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FDA Initiative Aims to Improve Diversity in Clinical Trials
NEW YORK — Underrepresentation by gender and race in major clinical trials has been a cause for complaint for decades, but the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has drafted a regulatory solution to this issue expected to be implemented sometime in 2025.
This initiative, known as the
Once the DAP is enacted, “the sponsor must specify the rationale and goals for study enrollment by age, ethnicity, sex, and race,” she said. Furthermore, the submission to the FDA must “describe the methods to meet the diversity benchmarks.”
Lack of Trial Diversity Is Common Across Medicine
Although she focused on the relevance of this initiative to dermatology, Dr. Harvey said the lack of diversity in clinical trials is pervasive throughout medicine. In one survey of randomized controlled trials, less than 60% of trials even specified the race and ethnicity of the participants. In recent psoriasis trials, only 30% met a diversity definition of ≥ 20% of patients identifying as minority (Black, Hispanic, Asian, or other non-White group), said Dr. Harvey, who practices dermatology in Newport News, Virginia.
The FDA draft guidance for the DAP was released in June 2024 and is now available for submitting comments (until September 26). The plan is expected to be published in June 2025, according to Dr. Harvey. It will pertain to all pivotal and phase 3 trials enrolling 180 days after the publication date and will be relevant to all drugs and biologics as well as certain devices.
This initiative could be a critical step toward ensuring diversity in major clinical trials after years of stagnation, Dr. Harvey said, noting that despite repeated calls for more diversity in clinical trials, the literature suggests “little progress.”
However, she said that increasing diversity in clinical trials is just one step toward gathering data about the generalizability of efficacy and safety across racial and ethnic groups. A much more complex issue involves how race and ethnicity are defined in order to understand differences, if any, for efficacy and risk.
“Race is a dynamic social construct and a poor measure for biologic variation and skin color,” Dr. Harvey said. This means that work is needed to address the more complex issue of race and ethnicity stratification that will help clinicians understand the relative benefits and risks for the drugs in these trials.
Rather than differences based on genetic or other sources of biologic differences, she said, outcomes by race alone are often suspected of reflecting disparities in access to healthcare rather than a difference in therapeutic response.
Skin Color Is Inadequate to Define Race
When stratifying patients by race or ethnicity, Dr. Harvey said that “we have to be very, very careful in considering the study purpose and what the study question is.” A study attempting to compare benefits and risks among subgroups by race or ethnicity will require descriptors beyond skin color.
The recognized limitations of measuring skin tone as a surrogate of race are one reason for widespread interest in moving away from the Fitzpatrick skin type (FST) rating that has been widely considered a standard, according to Dr. Harvey. Several alternatives have been proposed, including the Monk Skin Tone Scale, the Individual Typology Angle, and the Eumelanin Human Skin Color Scale, but she cautioned that these are less well validated and generally have the limitations of the FST.
If skin color was ever useful for grouping individuals on the basis of shared physiology, growing rates of intermarriage and immigration have made skin color increasingly irrelevant to racial identity. If the goal is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of drugs across racial groups and ethnicities, the characterization of populations will almost certainly require multiple descriptors and biomarkers, she said.
“It is very important to have many tools for characterizing patients by skin type,” Susan Taylor, MD, professor of dermatology and vice chair for diversity, equity, and inclusion for the Department of Dermatology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, said in an interview at the meeting.
The reason is “there are limitations to all of them,” she said, noting also that the questions being asked about how and if skin color and race are relevant to therapeutic options differ by the question, such as innate response or access to care.
Dr. Taylor is part of a workshop that she said is evaluating a combination of instruments for characterizing skin color and race in ways relevant to the specific question being asked.
The solutions might differ. While simple clinical assessments involving skin color might be made with methods captured on a smartphone app, Dr. Taylor acknowledged that far more complex tools might be required to document the effect of racial or ethnic differences in drug efficacy and safety in a research setting.
Outside of a research setting, any tools that might be useful for assessing race as a variable must be practical, according to Dr. Harvey. She suggested that these must be time efficient, of reasonable cost, and most importantly, reliable.
Tools meeting these criteria do not currently exist, but Dr. Harvey said the work is underway. She expects a “top-down” collaborative approach to validate alternatives to the FST. If such tools can be developed with buy-in from the FDA, they might be particularly useful for translating trial data to patient care, she added.
Dr. Harvey reported financial relationships with AbbVie, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Janssen, Johnson & Johnson, L’Oréal, and SkinCeuticals. Dr. Taylor, president-elect of the American Academy of Dermatology, reported financial relationships with more than 25 pharmaceutical and cosmetic companies.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
NEW YORK — Underrepresentation by gender and race in major clinical trials has been a cause for complaint for decades, but the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has drafted a regulatory solution to this issue expected to be implemented sometime in 2025.
This initiative, known as the
Once the DAP is enacted, “the sponsor must specify the rationale and goals for study enrollment by age, ethnicity, sex, and race,” she said. Furthermore, the submission to the FDA must “describe the methods to meet the diversity benchmarks.”
Lack of Trial Diversity Is Common Across Medicine
Although she focused on the relevance of this initiative to dermatology, Dr. Harvey said the lack of diversity in clinical trials is pervasive throughout medicine. In one survey of randomized controlled trials, less than 60% of trials even specified the race and ethnicity of the participants. In recent psoriasis trials, only 30% met a diversity definition of ≥ 20% of patients identifying as minority (Black, Hispanic, Asian, or other non-White group), said Dr. Harvey, who practices dermatology in Newport News, Virginia.
The FDA draft guidance for the DAP was released in June 2024 and is now available for submitting comments (until September 26). The plan is expected to be published in June 2025, according to Dr. Harvey. It will pertain to all pivotal and phase 3 trials enrolling 180 days after the publication date and will be relevant to all drugs and biologics as well as certain devices.
This initiative could be a critical step toward ensuring diversity in major clinical trials after years of stagnation, Dr. Harvey said, noting that despite repeated calls for more diversity in clinical trials, the literature suggests “little progress.”
However, she said that increasing diversity in clinical trials is just one step toward gathering data about the generalizability of efficacy and safety across racial and ethnic groups. A much more complex issue involves how race and ethnicity are defined in order to understand differences, if any, for efficacy and risk.
“Race is a dynamic social construct and a poor measure for biologic variation and skin color,” Dr. Harvey said. This means that work is needed to address the more complex issue of race and ethnicity stratification that will help clinicians understand the relative benefits and risks for the drugs in these trials.
Rather than differences based on genetic or other sources of biologic differences, she said, outcomes by race alone are often suspected of reflecting disparities in access to healthcare rather than a difference in therapeutic response.
Skin Color Is Inadequate to Define Race
When stratifying patients by race or ethnicity, Dr. Harvey said that “we have to be very, very careful in considering the study purpose and what the study question is.” A study attempting to compare benefits and risks among subgroups by race or ethnicity will require descriptors beyond skin color.
The recognized limitations of measuring skin tone as a surrogate of race are one reason for widespread interest in moving away from the Fitzpatrick skin type (FST) rating that has been widely considered a standard, according to Dr. Harvey. Several alternatives have been proposed, including the Monk Skin Tone Scale, the Individual Typology Angle, and the Eumelanin Human Skin Color Scale, but she cautioned that these are less well validated and generally have the limitations of the FST.
If skin color was ever useful for grouping individuals on the basis of shared physiology, growing rates of intermarriage and immigration have made skin color increasingly irrelevant to racial identity. If the goal is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of drugs across racial groups and ethnicities, the characterization of populations will almost certainly require multiple descriptors and biomarkers, she said.
“It is very important to have many tools for characterizing patients by skin type,” Susan Taylor, MD, professor of dermatology and vice chair for diversity, equity, and inclusion for the Department of Dermatology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, said in an interview at the meeting.
The reason is “there are limitations to all of them,” she said, noting also that the questions being asked about how and if skin color and race are relevant to therapeutic options differ by the question, such as innate response or access to care.
Dr. Taylor is part of a workshop that she said is evaluating a combination of instruments for characterizing skin color and race in ways relevant to the specific question being asked.
The solutions might differ. While simple clinical assessments involving skin color might be made with methods captured on a smartphone app, Dr. Taylor acknowledged that far more complex tools might be required to document the effect of racial or ethnic differences in drug efficacy and safety in a research setting.
Outside of a research setting, any tools that might be useful for assessing race as a variable must be practical, according to Dr. Harvey. She suggested that these must be time efficient, of reasonable cost, and most importantly, reliable.
Tools meeting these criteria do not currently exist, but Dr. Harvey said the work is underway. She expects a “top-down” collaborative approach to validate alternatives to the FST. If such tools can be developed with buy-in from the FDA, they might be particularly useful for translating trial data to patient care, she added.
Dr. Harvey reported financial relationships with AbbVie, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Janssen, Johnson & Johnson, L’Oréal, and SkinCeuticals. Dr. Taylor, president-elect of the American Academy of Dermatology, reported financial relationships with more than 25 pharmaceutical and cosmetic companies.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
NEW YORK — Underrepresentation by gender and race in major clinical trials has been a cause for complaint for decades, but the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has drafted a regulatory solution to this issue expected to be implemented sometime in 2025.
This initiative, known as the
Once the DAP is enacted, “the sponsor must specify the rationale and goals for study enrollment by age, ethnicity, sex, and race,” she said. Furthermore, the submission to the FDA must “describe the methods to meet the diversity benchmarks.”
Lack of Trial Diversity Is Common Across Medicine
Although she focused on the relevance of this initiative to dermatology, Dr. Harvey said the lack of diversity in clinical trials is pervasive throughout medicine. In one survey of randomized controlled trials, less than 60% of trials even specified the race and ethnicity of the participants. In recent psoriasis trials, only 30% met a diversity definition of ≥ 20% of patients identifying as minority (Black, Hispanic, Asian, or other non-White group), said Dr. Harvey, who practices dermatology in Newport News, Virginia.
The FDA draft guidance for the DAP was released in June 2024 and is now available for submitting comments (until September 26). The plan is expected to be published in June 2025, according to Dr. Harvey. It will pertain to all pivotal and phase 3 trials enrolling 180 days after the publication date and will be relevant to all drugs and biologics as well as certain devices.
This initiative could be a critical step toward ensuring diversity in major clinical trials after years of stagnation, Dr. Harvey said, noting that despite repeated calls for more diversity in clinical trials, the literature suggests “little progress.”
However, she said that increasing diversity in clinical trials is just one step toward gathering data about the generalizability of efficacy and safety across racial and ethnic groups. A much more complex issue involves how race and ethnicity are defined in order to understand differences, if any, for efficacy and risk.
“Race is a dynamic social construct and a poor measure for biologic variation and skin color,” Dr. Harvey said. This means that work is needed to address the more complex issue of race and ethnicity stratification that will help clinicians understand the relative benefits and risks for the drugs in these trials.
Rather than differences based on genetic or other sources of biologic differences, she said, outcomes by race alone are often suspected of reflecting disparities in access to healthcare rather than a difference in therapeutic response.
Skin Color Is Inadequate to Define Race
When stratifying patients by race or ethnicity, Dr. Harvey said that “we have to be very, very careful in considering the study purpose and what the study question is.” A study attempting to compare benefits and risks among subgroups by race or ethnicity will require descriptors beyond skin color.
The recognized limitations of measuring skin tone as a surrogate of race are one reason for widespread interest in moving away from the Fitzpatrick skin type (FST) rating that has been widely considered a standard, according to Dr. Harvey. Several alternatives have been proposed, including the Monk Skin Tone Scale, the Individual Typology Angle, and the Eumelanin Human Skin Color Scale, but she cautioned that these are less well validated and generally have the limitations of the FST.
If skin color was ever useful for grouping individuals on the basis of shared physiology, growing rates of intermarriage and immigration have made skin color increasingly irrelevant to racial identity. If the goal is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of drugs across racial groups and ethnicities, the characterization of populations will almost certainly require multiple descriptors and biomarkers, she said.
“It is very important to have many tools for characterizing patients by skin type,” Susan Taylor, MD, professor of dermatology and vice chair for diversity, equity, and inclusion for the Department of Dermatology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, said in an interview at the meeting.
The reason is “there are limitations to all of them,” she said, noting also that the questions being asked about how and if skin color and race are relevant to therapeutic options differ by the question, such as innate response or access to care.
Dr. Taylor is part of a workshop that she said is evaluating a combination of instruments for characterizing skin color and race in ways relevant to the specific question being asked.
The solutions might differ. While simple clinical assessments involving skin color might be made with methods captured on a smartphone app, Dr. Taylor acknowledged that far more complex tools might be required to document the effect of racial or ethnic differences in drug efficacy and safety in a research setting.
Outside of a research setting, any tools that might be useful for assessing race as a variable must be practical, according to Dr. Harvey. She suggested that these must be time efficient, of reasonable cost, and most importantly, reliable.
Tools meeting these criteria do not currently exist, but Dr. Harvey said the work is underway. She expects a “top-down” collaborative approach to validate alternatives to the FST. If such tools can be developed with buy-in from the FDA, they might be particularly useful for translating trial data to patient care, she added.
Dr. Harvey reported financial relationships with AbbVie, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Janssen, Johnson & Johnson, L’Oréal, and SkinCeuticals. Dr. Taylor, president-elect of the American Academy of Dermatology, reported financial relationships with more than 25 pharmaceutical and cosmetic companies.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM SOC 2024
Positive Stem Cell Transplant Data Is Increasing Its Use
COPENHAGEN —
With only one completed randomized trial available, HSCT remains experimental but the number of patients treated with this approach has now reached substantial numbers over 20 years of experience at multiple centers, according to two representative real-world studies presented at the 2024 ECTRIMS annual meeting.
The latest data are wholly consistent with a 2019 multinational randomized trial that found HSCT, which is a one-time intervention, to be relatively well tolerated and more effective than disease-modifying therapy (DMT) for median time to progression in patients refractory to DMT.
Relative to 24 months in the DMT group, median time to relapse was not reached among those randomized to HSCT because there were too few events. The hazard ratio (HR) reduction for progression was greater than 90% (HR, 0.07; P < 0.001). Other endpoints, such as EDSS, which improved in the group receiving HSCT but declined on DMT, also favored the single-treatment therapy.
Two Real-World Experiences With HSCT Reported
Of the two multicenter real world studies presented at ECTRIMS, one included 363 patients treated at one of 14 participating public hospitals in the United Kingdom since 2002. This analysis was uncontrolled. The other, with 97 patients treated at one of 20 participating centers in Italy since 1999, compared HSCT to alemtuzumab retrospectively.
In the UK data, presented by Paolo Muraro, MD, PhD, Senior Consultant, Division of Brain Sciences, Imperial College, London, England, 94.6% were in relapse-free survival (RFS) at 2 years and 88.6% at 5 years after undergoing HSCT. He called these numbers “impressive.”
In addition, MRI-free activity survival (MFS) was 88.2% and 78.8% at 2 and 5 years, respectively, Dr. Muraro said.
On the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS), the cumulative incidence of improvement was 24.6% at 2 years and 28.6% at 5 years. There was no evidence of disease activity on the endpoints of symptoms, relapse, and MRI (NEDA-3) in 72% of patients at 2 years and 48.5% at 5 years.
Relative to historical response rates in a refractory population, Dr. Muraro considered these results favorable. Although there were four deaths, producing a treatment-related mortality of 1.1%, all occurred at an early stage of the HSCT program when there was limited experience in the management of cytopenias and other acute complications of HSCT.
“In this real-world cohort, stem cell transplant led to a durable remission of inflammatory activity and to clinical stability even though this included patients with a high EDSS at baseline [median 6.0] and a substantial proportion [39%) with progressive disease,” Dr. Muraro said.
In the Italian data, presented by Alessio Signori, MD, PhD, associate professor, Department of Health Sciences, University of Genoa, Italy, the 97 HSCT patients were matched with 314 treated with alemtuzumab over the same period and compared with propensity score overlap weighting. Baseline features were comparable.
HSCT Outperforms Alemtuzumab on All Measures
After a median follow-up of 62 months in the HSCT group and 30 months in the alemtuzumab group, HSCT outperformed drug therapy on all efficacy measures. When translated into HR, HSCT relative to alemtuzumab was associated with a 50% reduction in the probability of disability progression (HR, 0.50; P = 0.025), a 66% reduction in probability of relapse (HR, 0.34; P < 0.001), and a 62% reduction in the probability of MRI activity (HR, 0.38; P < 0.001).
“At 5 years, 58.3% of patients in the HSCT group versus 22.3% of the patients in the alemtuzumab group maintained NEDA-3,” said Dr. Signori, who reported that this difference represented a greater than 50% reduction (HR, 0.48; P < 0.001).
