil Herson, president of ASD Healthcare, and Paolo Marcucci of Kedrion S.p.A.

Together, all three sponsor
about 280 children with hemophilia in poverty annually. Many of the other
attendees also sponsor children, including hemo-mom and Octapharma employee
Sherri Rojhani, who just sponsored a child in honor of Wolfgang Marguerre’s
birthday.

The evening
ended with spectacular fireworks, accompanied by songs representing many
countries, but the final song was a favorite of mine, the Irish pub-song The
Wild Rover.

When I thanked
Wolfgang for such a lovely evening, I told him he needed to manufacture a new
product—his energy! I want an infusion of whatever he has to keep me going strong
at 75 to do the humanitarian work I love to do. If only!
Thanks to Octapharma for a fascinating
symposium, such amazing festivities, and for all its support for Save One Life.

From the Philippines to New Jersey


We were really blessed to have a very special visitor last week: Andrea Trinidad-Echavez from Manila, the Philippines. Andrea has von Willebrand disease, as does her third child, Star. She manages the best she can in a country that buys no factor products. Imagine! We’ve tried to help her when we can through Project SHARE. But at some point, the Philippines must lobby to get legislators to approve a line item for factor.

If anyone can do that, it’s Andrea.

She has a journalism background, and also knows scores of high-level politicians. With her charm, poise, intelligence and fierce determination, I believe the Philippines will eventually join the countries in the developing world that buy factor. It’s possible! I point people to Honduras, one of the poorest in this hemisphere, which buys product.

Andrea and I met in October 2008, when I visited the Philippines. I was so impressed with her skills, and was delighted that she could come and stay with us. It was just cool enough that we could have a fire–her first ever in a fireplace!


Our first stop was a visit to see Wendy Owen at New England Hemophilia Association, for a meeting about NEHA’s successful lobbying strategies. Then back to Georgetown to meet with our staff. Then down the hall to meet with the ladies at Save One Life to discuss how the program is running in the Philippines.

Andrea discovered our puppet Bob, created by Wyeth (now Pfizer). Bob is a teaching puppet, and you can look into his joints to see a bleed, or check out his port. She loved it and wanted to bring it home to use with the kids.

The next day, Andrea and I were up early to fly to New York City, her first time there! Bob garnered many stares as we sat on the plane, then took the tram through JFK! One passenger walked up and said, “Wassup!” to Bob, who of course didn’t answer!


I took a rental and we drove through NYC to New Jersey, for a visit with Octapharma. We were both interested in this meeting as Octapharma just this year had “wilate,” their plasma-derived VWD product approved. We met with sales reps and executives. Then on to our hotel.

On Thursday we met with the global staff at Bayer Healthcare in Wayne, to speak about factor donations and other projects we have. After that, Andrea took a car to meet with NHF CEO Val Bias, at a restaurant. I had a bad feeling about being in a rental, in NJ, and needing to get to JFK at rush hour on a cloudy day. Sure enough, if you followed the headlines, a tornado blasted through Queens, only about 15 minutes before I arrived. I was on the Van Wyck expressway when it tore through. It was amazingly powerful. When I passed by this over turned tractor-trailer (one of three, all in the same place!) the entire expressway looked like an angry giant had rampaged through it and lopped off the tops of trees, stripped branches completely off trees and crushed cars. Glass, branches, cars.. what a mess! I didn’t get home till 5 am.
(Photo: With Cindy North of Bayer)

Andrea is bound to learn a lot from some very experienced people like Wendy and Val, and made some great contacts at the companies. We are committed to helping the Philippines improve its health care for hemophilia, but the only way it can be done it by lobbying the government. Andrea and her team now have what they need to get started.

You can read more about Andrea at her blog: www.fortheloveofstar.com

Great Book I Just Read
Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
I am ashamed to admit that this is the first Dickens book I have ever read. This is a classic: the story of Pip, an orphan, who lives a difficult life but who one day receives a fortune, from an unknown benefactor, to make him a “gentleman.” Pip is rich, but the humble boy becomes spoiled and vain, and turns his back on those who loved him most. The story shows how our values can change when he suddenly occupies a different station in life. Eventually he learns great lessons of life through strife, evil in others, and heartbreak; every character in this book seems to mature and grow in relation to one another. It’s a great story with timeless characters but it’s the writing–the writing is pure ecstasy, like ingesting literary Godiva’s every other page. I am weighted with words now, beautiful images, witty lines, twists of phrases. I didn’t know writing could be so mesmerizing and purely pleasurable. Four stars!

Wilate: a New VWD Product

This is big news for von Willebrand Disease patients: there’s a new product on the market. Wilate® just got approved by the US FDA for “treatment of spontaneous and trauma-induced bleeding episodes in patients with all types of von Willebrand disease (VWD),” according to a press release. Wilate is a high-purity plasma-derived product, which uses a double viral inactivation process in manufacturing: solvent/detergent (S/D) process and a special terminal dry-heating (TDH) system. No albumin is added as a stabilizer. Wilate is exclusively derived from large pools of human plasma collected in U.S. FDA approved plasma donation centers. Wilate will be available in the market in early 2010.

Wilate is produced by Octapharma, a Swiss-based company. This is the first time Octapharma has entered the US bleeding disorders market. Wilate will be in direct competion with Humate-P, manufactured by CLS Behring.

One thing interesting I learned is that this is the first product developed and manufactured specifically for VWD.

Here’s a quote from Octapharma: “Octapharma’s worldwide commitment to coagulation disorders dates back to Octapharma Group’s formation 25 years ago,” said Octapharma USA President Flemming Nielsen.”We are thrilled that U.S. patients will now have access to Wilate following its significant success in Europe as a next generation therapy. Octapharma is committed to providing the U.S. market with life-enhancing therapies.”

VWD patients now have more choices for treatment options. For more information, please visit www.octapharma.com.

Great Book I Just Read
Final Voyage: A Story of Arctic Disaster and One Fateful Whaling Season by Peter Nichols

Massachusetts (my home state) gave birth to the American Revolution and also the global whaling industry. This fascinating book recounts a terrible story of scores of whaling ships trapped in the Arctic region, as the captains tried to score as many whales as possible before the ice closed in for the winter. Nichols deftly parallels that story with the beginning of the whaling industry, which has direct ties to Puritans coming to the new world, religious intolerance in Massachusetts in the 1700s, and the Quakers, who almost single-handedly created this lucrative industry. Whale oil soon was lighting the homes of Massachusetts and then lubricating the machines of the Industrial Age, making some Quakers millionaires, even then. Nichols also details the decline of the industry: the discovery of crude oil in Titusville, Pennsylvania, which soon replaced whale oil; the decimation of so many whales left hunting lean. All these events culminate into a dreadful outcome for the ambitious captains of the whaling ships that last season of hunting, as they searched for the last whales in an early and fearsome storm. This book will enlighten you about many subjects, from religion and commerce, to whales and history. Three stars.

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