AUTHOR=Terasaka Naoki , Mckeand William TITLE=Optimization of hemophilia B treatment via population PK modeling of rIX-FP, including a 3-week regimen JOURNAL=Frontiers in Pediatrics VOLUME=Volume 13 - 2025 YEAR=2025 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/pediatrics/articles/10.3389/fped.2025.1710546 DOI=10.3389/fped.2025.1710546 ISSN=2296-2360 ABSTRACT=BackgroundRecombinant factor IX–albumin fusion protein (rIX-FP) enables extended-interval prophylaxis for hemophilia B. While higher trough levels with reduced dosing frequency have been shown vs. standard FIX products, age-related differences in pharmacokinetics (PK) may constrain extended intervals in children. We aimed to refine a population PK (popPK) model of rIX-FP to inform clinically practical dosing across pediatric, adolescent, and adult patients.MethodsPooled FIX activity data from 113 previously treated patients (1–63 years) in five clinical studies were analyzed with a two-compartment popPK model. Covariates included body weight, age, weight-adjusted dose, and ethnicity (Japanese vs. non-Japanese). Model performance was evaluated by standard diagnostics and prediction-corrected visual predictive checks. Simulations estimated single-dose duration above 5% FIX activity and steady-state troughs for common prophylactic regimens stratified by age (<6, 6–<12, 12–<18, ≥12, ≥18 years).ResultsBody weight significantly influenced clearance (CL) and volumes; weight-normalized CL was faster in children, especially <6 years. No meaningful ethnic effect was detected; PK parameters and simulated profiles were comparable between Japanese and non-Japanese patients. Simulations showed that in patients ≥12 years, median steady-state troughs were maintained around ∼5% with 25–50 IU/kg weekly, 50 IU/kg every 10 days, 75 IU/kg every 14 days, and 100 IU/kg every 21 days—supporting a 3-week option in well-controlled patients. In contrast, children <6 years generally required weekly dosing (≥40–50 IU/kg) to achieve ∼5% troughs; extending intervals substantially reduced the proportion meeting target levels.ConclusionrIX-FP supports individualized prophylaxis with extended intervals up to 3 weeks in patients ≥12 years while younger children typically require more frequent dosing due to higher weight-normalized clearance. These PK-based insights can guide shared decision-making to balance protection, treatment burden, and patient preference across pediatric and adolescent age groups.