In this study there were two treatment-related deaths. Both occurred within 30 days of HSCT and, again, were confined to the early experience with HSCT.
There are questions that remain unanswered, such as whether there are predictors of response to HSCT. Although sustained responses have been greater on HSCT than drug therapy on average, poor responses appeared to be more common among those with a progressive phenotype in the UK experience.
Although patients with progressive disease were excluded from the Italian study, a real-world experience published 2 years ago also indicated that patients with progressive forms of MS respond less well to HSCT. Conducted in the United States at a single center (Northwestern University, Chicago) with 414 patients of whom 93 had progressive disease, EDSS progressively declined over the 5 years of follow-up among those with secondary progressive MS even as it improved in those with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis.
HSCT Considered on Compassionate Basis
Overall, the HSCT experience as a rescue therapy for MS patients with an inadequate response to DMT has led a growing number of centers active in this area to offer this option on a compassionate basis, according to Dr. Muraro and Dr. Signori. Joachim Burman, MD, PhD, who was the moderator of the scientific session at ECTRIMS and the leader of a research program into HSCT for MS at Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden, agreed.
The increasing number of centers offering HSCT to MS patients does not preclude the need or the value of the ongoing phase 3 trials, according to Dr. Burman, but he suggested that there is a growing focus of how it should be used, not whether it will be used.
Ultimately, he speculated that HSCT, once accepted as a mainstream option for MS, will probably be confined to the 5%-10% of patients with very aggressive disease. This is not for lack of safety or efficacy, but he sees several barriers to using this approach first-line, outside of special situations.
“You need a team of several different specialists to offer HSCT,” he said, suggesting that this approach to MS is much more complicated than a visit to a neurologist’s office for a DMT prescription. However, he thinks other barriers, such as concern about safety, are dissipating.
HSCT “is still being characterized as a high-risk procedure, but I would object to that,” he said. “The deaths associated with HSCT largely occurred 20 years ago when the field was new.”
Dr. Muraro reported a financial relationship with Cellerys AG that is unrelated to this study. Dr. Signori reported financial relationships with Chiesi, Horizon, and Novartis. Dr. Burman reports no potential conflicts of interest.
COPENHAGEN —
With only one completed randomized trial available, HSCT remains experimental but the number of patients treated with this approach has now reached substantial numbers over 20 years of experience at multiple centers, according to two representative real-world studies presented at the 2024 ECTRIMS annual meeting.
The latest data are wholly consistent with a 2019 multinational randomized trial that found HSCT, which is a one-time intervention, to be relatively well tolerated and more effective than disease-modifying therapy (DMT) for median time to progression in patients refractory to DMT.
Relative to 24 months in the DMT group, median time to relapse was not reached among those randomized to HSCT because there were too few events. The hazard ratio (HR) reduction for progression was greater than 90% (HR, 0.07; P < 0.001). Other endpoints, such as EDSS, which improved in the group receiving HSCT but declined on DMT, also favored the single-treatment therapy.
Two Real-World Experiences With HSCT Reported
Of the two multicenter real world studies presented at ECTRIMS, one included 363 patients treated at one of 14 participating public hospitals in the United Kingdom since 2002. This analysis was uncontrolled. The other, with 97 patients treated at one of 20 participating centers in Italy since 1999, compared HSCT to alemtuzumab retrospectively.
In the UK data, presented by Paolo Muraro, MD, PhD, Senior Consultant, Division of Brain Sciences, Imperial College, London, England, 94.6% were in relapse-free survival (RFS) at 2 years and 88.6% at 5 years after undergoing HSCT. He called these numbers “impressive.”
In addition, MRI-free activity survival (MFS) was 88.2% and 78.8% at 2 and 5 years, respectively, Dr. Muraro said.
On the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS), the cumulative incidence of improvement was 24.6% at 2 years and 28.6% at 5 years. There was no evidence of disease activity on the endpoints of symptoms, relapse, and MRI (NEDA-3) in 72% of patients at 2 years and 48.5% at 5 years.
Relative to historical response rates in a refractory population, Dr. Muraro considered these results favorable. Although there were four deaths, producing a treatment-related mortality of 1.1%, all occurred at an early stage of the HSCT program when there was limited experience in the management of cytopenias and other acute complications of HSCT.
“In this real-world cohort, stem cell transplant led to a durable remission of inflammatory activity and to clinical stability even though this included patients with a high EDSS at baseline [median 6.0] and a substantial proportion [39%) with progressive disease,” Dr. Muraro said.
In the Italian data, presented by Alessio Signori, MD, PhD, associate professor, Department of Health Sciences, University of Genoa, Italy, the 97 HSCT patients were matched with 314 treated with alemtuzumab over the same period and compared with propensity score overlap weighting. Baseline features were comparable.
HSCT Outperforms Alemtuzumab on All Measures
After a median follow-up of 62 months in the HSCT group and 30 months in the alemtuzumab group, HSCT outperformed drug therapy on all efficacy measures. When translated into HR, HSCT relative to alemtuzumab was associated with a 50% reduction in the probability of disability progression (HR, 0.50; P = 0.025), a 66% reduction in probability of relapse (HR, 0.34; P < 0.001), and a 62% reduction in the probability of MRI activity (HR, 0.38; P < 0.001).
“At 5 years, 58.3% of patients in the HSCT group versus 22.3% of the patients in the alemtuzumab group maintained NEDA-3,” said Dr. Signori, who reported that this difference represented a greater than 50% reduction (HR, 0.48; P < 0.001).
In this study there were two treatment-related deaths. Both occurred within 30 days of HSCT and, again, were confined to the early experience with HSCT.
There are questions that remain unanswered, such as whether there are predictors of response to HSCT. Although sustained responses have been greater on HSCT than drug therapy on average, poor responses appeared to be more common among those with a progressive phenotype in the UK experience.
Although patients with progressive disease were excluded from the Italian study, a real-world experience published 2 years ago also indicated that patients with progressive forms of MS respond less well to HSCT. Conducted in the United States at a single center (Northwestern University, Chicago) with 414 patients of whom 93 had progressive disease, EDSS progressively declined over the 5 years of follow-up among those with secondary progressive MS even as it improved in those with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis.
HSCT Considered on Compassionate Basis
Overall, the HSCT experience as a rescue therapy for MS patients with an inadequate response to DMT has led a growing number of centers active in this area to offer this option on a compassionate basis, according to Dr. Muraro and Dr. Signori. Joachim Burman, MD, PhD, who was the moderator of the scientific session at ECTRIMS and the leader of a research program into HSCT for MS at Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden, agreed.
The increasing number of centers offering HSCT to MS patients does not preclude the need or the value of the ongoing phase 3 trials, according to Dr. Burman, but he suggested that there is a growing focus of how it should be used, not whether it will be used.
Ultimately, he speculated that HSCT, once accepted as a mainstream option for MS, will probably be confined to the 5%-10% of patients with very aggressive disease. This is not for lack of safety or efficacy, but he sees several barriers to using this approach first-line, outside of special situations.
“You need a team of several different specialists to offer HSCT,” he said, suggesting that this approach to MS is much more complicated than a visit to a neurologist’s office for a DMT prescription. However, he thinks other barriers, such as concern about safety, are dissipating.
HSCT “is still being characterized as a high-risk procedure, but I would object to that,” he said. “The deaths associated with HSCT largely occurred 20 years ago when the field was new.”
Dr. Muraro reported a financial relationship with Cellerys AG that is unrelated to this study. Dr. Signori reported financial relationships with Chiesi, Horizon, and Novartis. Dr. Burman reports no potential conflicts of interest.
COPENHAGEN —
With only one completed randomized trial available, HSCT remains experimental but the number of patients treated with this approach has now reached substantial numbers over 20 years of experience at multiple centers, according to two representative real-world studies presented at the 2024 ECTRIMS annual meeting.
The latest data are wholly consistent with a 2019 multinational randomized trial that found HSCT, which is a one-time intervention, to be relatively well tolerated and more effective than disease-modifying therapy (DMT) for median time to progression in patients refractory to DMT.
Relative to 24 months in the DMT group, median time to relapse was not reached among those randomized to HSCT because there were too few events. The hazard ratio (HR) reduction for progression was greater than 90% (HR, 0.07; P < 0.001). Other endpoints, such as EDSS, which improved in the group receiving HSCT but declined on DMT, also favored the single-treatment therapy.
Two Real-World Experiences With HSCT Reported
Of the two multicenter real world studies presented at ECTRIMS, one included 363 patients treated at one of 14 participating public hospitals in the United Kingdom since 2002. This analysis was uncontrolled. The other, with 97 patients treated at one of 20 participating centers in Italy since 1999, compared HSCT to alemtuzumab retrospectively.
In the UK data, presented by Paolo Muraro, MD, PhD, Senior Consultant, Division of Brain Sciences, Imperial College, London, England, 94.6% were in relapse-free survival (RFS) at 2 years and 88.6% at 5 years after undergoing HSCT. He called these numbers “impressive.”
In addition, MRI-free activity survival (MFS) was 88.2% and 78.8% at 2 and 5 years, respectively, Dr. Muraro said.
On the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS), the cumulative incidence of improvement was 24.6% at 2 years and 28.6% at 5 years. There was no evidence of disease activity on the endpoints of symptoms, relapse, and MRI (NEDA-3) in 72% of patients at 2 years and 48.5% at 5 years.
Relative to historical response rates in a refractory population, Dr. Muraro considered these results favorable. Although there were four deaths, producing a treatment-related mortality of 1.1%, all occurred at an early stage of the HSCT program when there was limited experience in the management of cytopenias and other acute complications of HSCT.
“In this real-world cohort, stem cell transplant led to a durable remission of inflammatory activity and to clinical stability even though this included patients with a high EDSS at baseline [median 6.0] and a substantial proportion [39%) with progressive disease,” Dr. Muraro said.
In the Italian data, presented by Alessio Signori, MD, PhD, associate professor, Department of Health Sciences, University of Genoa, Italy, the 97 HSCT patients were matched with 314 treated with alemtuzumab over the same period and compared with propensity score overlap weighting. Baseline features were comparable.
HSCT Outperforms Alemtuzumab on All Measures
After a median follow-up of 62 months in the HSCT group and 30 months in the alemtuzumab group, HSCT outperformed drug therapy on all efficacy measures. When translated into HR, HSCT relative to alemtuzumab was associated with a 50% reduction in the probability of disability progression (HR, 0.50; P = 0.025), a 66% reduction in probability of relapse (HR, 0.34; P < 0.001), and a 62% reduction in the probability of MRI activity (HR, 0.38; P < 0.001).
“At 5 years, 58.3% of patients in the HSCT group versus 22.3% of the patients in the alemtuzumab group maintained NEDA-3,” said Dr. Signori, who reported that this difference represented a greater than 50% reduction (HR, 0.48; P < 0.001).
In this study there were two treatment-related deaths. Both occurred within 30 days of HSCT and, again, were confined to the early experience with HSCT.
There are questions that remain unanswered, such as whether there are predictors of response to HSCT. Although sustained responses have been greater on HSCT than drug therapy on average, poor responses appeared to be more common among those with a progressive phenotype in the UK experience.
Although patients with progressive disease were excluded from the Italian study, a real-world experience published 2 years ago also indicated that patients with progressive forms of MS respond less well to HSCT. Conducted in the United States at a single center (Northwestern University, Chicago) with 414 patients of whom 93 had progressive disease, EDSS progressively declined over the 5 years of follow-up among those with secondary progressive MS even as it improved in those with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis.
HSCT Considered on Compassionate Basis
Overall, the HSCT experience as a rescue therapy for MS patients with an inadequate response to DMT has led a growing number of centers active in this area to offer this option on a compassionate basis, according to Dr. Muraro and Dr. Signori. Joachim Burman, MD, PhD, who was the moderator of the scientific session at ECTRIMS and the leader of a research program into HSCT for MS at Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden, agreed.
The increasing number of centers offering HSCT to MS patients does not preclude the need or the value of the ongoing phase 3 trials, according to Dr. Burman, but he suggested that there is a growing focus of how it should be used, not whether it will be used.
Ultimately, he speculated that HSCT, once accepted as a mainstream option for MS, will probably be confined to the 5%-10% of patients with very aggressive disease. This is not for lack of safety or efficacy, but he sees several barriers to using this approach first-line, outside of special situations.
“You need a team of several different specialists to offer HSCT,” he said, suggesting that this approach to MS is much more complicated than a visit to a neurologist’s office for a DMT prescription. However, he thinks other barriers, such as concern about safety, are dissipating.
HSCT “is still being characterized as a high-risk procedure, but I would object to that,” he said. “The deaths associated with HSCT largely occurred 20 years ago when the field was new.”
Dr. Muraro reported a financial relationship with Cellerys AG that is unrelated to this study. Dr. Signori reported financial relationships with Chiesi, Horizon, and Novartis. Dr. Burman reports no potential conflicts of interest.
FROM ECTRIMS 2024
Comorbidity Control Might Slow MS Activity
COPENHAGEN — The largest and perhaps most rigorous study to demonstrate an association between the presence of comorbidities and accelerated progression of multiple sclerosis (MS) is sufficiently compelling that both the study author and an independent expert maintained clinical practice should be adjusted.
Even while acknowledging that “it is hard to make causative statements” on the basis of these types of data, the findings are sufficiently compelling to suggest that comorbidities “should be a pressing concern” in MS management, according to Amber Salter, PhD, an associate professor of biostatistics at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School, Dallas.
The strong association in this meta-analysis, presented at the 2024 ECTRIMS annual meeting, were drawn from 15 multicenter phase 3 treatment trials with 16,794 participants followed for at least 2 years, Dr. Salter reported. Her data were published simultaneously in JAMA Neurology.
“One of the strengths of this study is that the data on comorbidities were collected prospectively as part of these trials,” explained Mark S. Freedman, MD, director of the Multiple Sclerosis Research Center at Ottawa Hospital in Canada. He agreed with Dr. Salter that it is reasonable to apply these findings to clinical practice given their consistency with numerous other studies and the value of what he termed as “a holistic approach” to improving outcomes in MS.
Meta-Analysis Avoids Weaknesses of Previous Data
There are many potential weaknesses of past observational studies that the authors of this meta-analysis hoped to avoid. These include the possibility that MS patients with comorbidities might be less likely to take or adhere to disease-modifying therapies (DMT) or that comorbidity burden might masquerade or be misinterpreted as MS progression. By employing data from phase 3 DMT trials, Dr. Salter maintained that prospectively collected data monitored carefully over an extended follow-up allows the impact of comorbidities on outcome to be evaluated in a more controlled fashion.
Dr. Freedman liked the design of this study, but he admitted that he was surprised by the result.
“Phase 3 trials typically include exclusion criteria for significant comorbidities, so I did not think they would be able to show any meaningful differences,” Dr. Freedman said in an interview.
For the main outcome of evidence of disease activity (EDA), defined as confirmed disability worsening measured with the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS), relapse activity, or any new or enlarging lesions on MRI, the differences reached significance even after adjustments for multiple potentially confounding factors.
MS Activity Increases Significantly with More Comorbidities
Compared with no comorbidity, the presence of three or more comorbidities were associated with a significant 14% increase in the adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) of EDA (aHR, 1.14; 95% CI, 1.02-1.28), Dr. Salter reported. If there were two or more cardiometabolic comorbidities, the risk of EDA was increased 21% (aHR, 1.21; 95% CI 1.08-1.37).
The list of comorbidities considered in this study was drawn from the International Advisory Committee on Clinical Trials in MS. It included numerous cardiometabolic comorbidities, such as hypertension, hyperlipidemia, diabetes, ischemic heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, and peripheral vascular disease. It also included chronic lung diseases, such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; psychiatric diseases, such as depression and anxiety; and miscellaneous autoimmune conditions.
The number of comorbidities was categorized for analysis as zero, one, two, or three or more. However, Dr. Salter acknowledged that these phase 3 trials did include comorbidity exclusion criteria. In fact, severe forms of most of these comorbidities were exclusion criteria in at least some studies. Yet, the prevalence of one or more comorbidities was still 45.4% in the total population from this meta-analysis.
By themselves alone, ischemic heart disease (aHR, 1.63), cerebrovascular disease (aHR, 1.70) and at least one psychiatric disorder (aHR, 1.14) were all significant for increased MS activity at the end of 2 years by a 95% confidence interval that did not cross the line of unity.
When the EDA endpoints were evaluated individually, not even three or more comorbidities was associated with an increased rate of active lesions on MRI at the end of follow-up, but two or more and three or more comorbidities were associated with a significantly increased risk of disability worsening (aHR, 1.16 and aHR, 1.31, respectively) and relapse (aHR, 1.16 for both).
