Icatibant for acute hereditary angioedema attacks in pediatric patients: A systematized review
Stephanie Schmalzried, Robert D. Beckett, Hannah Davis, Gabrielle CarreonBackground: Hereditary angioedema (HAE) is a rare, potentially life-threatening bradykinin-mediated disorder with limited pediatric treatment options and little comparative evidence. Icatibant, a bradykinin B2 receptor antagonist, has demonstrated efficacy in adults and has emerging evidence in children. Objective: To evaluate and synthesize clinical evidence on the efficacy and safety of icatibant for acute HAE attacks in pediatric patients. Methods: A literature search was performed by using medical literature data bases, clinical trial and research registries, and key journals through January 2026. The primary outcome was the time to onset of symptom relief. Secondary outcomes included the time to minimum symptoms, pain scores, adverse events, and feasibility of self- or caregiver administration. All included studies were nonrandomized, single-arm trials with heterogeneous designs and outcomes definitions; therefore, a meta-analysis was not performed, and all studies were descriptively evaluated. Results: This systematic review identified three clinical studies of icatibant for acute HAE attacks in children ages 0 to 17 years. Three open-label, phase III studies, which included 43 pediatric patients were reviewed. Icatibant demonstrated rapid symptom relief, with a median onset at ∼1 hour and minimum symptoms within 2 hours, although repeated dosing showed variability. Icatibant was well tolerated, with injection-site reactions as the most common adverse events and no serious treatment-related events. Self- or caregiver administration was feasible and effective in adolescents. Conclusion: Icatibant was safe and effective in the pediatric studies, providing rapid symptoms relief and a favorable tolerability profile. Despite limitations from small sample sizes and lack of comparator trials, current evidence supports icatibant as a targeted, practical option for treating acute HAE attacks in children.