When considering any new treatment, it’s common to have questions. Read on to learn more about ROCTAVIAN safety information.
Learn more about ROCTAVIAN study results, including improved bleed control and infusion-reduction data.
Before receiving ROCTAVIAN, there are a few things you should know and some precautions that you and your healthcare team will need to take.
During and in the hours following the infusion, tell your doctor or nurse immediately about any symptoms you experience, including hives or other rashes, itching, sneezing, coughing, difficulty breathing, runny nose, watery eyes, tingling throat, nausea (feeling sick), diarrhea, low blood pressure, rapid heartbeat, light headedness (near-fainting), fever, chills, or shivering. Talk to your doctor about what to do if you experience any side effects after you leave the infusion.
Before and regularly following administration of ROCTAVIAN, your doctor will perform blood tests to check your liver health. Make sure you obtain these blood tests during
the specified time your doctor instructs you to. Based on your liver test results, you may need to take corticosteroids or another medicine for a period of time (several months or longer) to help decrease liver enzyme levels, which may cause side effects while
you receive them. Talk to your doctor about these side effects and what you need to do to improve and maintain your liver’s health.
ROCTAVIAN can insert itself into the DNA of human body cells. The effect that insertion may have on those cells is unknown, but such events may contribute to a theoretical risk of cancer. There have been no reported cases of cancer caused by treatment with
ROCTAVIAN. Your doctor may perform regular monitoring if you have pre-existing risk factors for developing liver cancer. In the event of cancer, your doctor may send a sample to BioMarin Pharmaceutical, Inc. for further testing.
Hear first hand experiences from people who were part of the clinical study.
Do not take ROCTAVIAN if you:
What is the most important information I should know about ROCTAVIAN?
ROCTAVIAN may cause serious side effects during the infusion and afterward:
What should I tell my doctor before I get ROCTAVIAN?
Talk to your doctor about the following:
What should I avoid after taking ROCTAVIAN?
What are the possible side effects of ROCTAVIAN?
What other information should I know before getting ROCTAVIAN?
Talk to your doctor about the potential risks and benefits of ROCTAVIAN. Whether a patient experiences a benefit or not, the risks discussed here and with your doctor still apply.
These are not all the possible side effects of ROCTAVIAN. Talk to your doctor for medical advice about side effects. You may report side effects to BioMarin Pharmaceutical Inc. at 1-866-906-6100 or FDA at 1-800-FDA-1088.
Please see additional safety information in the Prescribing Information and Patient Information.
What is ROCTAVIAN?
ROCTAVIAN is a one-time gene therapy used for the treatment of adults with severe hemophilia A who do not have antibodies to the virus, AAV5 which is determined by a blood test. ROCTAVIAN uses a modified virus, called a vector, to deliver a working copy of the Factor VIII gene to liver cells to enable your body to produce clotting factor on its own, which helps the blood to clot and prevents or reduces the occurrence of bleeding. The modified virus does not contain viral DNA and does not cause disease in humans.