An Underestimation of Associations?
Prospective trials are still needed to show that treating comorbidities improves outcome in MS, but randomization will be problematic if it means withholding treatment for conditions with risks independent of MS, Dr. Salter said. Although the data from this analysis did not permit an analysis of how relative severity of comorbidities affected MS outcome, she reiterated that most patients with severe comorbidities were likely excluded from inclusion in the studies anyway.
“We think that we are probably seeing an underestimation of an associations between comorbidity and increased MS activity,” Dr. Salter said. While she reported that confounding cannot be ruled out, the robust associations identified in a meta-analysis “limit the possibility of bias or chance findings.”
Asked if the message that clinicians should treat comorbidities to reduce MS activity is a reasonable conclusion in the absence of proof that treatment is beneficial, Dr. Freedman looked both to the body of evidence and to the common sense behind the recommendation.
Basically, Dr. Freedman believes that comorbidities should be addressed routinely and rigorously even if there was no evidence that they improve MS outcome. These data provide just one other source of support for a practice that should be conducted anyway.
Dr. Salter reported financial relationships with Abata Therapeutics, Gryphon Bio, and Owl Therapeutics. Dr. Freedman reported financial relationships with more than 10 pharmaceutical companies.
COPENHAGEN — The largest and perhaps most rigorous study to demonstrate an association between the presence of comorbidities and accelerated progression of multiple sclerosis (MS) is sufficiently compelling that both the study author and an independent expert maintained clinical practice should be adjusted.
Even while acknowledging that “it is hard to make causative statements” on the basis of these types of data, the findings are sufficiently compelling to suggest that comorbidities “should be a pressing concern” in MS management, according to Amber Salter, PhD, an associate professor of biostatistics at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School, Dallas.
The strong association in this meta-analysis, presented at the 2024 ECTRIMS annual meeting, were drawn from 15 multicenter phase 3 treatment trials with 16,794 participants followed for at least 2 years, Dr. Salter reported. Her data were published simultaneously in JAMA Neurology.
“One of the strengths of this study is that the data on comorbidities were collected prospectively as part of these trials,” explained Mark S. Freedman, MD, director of the Multiple Sclerosis Research Center at Ottawa Hospital in Canada. He agreed with Dr. Salter that it is reasonable to apply these findings to clinical practice given their consistency with numerous other studies and the value of what he termed as “a holistic approach” to improving outcomes in MS.
Meta-Analysis Avoids Weaknesses of Previous Data
There are many potential weaknesses of past observational studies that the authors of this meta-analysis hoped to avoid. These include the possibility that MS patients with comorbidities might be less likely to take or adhere to disease-modifying therapies (DMT) or that comorbidity burden might masquerade or be misinterpreted as MS progression. By employing data from phase 3 DMT trials, Dr. Salter maintained that prospectively collected data monitored carefully over an extended follow-up allows the impact of comorbidities on outcome to be evaluated in a more controlled fashion.
Dr. Freedman liked the design of this study, but he admitted that he was surprised by the result.
“Phase 3 trials typically include exclusion criteria for significant comorbidities, so I did not think they would be able to show any meaningful differences,” Dr. Freedman said in an interview.
For the main outcome of evidence of disease activity (EDA), defined as confirmed disability worsening measured with the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS), relapse activity, or any new or enlarging lesions on MRI, the differences reached significance even after adjustments for multiple potentially confounding factors.
MS Activity Increases Significantly with More Comorbidities
Compared with no comorbidity, the presence of three or more comorbidities were associated with a significant 14% increase in the adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) of EDA (aHR, 1.14; 95% CI, 1.02-1.28), Dr. Salter reported. If there were two or more cardiometabolic comorbidities, the risk of EDA was increased 21% (aHR, 1.21; 95% CI 1.08-1.37).
The list of comorbidities considered in this study was drawn from the International Advisory Committee on Clinical Trials in MS. It included numerous cardiometabolic comorbidities, such as hypertension, hyperlipidemia, diabetes, ischemic heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, and peripheral vascular disease. It also included chronic lung diseases, such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; psychiatric diseases, such as depression and anxiety; and miscellaneous autoimmune conditions.
The number of comorbidities was categorized for analysis as zero, one, two, or three or more. However, Dr. Salter acknowledged that these phase 3 trials did include comorbidity exclusion criteria. In fact, severe forms of most of these comorbidities were exclusion criteria in at least some studies. Yet, the prevalence of one or more comorbidities was still 45.4% in the total population from this meta-analysis.
By themselves alone, ischemic heart disease (aHR, 1.63), cerebrovascular disease (aHR, 1.70) and at least one psychiatric disorder (aHR, 1.14) were all significant for increased MS activity at the end of 2 years by a 95% confidence interval that did not cross the line of unity.
When the EDA endpoints were evaluated individually, not even three or more comorbidities was associated with an increased rate of active lesions on MRI at the end of follow-up, but two or more and three or more comorbidities were associated with a significantly increased risk of disability worsening (aHR, 1.16 and aHR, 1.31, respectively) and relapse (aHR, 1.16 for both).
An Underestimation of Associations?
Prospective trials are still needed to show that treating comorbidities improves outcome in MS, but randomization will be problematic if it means withholding treatment for conditions with risks independent of MS, Dr. Salter said. Although the data from this analysis did not permit an analysis of how relative severity of comorbidities affected MS outcome, she reiterated that most patients with severe comorbidities were likely excluded from inclusion in the studies anyway.
“We think that we are probably seeing an underestimation of an associations between comorbidity and increased MS activity,” Dr. Salter said. While she reported that confounding cannot be ruled out, the robust associations identified in a meta-analysis “limit the possibility of bias or chance findings.”
Asked if the message that clinicians should treat comorbidities to reduce MS activity is a reasonable conclusion in the absence of proof that treatment is beneficial, Dr. Freedman looked both to the body of evidence and to the common sense behind the recommendation.
Basically, Dr. Freedman believes that comorbidities should be addressed routinely and rigorously even if there was no evidence that they improve MS outcome. These data provide just one other source of support for a practice that should be conducted anyway.
Dr. Salter reported financial relationships with Abata Therapeutics, Gryphon Bio, and Owl Therapeutics. Dr. Freedman reported financial relationships with more than 10 pharmaceutical companies.
COPENHAGEN — The largest and perhaps most rigorous study to demonstrate an association between the presence of comorbidities and accelerated progression of multiple sclerosis (MS) is sufficiently compelling that both the study author and an independent expert maintained clinical practice should be adjusted.
Even while acknowledging that “it is hard to make causative statements” on the basis of these types of data, the findings are sufficiently compelling to suggest that comorbidities “should be a pressing concern” in MS management, according to Amber Salter, PhD, an associate professor of biostatistics at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School, Dallas.
The strong association in this meta-analysis, presented at the 2024 ECTRIMS annual meeting, were drawn from 15 multicenter phase 3 treatment trials with 16,794 participants followed for at least 2 years, Dr. Salter reported. Her data were published simultaneously in JAMA Neurology.
“One of the strengths of this study is that the data on comorbidities were collected prospectively as part of these trials,” explained Mark S. Freedman, MD, director of the Multiple Sclerosis Research Center at Ottawa Hospital in Canada. He agreed with Dr. Salter that it is reasonable to apply these findings to clinical practice given their consistency with numerous other studies and the value of what he termed as “a holistic approach” to improving outcomes in MS.
Meta-Analysis Avoids Weaknesses of Previous Data
There are many potential weaknesses of past observational studies that the authors of this meta-analysis hoped to avoid. These include the possibility that MS patients with comorbidities might be less likely to take or adhere to disease-modifying therapies (DMT) or that comorbidity burden might masquerade or be misinterpreted as MS progression. By employing data from phase 3 DMT trials, Dr. Salter maintained that prospectively collected data monitored carefully over an extended follow-up allows the impact of comorbidities on outcome to be evaluated in a more controlled fashion.
Dr. Freedman liked the design of this study, but he admitted that he was surprised by the result.
“Phase 3 trials typically include exclusion criteria for significant comorbidities, so I did not think they would be able to show any meaningful differences,” Dr. Freedman said in an interview.
For the main outcome of evidence of disease activity (EDA), defined as confirmed disability worsening measured with the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS), relapse activity, or any new or enlarging lesions on MRI, the differences reached significance even after adjustments for multiple potentially confounding factors.
MS Activity Increases Significantly with More Comorbidities
Compared with no comorbidity, the presence of three or more comorbidities were associated with a significant 14% increase in the adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) of EDA (aHR, 1.14; 95% CI, 1.02-1.28), Dr. Salter reported. If there were two or more cardiometabolic comorbidities, the risk of EDA was increased 21% (aHR, 1.21; 95% CI 1.08-1.37).
The list of comorbidities considered in this study was drawn from the International Advisory Committee on Clinical Trials in MS. It included numerous cardiometabolic comorbidities, such as hypertension, hyperlipidemia, diabetes, ischemic heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, and peripheral vascular disease. It also included chronic lung diseases, such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; psychiatric diseases, such as depression and anxiety; and miscellaneous autoimmune conditions.
The number of comorbidities was categorized for analysis as zero, one, two, or three or more. However, Dr. Salter acknowledged that these phase 3 trials did include comorbidity exclusion criteria. In fact, severe forms of most of these comorbidities were exclusion criteria in at least some studies. Yet, the prevalence of one or more comorbidities was still 45.4% in the total population from this meta-analysis.
By themselves alone, ischemic heart disease (aHR, 1.63), cerebrovascular disease (aHR, 1.70) and at least one psychiatric disorder (aHR, 1.14) were all significant for increased MS activity at the end of 2 years by a 95% confidence interval that did not cross the line of unity.
When the EDA endpoints were evaluated individually, not even three or more comorbidities was associated with an increased rate of active lesions on MRI at the end of follow-up, but two or more and three or more comorbidities were associated with a significantly increased risk of disability worsening (aHR, 1.16 and aHR, 1.31, respectively) and relapse (aHR, 1.16 for both).
An Underestimation of Associations?
Prospective trials are still needed to show that treating comorbidities improves outcome in MS, but randomization will be problematic if it means withholding treatment for conditions with risks independent of MS, Dr. Salter said. Although the data from this analysis did not permit an analysis of how relative severity of comorbidities affected MS outcome, she reiterated that most patients with severe comorbidities were likely excluded from inclusion in the studies anyway.
“We think that we are probably seeing an underestimation of an associations between comorbidity and increased MS activity,” Dr. Salter said. While she reported that confounding cannot be ruled out, the robust associations identified in a meta-analysis “limit the possibility of bias or chance findings.”
Asked if the message that clinicians should treat comorbidities to reduce MS activity is a reasonable conclusion in the absence of proof that treatment is beneficial, Dr. Freedman looked both to the body of evidence and to the common sense behind the recommendation.
Basically, Dr. Freedman believes that comorbidities should be addressed routinely and rigorously even if there was no evidence that they improve MS outcome. These data provide just one other source of support for a practice that should be conducted anyway.
Dr. Salter reported financial relationships with Abata Therapeutics, Gryphon Bio, and Owl Therapeutics. Dr. Freedman reported financial relationships with more than 10 pharmaceutical companies.
FROM ECTRIMS 2024
Skip Potassium After Cardiac Surgery
LONDON —
“The widespread practice of giving patients potassium after bypass heart surgery even though their blood levels are within the normal range can be abandoned,” said Benjamin O’Brien, MD, PhD, director of the Clinic for Cardioanesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine at Charité Hospital in Berlin, Germany.
Results from the randomized TIGHT-K trial that assessed two levels of potassium supplementation were presented at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology.
In the tight-control group, supplementation was provided to maintain high-normal levels of potassium (> 4.5 mEq/L). In the relaxed-control group, supplementation was provided only when potassium levels fell below the low-normal threshold (< 3.6 mEq/L).
Trial Upending Popular Practice
The multinational trial involved 23 centers in Germany and the United Kingdom. All 1690 participants enrolled were scheduled to undergo a coronary artery bypass graft procedure, but Dr. O’Brien said he considers the results of TIGHT-K to be broadly applicable.
“There is no physiological basis to expect a different result in patients undergoing different types of cardiac surgery,” he said.
The primary endpoint was clinically and electrocardiography confirmed new-onset atrial fibrillation that occurred in the 5 days after the bypass procedure.
For the primary atrial fibrillation endpoint, event rates were similar in the tight-control and the relaxed-control groups (26.2% vs 27.8%); the 1.7% difference did not approach statistical significance (P = .44). The difference in dysrhythmias other than atrial fibrillation, although numerically lower in the tight-control group, was also not significant (19.1% vs 21.1%; P = .26).
There were no significant differences in several secondary endpoints, including length of hospital stay and in-patient mortality, but cost, a prespecified secondary endpoint, was approximately $120 lower per patient in the relaxed-control group than in the tight-control group (P < .001).
Lowering Cost Across Cardiac Surgeries
During the 5-day follow-up, median potassium levels were higher in the tight-control group. Levels in both groups fell gradually, but essentially in parallel, over the study period, so median potassium levels were always higher in the tight-control group than in the relaxed-control group. At the end of the observation period, mean potassium levels were 4.34 mEq/L in the tight-control group and 4.08 mEq/L in the relaxed-control group.
Prior to the development of atrial fibrillation, participants in the tight-control group received a medium of seven potassium administrations (range, 4-12), whereas those in the relaxed-control group received a medium of zero.
There were no significant differences in episodes in any subgroup evaluated, including those divided by age, sex, baseline left ventricular ejection fraction, and the absence or presence of beta blockers or loop diuretics. A per-protocol analysis also failed to show any advantage for tight potassium control.
Atrial fibrillation occurs in about one third of patients after bypass surgery, as it does after many types of cardiac surgery. Institutions often have strategies in place to reduce the risk after cardiac surgery, and potassium supplementation is one of the most common, despite the lack of supportive evidence, Dr. O’Brien said.
Narrow Window for Optimal Potassium Levels
The difference in potassium levels between the tight-control group and the relaxed-control group were modest in this study, said Subodh Verma, MD, a cardiac surgeon at St Michael’s Hospital and professor at the University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
However, this is unavoidable and central to the question being posed, Dr. O’Brien pointed out. Because of the risks for both hypokalemia and hyperkalemia, the window for safe supplementation is short. Current practice is to achieve high-normal levels to reduce atrial fibrillation, but TIGHT-K demonstrates this has no benefit.
The conclusion of TIGHT-K is appropriate, said Faiez Zannad, MD, PhD, professor of therapeutics in the Division of Cardiology at the University of Lorraine in Nancy, France, who praised the design and conduct of the study.
He acknowledged an unmet need for effective methods to reduce the risk for atrial fibrillation after cardiac surgery, but the ESC invited discussant said it is now necessary to look at other strategies. Several are under current evaluation, such as supplementary magnesium and the use of sodium-glucose transporter-2 inhibitors.
Although Dr. Zannad encouraged more studies of methods to reduce atrial fibrillation risk after cardiac surgery, he said that TIGHT-K has answered the question of whether potassium supplementation is beneficial.
Potassium supplementation should no longer be offered, he said, which will “reduce healthcare costs and decrease patient risk from an unnecessary intervention.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
LONDON —
“The widespread practice of giving patients potassium after bypass heart surgery even though their blood levels are within the normal range can be abandoned,” said Benjamin O’Brien, MD, PhD, director of the Clinic for Cardioanesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine at Charité Hospital in Berlin, Germany.
Results from the randomized TIGHT-K trial that assessed two levels of potassium supplementation were presented at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology.
In the tight-control group, supplementation was provided to maintain high-normal levels of potassium (> 4.5 mEq/L). In the relaxed-control group, supplementation was provided only when potassium levels fell below the low-normal threshold (< 3.6 mEq/L).
Trial Upending Popular Practice
The multinational trial involved 23 centers in Germany and the United Kingdom. All 1690 participants enrolled were scheduled to undergo a coronary artery bypass graft procedure, but Dr. O’Brien said he considers the results of TIGHT-K to be broadly applicable.
“There is no physiological basis to expect a different result in patients undergoing different types of cardiac surgery,” he said.
The primary endpoint was clinically and electrocardiography confirmed new-onset atrial fibrillation that occurred in the 5 days after the bypass procedure.
For the primary atrial fibrillation endpoint, event rates were similar in the tight-control and the relaxed-control groups (26.2% vs 27.8%); the 1.7% difference did not approach statistical significance (P = .44). The difference in dysrhythmias other than atrial fibrillation, although numerically lower in the tight-control group, was also not significant (19.1% vs 21.1%; P = .26).
