WHAT IS HEMOPHILIA?

Hemophilia is a rare and serious disease caused by an imbalance of hemostasis where missing clotting factor proteins can prevent stable blood clot formation, leading to excessive bleeding. In people with hemophilia, bleeds can happen during everyday activities, such as at work or school.

A MOSTLY INHERITED DISEASE

Hemophilia affects mostly men, although a percentage of cases occur in women. It’s usually inherited, and passed along through the X chromosome.

Women who have the hemophilia gene on one of their X chromosomes are considered “carriers” and can pass it along to their children. Women can also be affected and have symptoms.

In 30% of people with hemophilia, there is no family history of the disorder; it just appears as a new mutation of the gene.

HOW HEMOPHILIA IS INHERITED

Red color indicates individual has hemophilia. = Has hemophilia

Blue and red colors indicate individual is a carrier for the  hemophilia gene. = Carrier for hemophilia gene

Blue color indicates individual does not have  hemophilia. = No hemophilia

When father has hemophilia

When a father has hemophilia & the mother does not, male children can't inherit hemophilia. Female children will be carriers.
Hemophilia is transmitted only through the X chromosome, but since male offspring always get their X chromosome from their mother, they can’t inherit it from their father. Yet female children have a 100% chance that they will be a carrier.

When mother is carrier

When a mother carries the hemophilia gene, there is a 50% chance male children get hemophilia & a 50% chance female children will be carriers.
Since male offspring get their X chromosome from their mother, if she is a carrier, her sons have a 50% chance of getting hemophilia, while her daughters have a 50% chance that they will be a carrier.

HEMOPHILIA A & HEMOPHILIA B

The two most common types of hemophilia are hemophilia A and hemophilia B, with
hemophilia A affecting about four times as many as those with hemophilia B.

In people with hemophilia A, it’s clotting factor VIII that’s missing (or not working properly).

In people with hemophilia B, it’s clotting factor IX that’s missing (or not working properly).

FACTOR ACTIVITY LEVELS & WHY THEY MATTER

It’s your “factor activity level” (amount of clotting factor in your blood) that defines how protected you are and helps determine how much activity you may be able to sustain.

People in the near-normal to normal non-hemophilia range have factor levels above 40%. People with hemophilia have factor levels less than 40%. When levels drop below 40%, people with hemophilia are at an increased risk of bleeding, which impacts their lifestyles and outcomes.

Because there are differences between hemophilia A and B, treatment management and strategies should be different too. Talk to your doctor about managing your hemophilia.

Click through the chart below to see how your factor activity levels (for Mild, Moderate, and Severe hemophilia) can correlate to potentially safe activities.

As the chart above illustrates, your activity levels will vary depending on

how severe your hemophilia is.

CONTINUE ON TO LEARN ABOUT THE CLOTTING CASCADE

GET COMMUNITY EDUCATION

If you’re looking for more info or resources, our dedicated team of Community Relations & Education (CoRe) managers is ready to connect one-on-one, anytime. They’re just a call or email away.

STAY INFORMED

Sign up to receive helpful information to address your hemophilia needs, such as disease education, treatment options, and other resources to help you make the best decisions for your goals.

MAT-US-2204622-v2.0-11/2022