
FDA approves Tretten to treat rare genetic clotting disorder
This week, U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Tretten, Coagulation Factor XIII A-Subunit (Recombinant), the first recombinant product for use in the routine prevention of bleeding in adults and children who have a rare clotting disorder, known as congenital Factor XIII A-subunit deficiency.
Congenital Factor XIII deficiency is an extremely rare genetic disorder. Patients with this deficiency do not make enough Factor XIII, a protein that circulates in the blood and is important for normal clotting. Factor XIII is composed of two subunits, A and B. Factor XIII deficiency is usually caused by a deficiency of the A-subunit.
“The approval of this product provides another therapeutic option for the prevention of bleeding in patients with Factor XIII A-subunit deficiency,” said Karen Midthun, M.D., director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research. “Without treatment, people with this rare condition are at risk for serious and life-threatening bleeding.”
Tretten is a recombinant analogue of the human Factor XIII A-subunit that is produced in yeast cells and then further purified. It is a sterile freeze-dried-powder to be reconstituted with diluent and injected intravenously. Tretten can be administered by a physician or be self-administered.
Tretten is made by Novo Nordisk A/S, Denmark, and is distributed by Novo Nordisk, Inc., USA.
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