There were no significant differences in several secondary endpoints, including length of hospital stay and in-patient mortality, but cost, a prespecified secondary endpoint, was approximately $120 lower per patient in the relaxed-control group than in the tight-control group (P < .001).
Lowering Cost Across Cardiac Surgeries
During the 5-day follow-up, median potassium levels were higher in the tight-control group. Levels in both groups fell gradually, but essentially in parallel, over the study period, so median potassium levels were always higher in the tight-control group than in the relaxed-control group. At the end of the observation period, mean potassium levels were 4.34 mEq/L in the tight-control group and 4.08 mEq/L in the relaxed-control group.
Prior to the development of atrial fibrillation, participants in the tight-control group received a medium of seven potassium administrations (range, 4-12), whereas those in the relaxed-control group received a medium of zero.
There were no significant differences in episodes in any subgroup evaluated, including those divided by age, sex, baseline left ventricular ejection fraction, and the absence or presence of beta blockers or loop diuretics. A per-protocol analysis also failed to show any advantage for tight potassium control.
Atrial fibrillation occurs in about one third of patients after bypass surgery, as it does after many types of cardiac surgery. Institutions often have strategies in place to reduce the risk after cardiac surgery, and potassium supplementation is one of the most common, despite the lack of supportive evidence, Dr. O’Brien said.
Narrow Window for Optimal Potassium Levels
The difference in potassium levels between the tight-control group and the relaxed-control group were modest in this study, said Subodh Verma, MD, a cardiac surgeon at St Michael’s Hospital and professor at the University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
However, this is unavoidable and central to the question being posed, Dr. O’Brien pointed out. Because of the risks for both hypokalemia and hyperkalemia, the window for safe supplementation is short. Current practice is to achieve high-normal levels to reduce atrial fibrillation, but TIGHT-K demonstrates this has no benefit.
The conclusion of TIGHT-K is appropriate, said Faiez Zannad, MD, PhD, professor of therapeutics in the Division of Cardiology at the University of Lorraine in Nancy, France, who praised the design and conduct of the study.
He acknowledged an unmet need for effective methods to reduce the risk for atrial fibrillation after cardiac surgery, but the ESC invited discussant said it is now necessary to look at other strategies. Several are under current evaluation, such as supplementary magnesium and the use of sodium-glucose transporter-2 inhibitors.
Although Dr. Zannad encouraged more studies of methods to reduce atrial fibrillation risk after cardiac surgery, he said that TIGHT-K has answered the question of whether potassium supplementation is beneficial.
Potassium supplementation should no longer be offered, he said, which will “reduce healthcare costs and decrease patient risk from an unnecessary intervention.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
LONDON —
“The widespread practice of giving patients potassium after bypass heart surgery even though their blood levels are within the normal range can be abandoned,” said Benjamin O’Brien, MD, PhD, director of the Clinic for Cardioanesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine at Charité Hospital in Berlin, Germany.
Results from the randomized TIGHT-K trial that assessed two levels of potassium supplementation were presented at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology.
In the tight-control group, supplementation was provided to maintain high-normal levels of potassium (> 4.5 mEq/L). In the relaxed-control group, supplementation was provided only when potassium levels fell below the low-normal threshold (< 3.6 mEq/L).
Trial Upending Popular Practice
The multinational trial involved 23 centers in Germany and the United Kingdom. All 1690 participants enrolled were scheduled to undergo a coronary artery bypass graft procedure, but Dr. O’Brien said he considers the results of TIGHT-K to be broadly applicable.
“There is no physiological basis to expect a different result in patients undergoing different types of cardiac surgery,” he said.
The primary endpoint was clinically and electrocardiography confirmed new-onset atrial fibrillation that occurred in the 5 days after the bypass procedure.
For the primary atrial fibrillation endpoint, event rates were similar in the tight-control and the relaxed-control groups (26.2% vs 27.8%); the 1.7% difference did not approach statistical significance (P = .44). The difference in dysrhythmias other than atrial fibrillation, although numerically lower in the tight-control group, was also not significant (19.1% vs 21.1%; P = .26).
There were no significant differences in several secondary endpoints, including length of hospital stay and in-patient mortality, but cost, a prespecified secondary endpoint, was approximately $120 lower per patient in the relaxed-control group than in the tight-control group (P < .001).
Lowering Cost Across Cardiac Surgeries
During the 5-day follow-up, median potassium levels were higher in the tight-control group. Levels in both groups fell gradually, but essentially in parallel, over the study period, so median potassium levels were always higher in the tight-control group than in the relaxed-control group. At the end of the observation period, mean potassium levels were 4.34 mEq/L in the tight-control group and 4.08 mEq/L in the relaxed-control group.
Prior to the development of atrial fibrillation, participants in the tight-control group received a medium of seven potassium administrations (range, 4-12), whereas those in the relaxed-control group received a medium of zero.
There were no significant differences in episodes in any subgroup evaluated, including those divided by age, sex, baseline left ventricular ejection fraction, and the absence or presence of beta blockers or loop diuretics. A per-protocol analysis also failed to show any advantage for tight potassium control.
Atrial fibrillation occurs in about one third of patients after bypass surgery, as it does after many types of cardiac surgery. Institutions often have strategies in place to reduce the risk after cardiac surgery, and potassium supplementation is one of the most common, despite the lack of supportive evidence, Dr. O’Brien said.
Narrow Window for Optimal Potassium Levels
The difference in potassium levels between the tight-control group and the relaxed-control group were modest in this study, said Subodh Verma, MD, a cardiac surgeon at St Michael’s Hospital and professor at the University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
However, this is unavoidable and central to the question being posed, Dr. O’Brien pointed out. Because of the risks for both hypokalemia and hyperkalemia, the window for safe supplementation is short. Current practice is to achieve high-normal levels to reduce atrial fibrillation, but TIGHT-K demonstrates this has no benefit.
The conclusion of TIGHT-K is appropriate, said Faiez Zannad, MD, PhD, professor of therapeutics in the Division of Cardiology at the University of Lorraine in Nancy, France, who praised the design and conduct of the study.
He acknowledged an unmet need for effective methods to reduce the risk for atrial fibrillation after cardiac surgery, but the ESC invited discussant said it is now necessary to look at other strategies. Several are under current evaluation, such as supplementary magnesium and the use of sodium-glucose transporter-2 inhibitors.
Although Dr. Zannad encouraged more studies of methods to reduce atrial fibrillation risk after cardiac surgery, he said that TIGHT-K has answered the question of whether potassium supplementation is beneficial.
Potassium supplementation should no longer be offered, he said, which will “reduce healthcare costs and decrease patient risk from an unnecessary intervention.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM ESC CONGRESS 2024
New AFib Guidelines Address Underlying Illness, Comorbidities
LONDON — Updated guidelines for the management of atrial fibrillation released by the European Society of Cardiology are revamping the approach to care for this complex, multifactorial disease.
It is not just appropriate to place the same emphasis on the control of comorbidities as on the rhythm disturbance, it is critical, said Dr. Van Gelder, who served as chair of the ESC-AF guidelines task force.
Comorbidities are the drivers of both the onset and recurrence of atrial fibrillation, and a dynamic approach to comorbidities is “central for the success of AF management.”
Class I Recommendation
In fact, on the basis of overwhelming evidence, a class I recommendation has been issued for a large number of goals in the comorbidity and risk factor management step of atrial fibrillation management, including those for hypertension, components of heart failure, obesity, diabetes, alcohol consumption, and exercise.
Sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 (SGLT2) inhibitors “should be offered to all patients with AF,” according to Dr. Van Gelder, who identified this as a new class I recommendation.
Patients who are not managed aggressively for the listed comorbidities ultimately face “treatment failure, poor patient outcomes, and a waste of healthcare resources,” she said.
Control of sleep apnea is also noted as a key target, although Van Gelder acknowledged that the supporting evidence only allows for a class IIb recommendation.
Control of comorbidities is not a new idea. In the 2023 joint guideline, led by a consortium of professional groups, including the American Heart Association (AHA) and the American College of Cardiology (ACC), the control of comorbidities, including most of those identified in the new ESC guidelines, was second in a list of 10 key take-home messages.
However, the new ESC guidelines have prioritized comorbidity management by listing it first in each of the specific patient-care pathways developed to define optimized care.
These pathways, defined in algorithms for newly diagnosed AF, paroxysmal AF, and persistent AF, always start with the assessment of comorbidities, followed by step A — avoiding stroke — largely with anticoagulation.
Direct oral anticoagulants should be used, “except in those with a mechanical valve or mitral stenosis,” Dr. Van Gelder said. This includes, essentially, all patients with a CHA2DS2-VASc score of 2 or greater, and it should be “considered” in those with a score of 1.
The ESC framework has been identified with the acronym AF-CARE, in which the C stands for comorbidities.
In the A step of the framework, identifying and treating all modifiable bleeding risk factors in AF patients is a class I recommendation. On the basis of a class III recommendation, she cautioned against withholding anticoagulants because of CHA2DS2-VASc risk factors alone. Rather, Dr. Van Gelder called the decision to administer or withhold anticoagulation — like all decisions — one that should be individualized in consultation with the patient.
For reducing AF symptoms and rhythm control, the specific pathways diverge for newly diagnosed AF, paroxysmal AF, and persistent AF. Like all of the guidelines, the specific options for symptom management and AF ablation are color coded, with green signifying level 1 evidence.
The evaluation and dynamic reassessment step refers to the need to periodically assess patients for new modifiable risk factors related to comorbidities, risk for stroke, risk for bleeding, and risk for AF.
The management of risk factors for AF has long been emphasized in guidelines, but a previous focus on AF with attention to comorbidities has been replaced by a focus on comorbidities with an expectation of more durable AF control. The success of this pivot is based on multidisciplinary care, chosen in collaboration with the patient, to reduce or eliminate the triggers of AF and the risks of its complications.
Pathways Are Appropriate for All Patients
A very important recommendation — and this is new — is “to treat all our patients with atrial fibrillation, whether they are young or old, men or women, Black or White, or at high or low risk, according to our patient-centered integrated AF-CARE approach,” Dr. Van Gelder said.
The changes reflect a shared appreciation for the tight relation between the control of comorbidities and the control of AF, according to José A. Joglar, MD, professor of cardiac electrophysiologic research at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. Dr. Joglar was chair of the writing committee for the joint 2023 AF guidelines released by the AHA, ACC, the American College of Clinical Pharmacy, and the Heart Rhythm Society.
“It is increasingly clear that AF in many cases is the consequence of underlying risk factors and comorbidities, which cannot be separated from AF alone,” Dr. Joglar explained in an interview.
This was placed first “to emphasize the importance of viewing AFib as a complex disease that requires a holistic, multidisciplinary approach to care, as opposed to being viewed just as a rhythm abnormality,” he said.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
LONDON — Updated guidelines for the management of atrial fibrillation released by the European Society of Cardiology are revamping the approach to care for this complex, multifactorial disease.
It is not just appropriate to place the same emphasis on the control of comorbidities as on the rhythm disturbance, it is critical, said Dr. Van Gelder, who served as chair of the ESC-AF guidelines task force.
Comorbidities are the drivers of both the onset and recurrence of atrial fibrillation, and a dynamic approach to comorbidities is “central for the success of AF management.”
Class I Recommendation
In fact, on the basis of overwhelming evidence, a class I recommendation has been issued for a large number of goals in the comorbidity and risk factor management step of atrial fibrillation management, including those for hypertension, components of heart failure, obesity, diabetes, alcohol consumption, and exercise.
Sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 (SGLT2) inhibitors “should be offered to all patients with AF,” according to Dr. Van Gelder, who identified this as a new class I recommendation.
Patients who are not managed aggressively for the listed comorbidities ultimately face “treatment failure, poor patient outcomes, and a waste of healthcare resources,” she said.
Control of sleep apnea is also noted as a key target, although Van Gelder acknowledged that the supporting evidence only allows for a class IIb recommendation.
Control of comorbidities is not a new idea. In the 2023 joint guideline, led by a consortium of professional groups, including the American Heart Association (AHA) and the American College of Cardiology (ACC), the control of comorbidities, including most of those identified in the new ESC guidelines, was second in a list of 10 key take-home messages.
However, the new ESC guidelines have prioritized comorbidity management by listing it first in each of the specific patient-care pathways developed to define optimized care.
These pathways, defined in algorithms for newly diagnosed AF, paroxysmal AF, and persistent AF, always start with the assessment of comorbidities, followed by step A — avoiding stroke — largely with anticoagulation.
Direct oral anticoagulants should be used, “except in those with a mechanical valve or mitral stenosis,” Dr. Van Gelder said. This includes, essentially, all patients with a CHA2DS2-VASc score of 2 or greater, and it should be “considered” in those with a score of 1.
The ESC framework has been identified with the acronym AF-CARE, in which the C stands for comorbidities.
In the A step of the framework, identifying and treating all modifiable bleeding risk factors in AF patients is a class I recommendation. On the basis of a class III recommendation, she cautioned against withholding anticoagulants because of CHA2DS2-VASc risk factors alone. Rather, Dr. Van Gelder called the decision to administer or withhold anticoagulation — like all decisions — one that should be individualized in consultation with the patient.
For reducing AF symptoms and rhythm control, the specific pathways diverge for newly diagnosed AF, paroxysmal AF, and persistent AF. Like all of the guidelines, the specific options for symptom management and AF ablation are color coded, with green signifying level 1 evidence.
The evaluation and dynamic reassessment step refers to the need to periodically assess patients for new modifiable risk factors related to comorbidities, risk for stroke, risk for bleeding, and risk for AF.
The management of risk factors for AF has long been emphasized in guidelines, but a previous focus on AF with attention to comorbidities has been replaced by a focus on comorbidities with an expectation of more durable AF control. The success of this pivot is based on multidisciplinary care, chosen in collaboration with the patient, to reduce or eliminate the triggers of AF and the risks of its complications.
Pathways Are Appropriate for All Patients
A very important recommendation — and this is new — is “to treat all our patients with atrial fibrillation, whether they are young or old, men or women, Black or White, or at high or low risk, according to our patient-centered integrated AF-CARE approach,” Dr. Van Gelder said.
The changes reflect a shared appreciation for the tight relation between the control of comorbidities and the control of AF, according to José A. Joglar, MD, professor of cardiac electrophysiologic research at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. Dr. Joglar was chair of the writing committee for the joint 2023 AF guidelines released by the AHA, ACC, the American College of Clinical Pharmacy, and the Heart Rhythm Society.
“It is increasingly clear that AF in many cases is the consequence of underlying risk factors and comorbidities, which cannot be separated from AF alone,” Dr. Joglar explained in an interview.
This was placed first “to emphasize the importance of viewing AFib as a complex disease that requires a holistic, multidisciplinary approach to care, as opposed to being viewed just as a rhythm abnormality,” he said.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
LONDON — Updated guidelines for the management of atrial fibrillation released by the European Society of Cardiology are revamping the approach to care for this complex, multifactorial disease.
It is not just appropriate to place the same emphasis on the control of comorbidities as on the rhythm disturbance, it is critical, said Dr. Van Gelder, who served as chair of the ESC-AF guidelines task force.
Comorbidities are the drivers of both the onset and recurrence of atrial fibrillation, and a dynamic approach to comorbidities is “central for the success of AF management.”
Class I Recommendation
In fact, on the basis of overwhelming evidence, a class I recommendation has been issued for a large number of goals in the comorbidity and risk factor management step of atrial fibrillation management, including those for hypertension, components of heart failure, obesity, diabetes, alcohol consumption, and exercise.
Sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 (SGLT2) inhibitors “should be offered to all patients with AF,” according to Dr. Van Gelder, who identified this as a new class I recommendation.
Patients who are not managed aggressively for the listed comorbidities ultimately face “treatment failure, poor patient outcomes, and a waste of healthcare resources,” she said.
Control of sleep apnea is also noted as a key target, although Van Gelder acknowledged that the supporting evidence only allows for a class IIb recommendation.
Control of comorbidities is not a new idea. In the 2023 joint guideline, led by a consortium of professional groups, including the American Heart Association (AHA) and the American College of Cardiology (ACC), the control of comorbidities, including most of those identified in the new ESC guidelines, was second in a list of 10 key take-home messages.
However, the new ESC guidelines have prioritized comorbidity management by listing it first in each of the specific patient-care pathways developed to define optimized care.
These pathways, defined in algorithms for newly diagnosed AF, paroxysmal AF, and persistent AF, always start with the assessment of comorbidities, followed by step A — avoiding stroke — largely with anticoagulation.
Direct oral anticoagulants should be used, “except in those with a mechanical valve or mitral stenosis,” Dr. Van Gelder said. This includes, essentially, all patients with a CHA2DS2-VASc score of 2 or greater, and it should be “considered” in those with a score of 1.
The ESC framework has been identified with the acronym AF-CARE, in which the C stands for comorbidities.
In the A step of the framework, identifying and treating all modifiable bleeding risk factors in AF patients is a class I recommendation. On the basis of a class III recommendation, she cautioned against withholding anticoagulants because of CHA2DS2-VASc risk factors alone. Rather, Dr. Van Gelder called the decision to administer or withhold anticoagulation — like all decisions — one that should be individualized in consultation with the patient.
For reducing AF symptoms and rhythm control, the specific pathways diverge for newly diagnosed AF, paroxysmal AF, and persistent AF. Like all of the guidelines, the specific options for symptom management and AF ablation are color coded, with green signifying level 1 evidence.
The evaluation and dynamic reassessment step refers to the need to periodically assess patients for new modifiable risk factors related to comorbidities, risk for stroke, risk for bleeding, and risk for AF.
The management of risk factors for AF has long been emphasized in guidelines, but a previous focus on AF with attention to comorbidities has been replaced by a focus on comorbidities with an expectation of more durable AF control. The success of this pivot is based on multidisciplinary care, chosen in collaboration with the patient, to reduce or eliminate the triggers of AF and the risks of its complications.
Pathways Are Appropriate for All Patients
A very important recommendation — and this is new — is “to treat all our patients with atrial fibrillation, whether they are young or old, men or women, Black or White, or at high or low risk, according to our patient-centered integrated AF-CARE approach,” Dr. Van Gelder said.
The changes reflect a shared appreciation for the tight relation between the control of comorbidities and the control of AF, according to José A. Joglar, MD, professor of cardiac electrophysiologic research at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. Dr. Joglar was chair of the writing committee for the joint 2023 AF guidelines released by the AHA, ACC, the American College of Clinical Pharmacy, and the Heart Rhythm Society.
“It is increasingly clear that AF in many cases is the consequence of underlying risk factors and comorbidities, which cannot be separated from AF alone,” Dr. Joglar explained in an interview.
This was placed first “to emphasize the importance of viewing AFib as a complex disease that requires a holistic, multidisciplinary approach to care, as opposed to being viewed just as a rhythm abnormality,” he said.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM ESC 2024
Less Invasive, Overlooked Option in Cardiac Surgery May Offer Benefit
Compared with traditional replacement valves, sutureless valves placed through minimally invasive cardiac surgery have less data supporting their use but offer unique features that might make them the preferred option for certain patients, reported specialists.
The sutureless device known as Perceval (Corcym) and a rapidly deployed device called Intuity (Edwards Lifesciences) are used as an alternative to surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR) and transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR). But despite being commercially available since 2016, the devices are still not being used much.
The devices are not discussed in substantial detail in either the joint guidelines from the American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association issued in 2020 or guidelines from the European Society of Cardiology issued in 2022.
Cristiano Spadaccio, MD, PhD, a cardiothoracic surgeon associated with Lancashire Cardiac Centre in Blackpool, England, and his colleagues reviewed the small number of studies evaluating the alternate approach to “make the cardiology world aware” of alternatives “that can relieve the surgical burden by minimizing the implantation time and length of the operation,” he said.
The comprehensive review is published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
A Neglected Alternative
The sutureless Perceval device is held in place by a stent frame that self-expands. The Intuity device also relies primarily on its framework to anchor the valve in place but does involve three sutures. Both devices are still referred to as sutureless in the new review of them.
Only a small number of centers perform minimally invasive cardiac surgeries, and the main advantage of the devices — rapid deployment — has been eroded with the advent of automated knotting which has significantly reduced the time to implant and sutured valve.
The underuse of these devices is largely caused by the limited amount of comparative and prospective data, said Dr. Spadaccio. “The entire literature on sutureless aortic valve replacement with the exception of one randomized controlled trial is observational.”
That trial, PERSIST-AVR, found that the sutureless valves were just as good as conventional ones when it comes to major adverse cardiovascular events including all-cause death, myocardial infarction, stroke, or valve reintervention at 1 year.
In a subanalysis limited to patients who had isolated aortic valve replacement, the sutureless procedure was associated with lower adverse events (5.2% vs 10.8%) at the cost of a higher rate of pacemaker implantation (11% vs 1.6%).
There are also multiple retrospective studies and registries that have generated observational data comparing sutureless aortic valve replacement with SAVR and TAVR in various patient populations, said Dr. Spadaccio, and the review was based on more than a dozen studies published since 2015. Long-term follow-up data for sutureless aortic valve replacements, which now exceeds 10 years, suggest rates of structural valve deterioration and reintervention have been acceptably low.
The minimally invasive procedures have other advantages too. For example, relative to the greater trauma associated with open heart surgery, minimally invasive surgeries typically involve faster recovery, an advantage likely to appeal to many patients who are candidates for either.
Quicker Recovery
Collectively, these data suggest that sutureless aortic valve replacement might be a reasonable or even a more appropriate alternative to either SAVR or TAVR when considering specific patient characteristics and goals, according to the review, which included an algorithm identifying specifically where sutureless aortic valve replacement fits with SAVR and TAVR.
“The algorithm is based on different clinical scenarios and reflects current guidelines for SAVR,” said Dr. Spadaccio. For example, current guidelines identify SAVR as preferred in patients younger than 65 years and in older patients with a low Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) score, but there are many instances in which sutureless aortic valve replacement might be more attractive, such as in those also undergoing mitral valve repair, coronary artery bypass grafting, or another surgical procedure.
Dr. Spadaccio said that the STS score should not be considered in isolation when evaluating a patient for SAVR or TAVR. Other features such as mobility, frailty score, and comorbid liver or renal disease should also be considered when discussing the three options with patients. As a result, the algorithm emphasizes a detailed evaluation of patient characteristics in selecting one procedure over another.
“The treatment should be really tailored on the individual patient basis,” said Dr. Spadaccio.
Dr. Spadaccio acknowledged that there is a need for more comparative trials, particularly in regard to sutureless aortic valve replacement as an alternative to TAVR. “I really think that a 1:1 RCT on sutureless aortic valve replacement vs TAVR could give better answers to all of these interrogatives.”
But despite the limitations outlined in this review, Dr. Spadaccio and colleagues challenged the perception that current data are not sufficient to allow clinicians to consider sutureless aortic valve replacement in the mix of options.
A Viable Option
This comprehensive summary of what is known about sutureless aortic valve replacement compared with the other options addresses an important knowledge gap, said S. Chris Malaisrie, MD, a cardiac surgeon at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois.
He said he agrees this option has unique qualities. “Minimally invasive surgery has been largely ignored by guideline writers, but patients certainly demand options that are less invasive than standard open heart surgery. Sutureless and rapid deployment valves facilitate minimally invasive surgery and offer an advantageous option for younger patients.”
Dr. Malaisrie said the review is generating discussion about a potentially valuable option within the cardiology community. And that is exactly what Dr. Spadaccio was hoping for. “This paper was meant to educate as much as possible on these details to assist and inform decision-making,” he said.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Compared with traditional replacement valves, sutureless valves placed through minimally invasive cardiac surgery have less data supporting their use but offer unique features that might make them the preferred option for certain patients, reported specialists.
The sutureless device known as Perceval (Corcym) and a rapidly deployed device called Intuity (Edwards Lifesciences) are used as an alternative to surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR) and transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR). But despite being commercially available since 2016, the devices are still not being used much.
The devices are not discussed in substantial detail in either the joint guidelines from the American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association issued in 2020 or guidelines from the European Society of Cardiology issued in 2022.
Cristiano Spadaccio, MD, PhD, a cardiothoracic surgeon associated with Lancashire Cardiac Centre in Blackpool, England, and his colleagues reviewed the small number of studies evaluating the alternate approach to “make the cardiology world aware” of alternatives “that can relieve the surgical burden by minimizing the implantation time and length of the operation,” he said.
The comprehensive review is published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
A Neglected Alternative
The sutureless Perceval device is held in place by a stent frame that self-expands. The Intuity device also relies primarily on its framework to anchor the valve in place but does involve three sutures. Both devices are still referred to as sutureless in the new review of them.
Only a small number of centers perform minimally invasive cardiac surgeries, and the main advantage of the devices — rapid deployment — has been eroded with the advent of automated knotting which has significantly reduced the time to implant and sutured valve.
The underuse of these devices is largely caused by the limited amount of comparative and prospective data, said Dr. Spadaccio. “The entire literature on sutureless aortic valve replacement with the exception of one randomized controlled trial is observational.”
That trial, PERSIST-AVR, found that the sutureless valves were just as good as conventional ones when it comes to major adverse cardiovascular events including all-cause death, myocardial infarction, stroke, or valve reintervention at 1 year.
In a subanalysis limited to patients who had isolated aortic valve replacement, the sutureless procedure was associated with lower adverse events (5.2% vs 10.8%) at the cost of a higher rate of pacemaker implantation (11% vs 1.6%).
There are also multiple retrospective studies and registries that have generated observational data comparing sutureless aortic valve replacement with SAVR and TAVR in various patient populations, said Dr. Spadaccio, and the review was based on more than a dozen studies published since 2015. Long-term follow-up data for sutureless aortic valve replacements, which now exceeds 10 years, suggest rates of structural valve deterioration and reintervention have been acceptably low.
The minimally invasive procedures have other advantages too. For example, relative to the greater trauma associated with open heart surgery, minimally invasive surgeries typically involve faster recovery, an advantage likely to appeal to many patients who are candidates for either.
Quicker Recovery
Collectively, these data suggest that sutureless aortic valve replacement might be a reasonable or even a more appropriate alternative to either SAVR or TAVR when considering specific patient characteristics and goals, according to the review, which included an algorithm identifying specifically where sutureless aortic valve replacement fits with SAVR and TAVR.
“The algorithm is based on different clinical scenarios and reflects current guidelines for SAVR,” said Dr. Spadaccio. For example, current guidelines identify SAVR as preferred in patients younger than 65 years and in older patients with a low Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) score, but there are many instances in which sutureless aortic valve replacement might be more attractive, such as in those also undergoing mitral valve repair, coronary artery bypass grafting, or another surgical procedure.
Dr. Spadaccio said that the STS score should not be considered in isolation when evaluating a patient for SAVR or TAVR. Other features such as mobility, frailty score, and comorbid liver or renal disease should also be considered when discussing the three options with patients. As a result, the algorithm emphasizes a detailed evaluation of patient characteristics in selecting one procedure over another.
“The treatment should be really tailored on the individual patient basis,” said Dr. Spadaccio.
Dr. Spadaccio acknowledged that there is a need for more comparative trials, particularly in regard to sutureless aortic valve replacement as an alternative to TAVR. “I really think that a 1:1 RCT on sutureless aortic valve replacement vs TAVR could give better answers to all of these interrogatives.”
But despite the limitations outlined in this review, Dr. Spadaccio and colleagues challenged the perception that current data are not sufficient to allow clinicians to consider sutureless aortic valve replacement in the mix of options.
A Viable Option
This comprehensive summary of what is known about sutureless aortic valve replacement compared with the other options addresses an important knowledge gap, said S. Chris Malaisrie, MD, a cardiac surgeon at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois.
He said he agrees this option has unique qualities. “Minimally invasive surgery has been largely ignored by guideline writers, but patients certainly demand options that are less invasive than standard open heart surgery. Sutureless and rapid deployment valves facilitate minimally invasive surgery and offer an advantageous option for younger patients.”
Dr. Malaisrie said the review is generating discussion about a potentially valuable option within the cardiology community. And that is exactly what Dr. Spadaccio was hoping for. “This paper was meant to educate as much as possible on these details to assist and inform decision-making,” he said.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Compared with traditional replacement valves, sutureless valves placed through minimally invasive cardiac surgery have less data supporting their use but offer unique features that might make them the preferred option for certain patients, reported specialists.
The sutureless device known as Perceval (Corcym) and a rapidly deployed device called Intuity (Edwards Lifesciences) are used as an alternative to surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR) and transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR). But despite being commercially available since 2016, the devices are still not being used much.
The devices are not discussed in substantial detail in either the joint guidelines from the American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association issued in 2020 or guidelines from the European Society of Cardiology issued in 2022.
Cristiano Spadaccio, MD, PhD, a cardiothoracic surgeon associated with Lancashire Cardiac Centre in Blackpool, England, and his colleagues reviewed the small number of studies evaluating the alternate approach to “make the cardiology world aware” of alternatives “that can relieve the surgical burden by minimizing the implantation time and length of the operation,” he said.
The comprehensive review is published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
A Neglected Alternative
The sutureless Perceval device is held in place by a stent frame that self-expands. The Intuity device also relies primarily on its framework to anchor the valve in place but does involve three sutures. Both devices are still referred to as sutureless in the new review of them.
Only a small number of centers perform minimally invasive cardiac surgeries, and the main advantage of the devices — rapid deployment — has been eroded with the advent of automated knotting which has significantly reduced the time to implant and sutured valve.
The underuse of these devices is largely caused by the limited amount of comparative and prospective data, said Dr. Spadaccio. “The entire literature on sutureless aortic valve replacement with the exception of one randomized controlled trial is observational.”
That trial, PERSIST-AVR, found that the sutureless valves were just as good as conventional ones when it comes to major adverse cardiovascular events including all-cause death, myocardial infarction, stroke, or valve reintervention at 1 year.
In a subanalysis limited to patients who had isolated aortic valve replacement, the sutureless procedure was associated with lower adverse events (5.2% vs 10.8%) at the cost of a higher rate of pacemaker implantation (11% vs 1.6%).
There are also multiple retrospective studies and registries that have generated observational data comparing sutureless aortic valve replacement with SAVR and TAVR in various patient populations, said Dr. Spadaccio, and the review was based on more than a dozen studies published since 2015. Long-term follow-up data for sutureless aortic valve replacements, which now exceeds 10 years, suggest rates of structural valve deterioration and reintervention have been acceptably low.
The minimally invasive procedures have other advantages too. For example, relative to the greater trauma associated with open heart surgery, minimally invasive surgeries typically involve faster recovery, an advantage likely to appeal to many patients who are candidates for either.
Quicker Recovery
Collectively, these data suggest that sutureless aortic valve replacement might be a reasonable or even a more appropriate alternative to either SAVR or TAVR when considering specific patient characteristics and goals, according to the review, which included an algorithm identifying specifically where sutureless aortic valve replacement fits with SAVR and TAVR.
“The algorithm is based on different clinical scenarios and reflects current guidelines for SAVR,” said Dr. Spadaccio. For example, current guidelines identify SAVR as preferred in patients younger than 65 years and in older patients with a low Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) score, but there are many instances in which sutureless aortic valve replacement might be more attractive, such as in those also undergoing mitral valve repair, coronary artery bypass grafting, or another surgical procedure.
Dr. Spadaccio said that the STS score should not be considered in isolation when evaluating a patient for SAVR or TAVR. Other features such as mobility, frailty score, and comorbid liver or renal disease should also be considered when discussing the three options with patients. As a result, the algorithm emphasizes a detailed evaluation of patient characteristics in selecting one procedure over another.
“The treatment should be really tailored on the individual patient basis,” said Dr. Spadaccio.
Dr. Spadaccio acknowledged that there is a need for more comparative trials, particularly in regard to sutureless aortic valve replacement as an alternative to TAVR. “I really think that a 1:1 RCT on sutureless aortic valve replacement vs TAVR could give better answers to all of these interrogatives.”
But despite the limitations outlined in this review, Dr. Spadaccio and colleagues challenged the perception that current data are not sufficient to allow clinicians to consider sutureless aortic valve replacement in the mix of options.
A Viable Option
This comprehensive summary of what is known about sutureless aortic valve replacement compared with the other options addresses an important knowledge gap, said S. Chris Malaisrie, MD, a cardiac surgeon at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois.
He said he agrees this option has unique qualities. “Minimally invasive surgery has been largely ignored by guideline writers, but patients certainly demand options that are less invasive than standard open heart surgery. Sutureless and rapid deployment valves facilitate minimally invasive surgery and offer an advantageous option for younger patients.”
Dr. Malaisrie said the review is generating discussion about a potentially valuable option within the cardiology community. And that is exactly what Dr. Spadaccio was hoping for. “This paper was meant to educate as much as possible on these details to assist and inform decision-making,” he said.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM THE JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY
Gout Drugs in Late-Phase Trials Might Increase Patients at Target Urate Level
VIENNA — Safe and effective options for lowering serum uric acid (sUA) in patients with gout who are refractory to conventional therapies appear to be near, judging from phase 2 and 3 trials that produced positive results at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology.
Reports from the meeting included two phase 2 studies with novel urate anion transporter 1 (URAT1) inhibitors for patients with refractory gout, in addition to extension data from the phase 3 trial program for SEL-212. In all cases, efficacy appeared to be on the same order of currently available drugs with potentially better tolerability, an important unmet need for patients with gout refractory to traditional therapies.
12-Month Outcomes With SEL-212
The extension data with SEL-212 follow the 6-month results presented from the DISSOLVE I and II trials at EULAR 2023. Now at 12 months, the benefits have proven to be generally sustained with no new safety signals, according to Herbert S.B. Baraf, MD, The Center for Rheumatology and Bone Research, Wheaton, Maryland.
SEL-212 is a drug platform involving two components delivered by intravenous infusion once monthly in sequence. The first, SEL-110, consists of tolerogenic nanoparticles containing sirolimus. The second, SEL-037, is the pegylated uricase pegadricase.
On the 1-month dosing schedule, most patients who had responded at 6 months were still responding at 12 months, and both of the two study doses of SEL-212 in the DISSOLVE trials were well tolerated over the extension, Dr. Baraf reported.
On the basis of the data so far, “this will be an effective and well tolerated therapy for refractory gout over a period of at least 12 months,” Dr. Baraf said.
The DISSOLVE I and II trials were identically designed. Patients with refractory gout, defined as failure to normalize sUA or control symptoms with a xanthine oxidase inhibitor, were randomly assigned to receive 0.15 mg SEL-212, 1.0 mg SEL-212, or placebo.
There was a stopping rule for patients who reached a sUA level < 2 mg/dL 1 hour after the infusion.
The primary endpoint was sUA level < 6 mg/dL for at least 80% of the sixth month of the 6-month trial. About 50% of patients on either dose of SEL-212 met this endpoint (vs 4% of those receiving placebo; P < .0001). There was a numerical advantage for the higher dose in both studies.
Patients who completed the 6-month trial were eligible for a 6-month extension, during which they remained on their assigned therapy, including placebo. This phase was also blinded. Patients who met the stopping rule in either the main study or extension did not take the study drug but remained in the study for final analysis.
Of the 265 patients who participated in the main phase of the study, 143 (54%) completed the 6-month extension. Most discontinuations were the result of the stopping rule. Reasons for other patients discontinuing the study included withdrawal of consent in about 10% of each treatment arm and adverse events in 13.8%, 6.8%, and 2.2% of the high-dose, low-dose, and placebo groups, respectively.
At 12 months, when the data from the two trials were pooled, the proportion of patients on therapy and responding remained at about 50% in the high-dose group and 43% in the low-dose group on an intention-to-treat analysis. Relative to the 8% response rate for placebo, the advantage for either dose was highly significant (P < .0001).
In the subgroup of patients with tophi at baseline, representing about half the study group, responses were low at 12 months, whether on high- (41%) or low-dose (43%) SEL-212. The rate of response among placebo patients with baseline tophi was 9%.
Safety of SEL-212
The safety over the 6-month extension did not differ substantially from that observed during the first 6 months, according to Dr. Baraf. This was reiterated in more detail by Alan Kivitz, MD, Altoona Center for Clinical Research, Duncansville, Pennsylvania. He delivered a separate safety presentation focused on DISSOLVE I.
Specifically, there were no serious adverse events thought to be related to treatment. Besides gout flares, which affected approximately 27% of patients regardless of active treatment or placebo assignment, the most common adverse effect was hypertriglyceridemia, which was observed in 5.4% of patients on active treatment vs 0% of those receiving placebo. Independent of the treatment arm, less than 5% of patients developed stomatitis or cellulitis during the 6-month extension period.
In the 6-month extension phase, there were no infusion reactions observed within 1 hour after SEL-212 administration and just two overall that occurred with low-dose SEL-212, according to Kivitz.
New Selective URAT1 Inhibitors
The other potential advance in the treatment of refractory gout is coming from newer selective URAT1 inhibitors. According to the lead investigators of two phase 2 trials evaluating a novel URAT1 inhibitor, the urate transporter protein has long been considered the most promising target for gout treatment. As this protein regulates the absorption of uric acid from the renal tubule, it has a direct uric acid–lowering effect. However, the adverse events of current agents, such as probenecid, benzbromarone, and sulfinpyrazone, have created a need for drugs with a better benefit-to-risk ratio.
In one of two multicenter phase 2 studies on refractory gout, the experimental agent ruzinurad was tested as an adjunct to the xanthine oxidase inhibitor febuxostat. In the other, the objective was to evaluate whether the experimental agent AR882 or AR882 plus allopurinol is better than allopurinol alone for reducing tophi at 12 months.
Ruzinurad Plus Febuxostat
In the ruzinurad trial, 151 patients with symptomatic gout and elevated sUA (> 6 mg/dL) for at least 6 weeks on stable doses of febuxostat were randomized to receive 5 mg ruzinurad, 10 mg ruzinurad, or placebo. All remained on febuxostat. In the active treatment arms, the starting ruzinurad dose was 1 mg before titrating up to the assigned target.
For the primary endpoint of sUA < 6 mg/dL at 12 weeks, the rates were 56.9%, 53.1%, and 13.7% in the high-dose, low-dose, and placebo groups, respectively (P < .0001 for both ruzinurad arms), reported Huihua Ding, MD, a clinician and researcher at Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, China.
“Consistently, subgroup analyses based on baseline eGFR [estimated glomerular filtration rate], sUA, and tophus demonstrated superior effective of ruzinurad plus febuxostat over placebo plus febuxostat,” reported Dr. Ding, who noted that previous clinical studies suggested the potential for synergism between ruzinurad and febuxostat.
The proportion of patients achieving the more rigorous target of < 0.5 mg/dL was also higher with the higher and lower doses of ruzinurad vs placebo (43.1% and 38.8% vs 9.8%, respectively).
The proportion of patients with treatment-emergent side effects did not differ between the three groups. The most common were gout flares, which were observed in 39.2%, 49.0%, and 45.1% in the high-dose, low-dose, and placebo groups, respectively. Most adverse events were mild or moderate, and none led to treatment discontinuation.
The favorable benefit-to-risk profile of ruzinurad was attributed by Dr. Ding to its high relative selectivity and potent inhibition of URAT1, an advantage that might be relevant to avoiding side effects at higher doses.
AR882 in Patients With Tophi
In the trial with AR882, 42 patients with refractory gout and at least one subcutaneous tophus were randomized to receive 75 mg AR882, 50 mg AR882 plus allopurinol, or allopurinol alone. All drugs were taken once daily. Doses of allopurinol of up to 300 mg were permitted.
The changes in the target tophus area and crystal volume at month 6 were compared, and patients who completed this phase were invited into a 6-month extension. In the 6-month extension, 75 mg AR882 was additionally provided to those who had been in the single-agent allopurinol arm. The other arms were unchanged.
Tophi measurements were performed with calipers at regular intervals. Change from baseline in sUA levels was also an efficacy measure, according to Robert Keenan, MD, chief medical officer of Arthrosi Therapeutics, which is developing AR882.
From average baseline sUA levels of > 9 mg/dL, all three treatments reduced sUA levels by an average of at least 4.5 mg by month 3. At month 6, complete resolution of at least one target tophus was observed in 29% of the group randomized to receive 75 mg AR882 alone, 8% of those randomized to receive 50 mg AR882 plus allopurinol, and 8% of those on allopurinol alone.
At month 12, the average sUA levels were 4.3 mg/dL for 75 mg AR882, 3.7 mg/dL for 50 mg AR882 plus allopurinol, and 2.9 mg/dL for the 75 mg AR882 plus allopurinol extension-switch arm.
At the 12-month mark, the proportions of patients with complete resolution of any tophus were 50.0% for 75 mg AR882, 12.5% for 50 mg AR882 plus allopurinol, and 36.4% for the 75 mg AR882 plus allopurinol extension-switch arm, according to Dr. Keenan.
Compared with allopurinol alone at 6 months, 75 mg AR882 led to a reduction in total urate crystal volume, and this reduction was sustained at 12 months, he added.
Alone or in combination with allopurinol, AR882 was well tolerated. Gout flares were the most common adverse events, but they declined with continued AR882 treatment, according to Dr. Keenan. Diarrhea, headache, and upper respiratory infections were reported but were of mild or moderate severity.
Again, the take-home message from this study, like the other phase 2 study of a novel URAT1 inhibitor, is that these newer drugs might offer a better benefit-to-risk ratio, particularly in those with refractory disease.
“AR882 may offer improved efficacy and better safety compared to existing therapies in the treatment of patients with gout, including those with both clinically visible and subclinical crystal deposition,” Dr. Keenan said.
Dr. Baraf reported financial relationships with Horizon Therapeutics, Fresenius Kabi, Grünenthal, Olatec, Selecta Biosciences, and Sobi, which provided funding for the trials he discussed. Dr. Kivitz also reported a financial relationship with Sobi, which funded the DISSOLVE trials, along with AbbVie, Amgen, Eli Lilly, Flexion, GlaxoSmithKline, and Sanofi Regeneron. Dr. Ding reported no potential conflicts. The study she discussed was funded by Jiangsu Hengrui Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Keenan is an employee of Arthrosi Therapeutics, which provided funding for the trial he presented.
August 1, 2024 — Editor's note: This article has been updated to reflect the correct number of infusion reactions reported in the 6-month extension phase of the DISSOLVE I trial.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
VIENNA — Safe and effective options for lowering serum uric acid (sUA) in patients with gout who are refractory to conventional therapies appear to be near, judging from phase 2 and 3 trials that produced positive results at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology.
Reports from the meeting included two phase 2 studies with novel urate anion transporter 1 (URAT1) inhibitors for patients with refractory gout, in addition to extension data from the phase 3 trial program for SEL-212. In all cases, efficacy appeared to be on the same order of currently available drugs with potentially better tolerability, an important unmet need for patients with gout refractory to traditional therapies.
12-Month Outcomes With SEL-212
The extension data with SEL-212 follow the 6-month results presented from the DISSOLVE I and II trials at EULAR 2023. Now at 12 months, the benefits have proven to be generally sustained with no new safety signals, according to Herbert S.B. Baraf, MD, The Center for Rheumatology and Bone Research, Wheaton, Maryland.
SEL-212 is a drug platform involving two components delivered by intravenous infusion once monthly in sequence. The first, SEL-110, consists of tolerogenic nanoparticles containing sirolimus. The second, SEL-037, is the pegylated uricase pegadricase.
On the 1-month dosing schedule, most patients who had responded at 6 months were still responding at 12 months, and both of the two study doses of SEL-212 in the DISSOLVE trials were well tolerated over the extension, Dr. Baraf reported.
On the basis of the data so far, “this will be an effective and well tolerated therapy for refractory gout over a period of at least 12 months,” Dr. Baraf said.
The DISSOLVE I and II trials were identically designed. Patients with refractory gout, defined as failure to normalize sUA or control symptoms with a xanthine oxidase inhibitor, were randomly assigned to receive 0.15 mg SEL-212, 1.0 mg SEL-212, or placebo.
There was a stopping rule for patients who reached a sUA level < 2 mg/dL 1 hour after the infusion.
The primary endpoint was sUA level < 6 mg/dL for at least 80% of the sixth month of the 6-month trial. About 50% of patients on either dose of SEL-212 met this endpoint (vs 4% of those receiving placebo; P < .0001). There was a numerical advantage for the higher dose in both studies.
Patients who completed the 6-month trial were eligible for a 6-month extension, during which they remained on their assigned therapy, including placebo. This phase was also blinded. Patients who met the stopping rule in either the main study or extension did not take the study drug but remained in the study for final analysis.
Of the 265 patients who participated in the main phase of the study, 143 (54%) completed the 6-month extension. Most discontinuations were the result of the stopping rule. Reasons for other patients discontinuing the study included withdrawal of consent in about 10% of each treatment arm and adverse events in 13.8%, 6.8%, and 2.2% of the high-dose, low-dose, and placebo groups, respectively.
At 12 months, when the data from the two trials were pooled, the proportion of patients on therapy and responding remained at about 50% in the high-dose group and 43% in the low-dose group on an intention-to-treat analysis. Relative to the 8% response rate for placebo, the advantage for either dose was highly significant (P < .0001).
In the subgroup of patients with tophi at baseline, representing about half the study group, responses were low at 12 months, whether on high- (41%) or low-dose (43%) SEL-212. The rate of response among placebo patients with baseline tophi was 9%.
Safety of SEL-212
The safety over the 6-month extension did not differ substantially from that observed during the first 6 months, according to Dr. Baraf. This was reiterated in more detail by Alan Kivitz, MD, Altoona Center for Clinical Research, Duncansville, Pennsylvania. He delivered a separate safety presentation focused on DISSOLVE I.
Specifically, there were no serious adverse events thought to be related to treatment. Besides gout flares, which affected approximately 27% of patients regardless of active treatment or placebo assignment, the most common adverse effect was hypertriglyceridemia, which was observed in 5.4% of patients on active treatment vs 0% of those receiving placebo. Independent of the treatment arm, less than 5% of patients developed stomatitis or cellulitis during the 6-month extension period.
In the 6-month extension phase, there were no infusion reactions observed within 1 hour after SEL-212 administration and just two overall that occurred with low-dose SEL-212, according to Kivitz.
New Selective URAT1 Inhibitors
The other potential advance in the treatment of refractory gout is coming from newer selective URAT1 inhibitors. According to the lead investigators of two phase 2 trials evaluating a novel URAT1 inhibitor, the urate transporter protein has long been considered the most promising target for gout treatment. As this protein regulates the absorption of uric acid from the renal tubule, it has a direct uric acid–lowering effect. However, the adverse events of current agents, such as probenecid, benzbromarone, and sulfinpyrazone, have created a need for drugs with a better benefit-to-risk ratio.
In one of two multicenter phase 2 studies on refractory gout, the experimental agent ruzinurad was tested as an adjunct to the xanthine oxidase inhibitor febuxostat. In the other, the objective was to evaluate whether the experimental agent AR882 or AR882 plus allopurinol is better than allopurinol alone for reducing tophi at 12 months.
Ruzinurad Plus Febuxostat
In the ruzinurad trial, 151 patients with symptomatic gout and elevated sUA (> 6 mg/dL) for at least 6 weeks on stable doses of febuxostat were randomized to receive 5 mg ruzinurad, 10 mg ruzinurad, or placebo. All remained on febuxostat. In the active treatment arms, the starting ruzinurad dose was 1 mg before titrating up to the assigned target.
For the primary endpoint of sUA < 6 mg/dL at 12 weeks, the rates were 56.9%, 53.1%, and 13.7% in the high-dose, low-dose, and placebo groups, respectively (P < .0001 for both ruzinurad arms), reported Huihua Ding, MD, a clinician and researcher at Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, China.
“Consistently, subgroup analyses based on baseline eGFR [estimated glomerular filtration rate], sUA, and tophus demonstrated superior effective of ruzinurad plus febuxostat over placebo plus febuxostat,” reported Dr. Ding, who noted that previous clinical studies suggested the potential for synergism between ruzinurad and febuxostat.
The proportion of patients achieving the more rigorous target of < 0.5 mg/dL was also higher with the higher and lower doses of ruzinurad vs placebo (43.1% and 38.8% vs 9.8%, respectively).
The proportion of patients with treatment-emergent side effects did not differ between the three groups. The most common were gout flares, which were observed in 39.2%, 49.0%, and 45.1% in the high-dose, low-dose, and placebo groups, respectively. Most adverse events were mild or moderate, and none led to treatment discontinuation.
The favorable benefit-to-risk profile of ruzinurad was attributed by Dr. Ding to its high relative selectivity and potent inhibition of URAT1, an advantage that might be relevant to avoiding side effects at higher doses.
AR882 in Patients With Tophi
In the trial with AR882, 42 patients with refractory gout and at least one subcutaneous tophus were randomized to receive 75 mg AR882, 50 mg AR882 plus allopurinol, or allopurinol alone. All drugs were taken once daily. Doses of allopurinol of up to 300 mg were permitted.
The changes in the target tophus area and crystal volume at month 6 were compared, and patients who completed this phase were invited into a 6-month extension. In the 6-month extension, 75 mg AR882 was additionally provided to those who had been in the single-agent allopurinol arm. The other arms were unchanged.
Tophi measurements were performed with calipers at regular intervals. Change from baseline in sUA levels was also an efficacy measure, according to Robert Keenan, MD, chief medical officer of Arthrosi Therapeutics, which is developing AR882.
From average baseline sUA levels of > 9 mg/dL, all three treatments reduced sUA levels by an average of at least 4.5 mg by month 3. At month 6, complete resolution of at least one target tophus was observed in 29% of the group randomized to receive 75 mg AR882 alone, 8% of those randomized to receive 50 mg AR882 plus allopurinol, and 8% of those on allopurinol alone.
At month 12, the average sUA levels were 4.3 mg/dL for 75 mg AR882, 3.7 mg/dL for 50 mg AR882 plus allopurinol, and 2.9 mg/dL for the 75 mg AR882 plus allopurinol extension-switch arm.
At the 12-month mark, the proportions of patients with complete resolution of any tophus were 50.0% for 75 mg AR882, 12.5% for 50 mg AR882 plus allopurinol, and 36.4% for the 75 mg AR882 plus allopurinol extension-switch arm, according to Dr. Keenan.
Compared with allopurinol alone at 6 months, 75 mg AR882 led to a reduction in total urate crystal volume, and this reduction was sustained at 12 months, he added.
Alone or in combination with allopurinol, AR882 was well tolerated. Gout flares were the most common adverse events, but they declined with continued AR882 treatment, according to Dr. Keenan. Diarrhea, headache, and upper respiratory infections were reported but were of mild or moderate severity.
Again, the take-home message from this study, like the other phase 2 study of a novel URAT1 inhibitor, is that these newer drugs might offer a better benefit-to-risk ratio, particularly in those with refractory disease.
“AR882 may offer improved efficacy and better safety compared to existing therapies in the treatment of patients with gout, including those with both clinically visible and subclinical crystal deposition,” Dr. Keenan said.
Dr. Baraf reported financial relationships with Horizon Therapeutics, Fresenius Kabi, Grünenthal, Olatec, Selecta Biosciences, and Sobi, which provided funding for the trials he discussed. Dr. Kivitz also reported a financial relationship with Sobi, which funded the DISSOLVE trials, along with AbbVie, Amgen, Eli Lilly, Flexion, GlaxoSmithKline, and Sanofi Regeneron. Dr. Ding reported no potential conflicts. The study she discussed was funded by Jiangsu Hengrui Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Keenan is an employee of Arthrosi Therapeutics, which provided funding for the trial he presented.
August 1, 2024 — Editor's note: This article has been updated to reflect the correct number of infusion reactions reported in the 6-month extension phase of the DISSOLVE I trial.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
VIENNA — Safe and effective options for lowering serum uric acid (sUA) in patients with gout who are refractory to conventional therapies appear to be near, judging from phase 2 and 3 trials that produced positive results at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology.
Reports from the meeting included two phase 2 studies with novel urate anion transporter 1 (URAT1) inhibitors for patients with refractory gout, in addition to extension data from the phase 3 trial program for SEL-212. In all cases, efficacy appeared to be on the same order of currently available drugs with potentially better tolerability, an important unmet need for patients with gout refractory to traditional therapies.
12-Month Outcomes With SEL-212
The extension data with SEL-212 follow the 6-month results presented from the DISSOLVE I and II trials at EULAR 2023. Now at 12 months, the benefits have proven to be generally sustained with no new safety signals, according to Herbert S.B. Baraf, MD, The Center for Rheumatology and Bone Research, Wheaton, Maryland.
SEL-212 is a drug platform involving two components delivered by intravenous infusion once monthly in sequence. The first, SEL-110, consists of tolerogenic nanoparticles containing sirolimus. The second, SEL-037, is the pegylated uricase pegadricase.
On the 1-month dosing schedule, most patients who had responded at 6 months were still responding at 12 months, and both of the two study doses of SEL-212 in the DISSOLVE trials were well tolerated over the extension, Dr. Baraf reported.
On the basis of the data so far, “this will be an effective and well tolerated therapy for refractory gout over a period of at least 12 months,” Dr. Baraf said.
The DISSOLVE I and II trials were identically designed. Patients with refractory gout, defined as failure to normalize sUA or control symptoms with a xanthine oxidase inhibitor, were randomly assigned to receive 0.15 mg SEL-212, 1.0 mg SEL-212, or placebo.
There was a stopping rule for patients who reached a sUA level < 2 mg/dL 1 hour after the infusion.
The primary endpoint was sUA level < 6 mg/dL for at least 80% of the sixth month of the 6-month trial. About 50% of patients on either dose of SEL-212 met this endpoint (vs 4% of those receiving placebo; P < .0001). There was a numerical advantage for the higher dose in both studies.
Patients who completed the 6-month trial were eligible for a 6-month extension, during which they remained on their assigned therapy, including placebo. This phase was also blinded. Patients who met the stopping rule in either the main study or extension did not take the study drug but remained in the study for final analysis.
Of the 265 patients who participated in the main phase of the study, 143 (54%) completed the 6-month extension. Most discontinuations were the result of the stopping rule. Reasons for other patients discontinuing the study included withdrawal of consent in about 10% of each treatment arm and adverse events in 13.8%, 6.8%, and 2.2% of the high-dose, low-dose, and placebo groups, respectively.
At 12 months, when the data from the two trials were pooled, the proportion of patients on therapy and responding remained at about 50% in the high-dose group and 43% in the low-dose group on an intention-to-treat analysis. Relative to the 8% response rate for placebo, the advantage for either dose was highly significant (P < .0001).
In the subgroup of patients with tophi at baseline, representing about half the study group, responses were low at 12 months, whether on high- (41%) or low-dose (43%) SEL-212. The rate of response among placebo patients with baseline tophi was 9%.
Safety of SEL-212
The safety over the 6-month extension did not differ substantially from that observed during the first 6 months, according to Dr. Baraf. This was reiterated in more detail by Alan Kivitz, MD, Altoona Center for Clinical Research, Duncansville, Pennsylvania. He delivered a separate safety presentation focused on DISSOLVE I.
Specifically, there were no serious adverse events thought to be related to treatment. Besides gout flares, which affected approximately 27% of patients regardless of active treatment or placebo assignment, the most common adverse effect was hypertriglyceridemia, which was observed in 5.4% of patients on active treatment vs 0% of those receiving placebo. Independent of the treatment arm, less than 5% of patients developed stomatitis or cellulitis during the 6-month extension period.
In the 6-month extension phase, there were no infusion reactions observed within 1 hour after SEL-212 administration and just two overall that occurred with low-dose SEL-212, according to Kivitz.
New Selective URAT1 Inhibitors
The other potential advance in the treatment of refractory gout is coming from newer selective URAT1 inhibitors. According to the lead investigators of two phase 2 trials evaluating a novel URAT1 inhibitor, the urate transporter protein has long been considered the most promising target for gout treatment. As this protein regulates the absorption of uric acid from the renal tubule, it has a direct uric acid–lowering effect. However, the adverse events of current agents, such as probenecid, benzbromarone, and sulfinpyrazone, have created a need for drugs with a better benefit-to-risk ratio.
In one of two multicenter phase 2 studies on refractory gout, the experimental agent ruzinurad was tested as an adjunct to the xanthine oxidase inhibitor febuxostat. In the other, the objective was to evaluate whether the experimental agent AR882 or AR882 plus allopurinol is better than allopurinol alone for reducing tophi at 12 months.
Ruzinurad Plus Febuxostat
In the ruzinurad trial, 151 patients with symptomatic gout and elevated sUA (> 6 mg/dL) for at least 6 weeks on stable doses of febuxostat were randomized to receive 5 mg ruzinurad, 10 mg ruzinurad, or placebo. All remained on febuxostat. In the active treatment arms, the starting ruzinurad dose was 1 mg before titrating up to the assigned target.
For the primary endpoint of sUA < 6 mg/dL at 12 weeks, the rates were 56.9%, 53.1%, and 13.7% in the high-dose, low-dose, and placebo groups, respectively (P < .0001 for both ruzinurad arms), reported Huihua Ding, MD, a clinician and researcher at Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, China.
“Consistently, subgroup analyses based on baseline eGFR [estimated glomerular filtration rate], sUA, and tophus demonstrated superior effective of ruzinurad plus febuxostat over placebo plus febuxostat,” reported Dr. Ding, who noted that previous clinical studies suggested the potential for synergism between ruzinurad and febuxostat.
The proportion of patients achieving the more rigorous target of < 0.5 mg/dL was also higher with the higher and lower doses of ruzinurad vs placebo (43.1% and 38.8% vs 9.8%, respectively).
The proportion of patients with treatment-emergent side effects did not differ between the three groups. The most common were gout flares, which were observed in 39.2%, 49.0%, and 45.1% in the high-dose, low-dose, and placebo groups, respectively. Most adverse events were mild or moderate, and none led to treatment discontinuation.
The favorable benefit-to-risk profile of ruzinurad was attributed by Dr. Ding to its high relative selectivity and potent inhibition of URAT1, an advantage that might be relevant to avoiding side effects at higher doses.
AR882 in Patients With Tophi
In the trial with AR882, 42 patients with refractory gout and at least one subcutaneous tophus were randomized to receive 75 mg AR882, 50 mg AR882 plus allopurinol, or allopurinol alone. All drugs were taken once daily. Doses of allopurinol of up to 300 mg were permitted.
The changes in the target tophus area and crystal volume at month 6 were compared, and patients who completed this phase were invited into a 6-month extension. In the 6-month extension, 75 mg AR882 was additionally provided to those who had been in the single-agent allopurinol arm. The other arms were unchanged.
Tophi measurements were performed with calipers at regular intervals. Change from baseline in sUA levels was also an efficacy measure, according to Robert Keenan, MD, chief medical officer of Arthrosi Therapeutics, which is developing AR882.
From average baseline sUA levels of > 9 mg/dL, all three treatments reduced sUA levels by an average of at least 4.5 mg by month 3. At month 6, complete resolution of at least one target tophus was observed in 29% of the group randomized to receive 75 mg AR882 alone, 8% of those randomized to receive 50 mg AR882 plus allopurinol, and 8% of those on allopurinol alone.
At month 12, the average sUA levels were 4.3 mg/dL for 75 mg AR882, 3.7 mg/dL for 50 mg AR882 plus allopurinol, and 2.9 mg/dL for the 75 mg AR882 plus allopurinol extension-switch arm.
At the 12-month mark, the proportions of patients with complete resolution of any tophus were 50.0% for 75 mg AR882, 12.5% for 50 mg AR882 plus allopurinol, and 36.4% for the 75 mg AR882 plus allopurinol extension-switch arm, according to Dr. Keenan.
Compared with allopurinol alone at 6 months, 75 mg AR882 led to a reduction in total urate crystal volume, and this reduction was sustained at 12 months, he added.
Alone or in combination with allopurinol, AR882 was well tolerated. Gout flares were the most common adverse events, but they declined with continued AR882 treatment, according to Dr. Keenan. Diarrhea, headache, and upper respiratory infections were reported but were of mild or moderate severity.
Again, the take-home message from this study, like the other phase 2 study of a novel URAT1 inhibitor, is that these newer drugs might offer a better benefit-to-risk ratio, particularly in those with refractory disease.
“AR882 may offer improved efficacy and better safety compared to existing therapies in the treatment of patients with gout, including those with both clinically visible and subclinical crystal deposition,” Dr. Keenan said.
Dr. Baraf reported financial relationships with Horizon Therapeutics, Fresenius Kabi, Grünenthal, Olatec, Selecta Biosciences, and Sobi, which provided funding for the trials he discussed. Dr. Kivitz also reported a financial relationship with Sobi, which funded the DISSOLVE trials, along with AbbVie, Amgen, Eli Lilly, Flexion, GlaxoSmithKline, and Sanofi Regeneron. Dr. Ding reported no potential conflicts. The study she discussed was funded by Jiangsu Hengrui Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Keenan is an employee of Arthrosi Therapeutics, which provided funding for the trial he presented.
August 1, 2024 — Editor's note: This article has been updated to reflect the correct number of infusion reactions reported in the 6-month extension phase of the DISSOLVE I trial.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM EULAR 2024
CAR T-Cell Treatment Data Expands in Refractory Rheumatic Diseases, Demonstrating Consistent Efficacy
VIENNA — From a dozen or so studies and sessions devoted to the role of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells in rheumatic diseases at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology, the message was uniformly positive, supporting growing evidence that drugs in this class are heading toward a paradigm shift in refractory rheumatic diseases.
Of the reports, an update from a 15-patient case series with at least 1 year of follow-up provides “the first long-term evidence of safety and efficacy in multiple rheumatic diseases,” according to Georg Schett, MD, PhD, director of rheumatology and immunology, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, Germany.
The report of high rates of activity and low relative risk of serious adverse events from the same series was published earlier this year in The New England Journal of Medicine when the median follow-up was 15 months. Almost all of the patients have now completed at least 1 year of follow-up and about a third have completed more than 2 years.
SLE Is Frequently Targeted in CAR T-Cell Studies
The three rheumatic diseases represented in this series of patients, all of whom had failed multiple previous immune suppressive treatments, were systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), idiopathic inflammatory myositis (IIM), and systemic sclerosis (SSc). After the autologous T cells were harvested, they were expanded and transfected with the CD19 CAR. The proprietary investigational product, called MB-CART19.1 (Miltenyi Biotec), was administered in a single dose of one million cells per kg bodyweight.
The response rates have been, and continue to be, impressive. For the eight patients with SLE, all achieved the definition of remission in SLE criteria after one dose of treatment. Complete resolution of all major symptom types was achieved after 6 months of follow-up. So far, no patient has relapsed.
For the three patients with IIM, all reached the American College of Rheumatology–EULAR criteria for a major response. All creatine kinase levels had normalized by 3 months. In this group, there was one relapse, which occurred after 18 months of follow-up.
All four patients with SSc achieved a major response on the European Scleroderma Trials and Research (EUSTAR) group activity index. The median reduction from baseline in the EUSTAR score was 4.2 points, and this has been maintained in follow-up to date.
Remissions Have Persisted Off All Therapies
These remissions were achieved and maintained after a single dose of CAR T-cell therapy despite discontinuation of all immunosuppressive therapies. With the exception of the single relapse, all remissions have persisted through follow-up to date.
These responses were achieved with manageable side effects, according to Dr. Schett. The most serious adverse event was a grade 4 neutropenia that developed 4 months after receiving CAR T cells. It resolved with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor treatment. Cytokine release syndrome (CRS) has occurred in 10 patients, but it was grade 1 in eight patients and grade 2 in the others. There has been no neurotoxicity.
Almost all patients have experienced an infection during follow-up, but there has been no discernible pattern in relationship to the timing or types of infections. The most common have involved the upper respiratory tract and have been of mild severity, with cases disseminated similarly over early vs late follow-up. There was one case of pneumonia involving antibiotic treatment and a hospital stay, but it resolved.
Dr. Schett acknowledged that safety is a bigger concern in autoimmune diseases, which are often serious but rarely fatal, than in the hematologic malignancies for which CAR T cells were initially tested, but the low rates of serious adverse events in his and other early studies have supported the premise that the risks are not the same.
Asked specifically if CAR T cells can be considered a game changer in autoimmune rheumatic diseases, Dr. Schett was cautious. One reason is the CAR T cells are a complex therapy relative to biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs. He thinks, therefore, that much more data are needed to confirm safety and efficacy. In addition, they are expensive, so it is not yet clear how they will be integrated with other options.
Yet, he thinks the evidence so far suggests a profound effect on the fundamental drivers of autoimmune disease. Their specific mechanism of benefit is still being evaluated, but he considers the clinical responses consistent with a “reset” hypothesis.
After a response, “we are seeing drug-free remissions in some patients as long as they have been followed,” Dr. Schett said. Based on the fact that disease control is being observed off all other therapies, “this only makes sense to me if there is some sort of immunologic reset.”
CAR T-Cell Studies in Autoimmune Diseases Are Proliferating
At last count, there were about 40 studies being performed with CAR T cells in various autoimmune diseases, most of which were rheumatologic disorders, according to Dr. Schett. He noted that funding is coming from multinational drug companies, small biotech startups, and investigator-initiated studies at academic centers.
At EULAR, beyond case studies and anecdotal reports, all of the clinical studies were still at the level of phase 1 or 1/2. Consistent with the data presented by Dr. Schett, the drugs have been nearly uniformly effective, with major responses persisting in patients off other therapies. Adverse events have been manageable.
Examples include a phase 1/2 multinational study with the investigational CAR T-cell therapy YTB323 (Novartis), which demonstrated acceptable safety and a strong signal of benefit in six patients with SLE. In this report, CRS was also common, but no case of CRS was more severe than grade 2. There was no neurotoxicity. Infections did occur but were of relatively mild grades and resolved with treatment.
For efficacy in the ongoing follow-up, SLE symptoms as measured with the SLE Disease Activity Index began to abate at about 14 days after the single-infusion treatment. Improvement on the Physician Global Assessment was also observed between 14 and 28 days. C3 and C4 complement levels started to rise at about 28 days. While the responses have correlated with the observed changes in biomarkers of immune function, they have endured through a median follow-up that now exceeds 6 months.
Complete B-Cell Depletion Is Followed by Full Recovery
“Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic studies revealed peak expansion of CAR T cells approximately 13-21 days post infusion, which was accompanied by deep B-cell depletion followed by subsequent B-cell recovery,” reported Josefina Cortés-Hernández, MD, PhD, a senior lecturer at Vall d’Hebron Research Institute, Barcelona, Spain.
Dr. Schett had reported the same pattern of expansion followed by a rapid elimination of detectable CAR T cells despite the sustained clinical benefit.
Dr. Cortés-Hernández said that the signal of efficacy in the context of acceptable safety supports an expansion of clinical studies with this CAR T-cell product in SLE and perhaps other autoimmune disorders.
In another early-stage study, patients with SLE who had failed multiple prior lines of therapy have been enrolled in an ongoing study with a compound CAR (cCAR) T cell. This experimental proprietary product (iCAR Bio Therapeutics, Zhongshan, China) targets both the B-cell maturation antigen and CD19, according to Greg Deener, the chief executive officer of iCell Gene Therapeutics, New York City.
cCAR T-Cell Construct Targets Immune Reset
With this construct, the goal is to deplete long-lived plasma cells as well as B cells in order to achieve a more complete humoral reset. While preliminary data from the phase 1 trial were published earlier this year in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, Mr. Deener focused his presentation at EULAR 2024 on 12 patients with SLE and lupus nephritis, a severe form of SLE that threatens glomerular structures and can lead to end-stage liver disease.
B cells in the peripheral blood could not be detected within 10 days of the cCAR infusion, and the immunoglobulins IgM and IgA were undetectable by day 42.
However, after B-cell recovery by day 150, “flow cytometry and B-cell receptor sequencing confirmed full humoral reset was achieved,” Mr. Deener said.
The remission has been durable in 11 of the 12 patients after a mean follow-up of 458 days, Mr. Deener reported. He noted that an improvement in renal function has been observed in the majority of patients.
Like others, he reported that treatment has been relatively well tolerated. In this series of patients, there have been no cases of CRS more severe than grade 1.
Overall, the cCAR data in lupus nephritis support the hypothesis that CAR T cells are reprogramming the immune system, according to Mr. Deener.
Combined with a reasonable safety profile, the consistency of benefit from CAR T cells in autoimmune rheumatic diseases is good news, but all of the investigators who spoke at EULAR agreed that there are still many unanswered questions. Not least, it is unclear whether patients can be effectively and safely retreated when and if relapses occur. Even though Dr. Schett did report a response with retreatment following a relapse, he said that there is no conclusion to draw from a single patient.
Yet, the high rates of remissions in patients with disease refractory to other therapeutic options is highly encouraging, particularly with the manageable side effects now reported by multiple investigators using different CAR T-cell products.
“Roughly 100 patients with rheumatic diseases have been treated with CAR T-cells, and we have not seen a high-grade CRS or neurotoxicity,” he said.
Long-term efficacy is less clear. With the first clinical studies in autoimmune diseases initiated in 2021, few patients have been followed for more than 2 years. Even with the high rates of response that will certainly fuel efforts to rapidly bring these treatments forward, long-term data are now the missing piece.
Other Case Series Presented at EULAR
Several other abstracts reported on patients with SSc who were treated with CD19-targeting CAR T cells:
Three patients for whom autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation was contraindicated or unsuccessful were successfully and safely treated.
Six patients with diffuse and progressive disease achieved stable disease activity without additional immunosuppression for up to 1 year after treatment.
Dr. Schett reported no potential conflicts of interest, and the study he presented was not funded by industry. Dr. Cortés-Hernández reported a financial relationship with Novartis, which funded the study of the CAR T-cell therapy YTB323, as well as with GlaxoSmithKline, which was not involved in the study she presented. Mr. Deener is an employee of iCell Gene Therapeutics, which provided funding for the trial he presented.
August 7, 2024 — Editor's note: This article was updated with additional disclosure information for Dr. Josefina Cortés-Hernández.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
VIENNA — From a dozen or so studies and sessions devoted to the role of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells in rheumatic diseases at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology, the message was uniformly positive, supporting growing evidence that drugs in this class are heading toward a paradigm shift in refractory rheumatic diseases.
Of the reports, an update from a 15-patient case series with at least 1 year of follow-up provides “the first long-term evidence of safety and efficacy in multiple rheumatic diseases,” according to Georg Schett, MD, PhD, director of rheumatology and immunology, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, Germany.
The report of high rates of activity and low relative risk of serious adverse events from the same series was published earlier this year in The New England Journal of Medicine when the median follow-up was 15 months. Almost all of the patients have now completed at least 1 year of follow-up and about a third have completed more than 2 years.
SLE Is Frequently Targeted in CAR T-Cell Studies
The three rheumatic diseases represented in this series of patients, all of whom had failed multiple previous immune suppressive treatments, were systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), idiopathic inflammatory myositis (IIM), and systemic sclerosis (SSc). After the autologous T cells were harvested, they were expanded and transfected with the CD19 CAR. The proprietary investigational product, called MB-CART19.1 (Miltenyi Biotec), was administered in a single dose of one million cells per kg bodyweight.
The response rates have been, and continue to be, impressive. For the eight patients with SLE, all achieved the definition of remission in SLE criteria after one dose of treatment. Complete resolution of all major symptom types was achieved after 6 months of follow-up. So far, no patient has relapsed.
For the three patients with IIM, all reached the American College of Rheumatology–EULAR criteria for a major response. All creatine kinase levels had normalized by 3 months. In this group, there was one relapse, which occurred after 18 months of follow-up.
All four patients with SSc achieved a major response on the European Scleroderma Trials and Research (EUSTAR) group activity index. The median reduction from baseline in the EUSTAR score was 4.2 points, and this has been maintained in follow-up to date.
Remissions Have Persisted Off All Therapies
These remissions were achieved and maintained after a single dose of CAR T-cell therapy despite discontinuation of all immunosuppressive therapies. With the exception of the single relapse, all remissions have persisted through follow-up to date.
These responses were achieved with manageable side effects, according to Dr. Schett. The most serious adverse event was a grade 4 neutropenia that developed 4 months after receiving CAR T cells. It resolved with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor treatment. Cytokine release syndrome (CRS) has occurred in 10 patients, but it was grade 1 in eight patients and grade 2 in the others. There has been no neurotoxicity.
Almost all patients have experienced an infection during follow-up, but there has been no discernible pattern in relationship to the timing or types of infections. The most common have involved the upper respiratory tract and have been of mild severity, with cases disseminated similarly over early vs late follow-up. There was one case of pneumonia involving antibiotic treatment and a hospital stay, but it resolved.
Dr. Schett acknowledged that safety is a bigger concern in autoimmune diseases, which are often serious but rarely fatal, than in the hematologic malignancies for which CAR T cells were initially tested, but the low rates of serious adverse events in his and other early studies have supported the premise that the risks are not the same.
Asked specifically if CAR T cells can be considered a game changer in autoimmune rheumatic diseases, Dr. Schett was cautious. One reason is the CAR T cells are a complex therapy relative to biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs. He thinks, therefore, that much more data are needed to confirm safety and efficacy. In addition, they are expensive, so it is not yet clear how they will be integrated with other options.
Yet, he thinks the evidence so far suggests a profound effect on the fundamental drivers of autoimmune disease. Their specific mechanism of benefit is still being evaluated, but he considers the clinical responses consistent with a “reset” hypothesis.
After a response, “we are seeing drug-free remissions in some patients as long as they have been followed,” Dr. Schett said. Based on the fact that disease control is being observed off all other therapies, “this only makes sense to me if there is some sort of immunologic reset.”
CAR T-Cell Studies in Autoimmune Diseases Are Proliferating
At last count, there were about 40 studies being performed with CAR T cells in various autoimmune diseases, most of which were rheumatologic disorders, according to Dr. Schett. He noted that funding is coming from multinational drug companies, small biotech startups, and investigator-initiated studies at academic centers.
At EULAR, beyond case studies and anecdotal reports, all of the clinical studies were still at the level of phase 1 or 1/2. Consistent with the data presented by Dr. Schett, the drugs have been nearly uniformly effective, with major responses persisting in patients off other therapies. Adverse events have been manageable.
Examples include a phase 1/2 multinational study with the investigational CAR T-cell therapy YTB323 (Novartis), which demonstrated acceptable safety and a strong signal of benefit in six patients with SLE. In this report, CRS was also common, but no case of CRS was more severe than grade 2. There was no neurotoxicity. Infections did occur but were of relatively mild grades and resolved with treatment.
For efficacy in the ongoing follow-up, SLE symptoms as measured with the SLE Disease Activity Index began to abate at about 14 days after the single-infusion treatment. Improvement on the Physician Global Assessment was also observed between 14 and 28 days. C3 and C4 complement levels started to rise at about 28 days. While the responses have correlated with the observed changes in biomarkers of immune function, they have endured through a median follow-up that now exceeds 6 months.
Complete B-Cell Depletion Is Followed by Full Recovery
“Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic studies revealed peak expansion of CAR T cells approximately 13-21 days post infusion, which was accompanied by deep B-cell depletion followed by subsequent B-cell recovery,” reported Josefina Cortés-Hernández, MD, PhD, a senior lecturer at Vall d’Hebron Research Institute, Barcelona, Spain.
Dr. Schett had reported the same pattern of expansion followed by a rapid elimination of detectable CAR T cells despite the sustained clinical benefit.
Dr. Cortés-Hernández said that the signal of efficacy in the context of acceptable safety supports an expansion of clinical studies with this CAR T-cell product in SLE and perhaps other autoimmune disorders.
In another early-stage study, patients with SLE who had failed multiple prior lines of therapy have been enrolled in an ongoing study with a compound CAR (cCAR) T cell. This experimental proprietary product (iCAR Bio Therapeutics, Zhongshan, China) targets both the B-cell maturation antigen and CD19, according to Greg Deener, the chief executive officer of iCell Gene Therapeutics, New York City.
cCAR T-Cell Construct Targets Immune Reset
With this construct, the goal is to deplete long-lived plasma cells as well as B cells in order to achieve a more complete humoral reset. While preliminary data from the phase 1 trial were published earlier this year in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, Mr. Deener focused his presentation at EULAR 2024 on 12 patients with SLE and lupus nephritis, a severe form of SLE that threatens glomerular structures and can lead to end-stage liver disease.
B cells in the peripheral blood could not be detected within 10 days of the cCAR infusion, and the immunoglobulins IgM and IgA were undetectable by day 42.
However, after B-cell recovery by day 150, “flow cytometry and B-cell receptor sequencing confirmed full humoral reset was achieved,” Mr. Deener said.
The remission has been durable in 11 of the 12 patients after a mean follow-up of 458 days, Mr. Deener reported. He noted that an improvement in renal function has been observed in the majority of patients.
Like others, he reported that treatment has been relatively well tolerated. In this series of patients, there have been no cases of CRS more severe than grade 1.
Overall, the cCAR data in lupus nephritis support the hypothesis that CAR T cells are reprogramming the immune system, according to Mr. Deener.
Combined with a reasonable safety profile, the consistency of benefit from CAR T cells in autoimmune rheumatic diseases is good news, but all of the investigators who spoke at EULAR agreed that there are still many unanswered questions. Not least, it is unclear whether patients can be effectively and safely retreated when and if relapses occur. Even though Dr. Schett did report a response with retreatment following a relapse, he said that there is no conclusion to draw from a single patient.
Yet, the high rates of remissions in patients with disease refractory to other therapeutic options is highly encouraging, particularly with the manageable side effects now reported by multiple investigators using different CAR T-cell products.
“Roughly 100 patients with rheumatic diseases have been treated with CAR T-cells, and we have not seen a high-grade CRS or neurotoxicity,” he said.
Long-term efficacy is less clear. With the first clinical studies in autoimmune diseases initiated in 2021, few patients have been followed for more than 2 years. Even with the high rates of response that will certainly fuel efforts to rapidly bring these treatments forward, long-term data are now the missing piece.
Other Case Series Presented at EULAR
Several other abstracts reported on patients with SSc who were treated with CD19-targeting CAR T cells:
Three patients for whom autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation was contraindicated or unsuccessful were successfully and safely treated.
Six patients with diffuse and progressive disease achieved stable disease activity without additional immunosuppression for up to 1 year after treatment.
Dr. Schett reported no potential conflicts of interest, and the study he presented was not funded by industry. Dr. Cortés-Hernández reported a financial relationship with Novartis, which funded the study of the CAR T-cell therapy YTB323, as well as with GlaxoSmithKline, which was not involved in the study she presented. Mr. Deener is an employee of iCell Gene Therapeutics, which provided funding for the trial he presented.
August 7, 2024 — Editor's note: This article was updated with additional disclosure information for Dr. Josefina Cortés-Hernández.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
VIENNA — From a dozen or so studies and sessions devoted to the role of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells in rheumatic diseases at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology, the message was uniformly positive, supporting growing evidence that drugs in this class are heading toward a paradigm shift in refractory rheumatic diseases.
Of the reports, an update from a 15-patient case series with at least 1 year of follow-up provides “the first long-term evidence of safety and efficacy in multiple rheumatic diseases,” according to Georg Schett, MD, PhD, director of rheumatology and immunology, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, Germany.
The report of high rates of activity and low relative risk of serious adverse events from the same series was published earlier this year in The New England Journal of Medicine when the median follow-up was 15 months. Almost all of the patients have now completed at least 1 year of follow-up and about a third have completed more than 2 years.
SLE Is Frequently Targeted in CAR T-Cell Studies
The three rheumatic diseases represented in this series of patients, all of whom had failed multiple previous immune suppressive treatments, were systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), idiopathic inflammatory myositis (IIM), and systemic sclerosis (SSc). After the autologous T cells were harvested, they were expanded and transfected with the CD19 CAR. The proprietary investigational product, called MB-CART19.1 (Miltenyi Biotec), was administered in a single dose of one million cells per kg bodyweight.
The response rates have been, and continue to be, impressive. For the eight patients with SLE, all achieved the definition of remission in SLE criteria after one dose of treatment. Complete resolution of all major symptom types was achieved after 6 months of follow-up. So far, no patient has relapsed.
For the three patients with IIM, all reached the American College of Rheumatology–EULAR criteria for a major response. All creatine kinase levels had normalized by 3 months. In this group, there was one relapse, which occurred after 18 months of follow-up.
All four patients with SSc achieved a major response on the European Scleroderma Trials and Research (EUSTAR) group activity index. The median reduction from baseline in the EUSTAR score was 4.2 points, and this has been maintained in follow-up to date.
Remissions Have Persisted Off All Therapies
These remissions were achieved and maintained after a single dose of CAR T-cell therapy despite discontinuation of all immunosuppressive therapies. With the exception of the single relapse, all remissions have persisted through follow-up to date.
These responses were achieved with manageable side effects, according to Dr. Schett. The most serious adverse event was a grade 4 neutropenia that developed 4 months after receiving CAR T cells. It resolved with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor treatment. Cytokine release syndrome (CRS) has occurred in 10 patients, but it was grade 1 in eight patients and grade 2 in the others. There has been no neurotoxicity.
Almost all patients have experienced an infection during follow-up, but there has been no discernible pattern in relationship to the timing or types of infections. The most common have involved the upper respiratory tract and have been of mild severity, with cases disseminated similarly over early vs late follow-up. There was one case of pneumonia involving antibiotic treatment and a hospital stay, but it resolved.
Dr. Schett acknowledged that safety is a bigger concern in autoimmune diseases, which are often serious but rarely fatal, than in the hematologic malignancies for which CAR T cells were initially tested, but the low rates of serious adverse events in his and other early studies have supported the premise that the risks are not the same.
Asked specifically if CAR T cells can be considered a game changer in autoimmune rheumatic diseases, Dr. Schett was cautious. One reason is the CAR T cells are a complex therapy relative to biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs. He thinks, therefore, that much more data are needed to confirm safety and efficacy. In addition, they are expensive, so it is not yet clear how they will be integrated with other options.
Yet, he thinks the evidence so far suggests a profound effect on the fundamental drivers of autoimmune disease. Their specific mechanism of benefit is still being evaluated, but he considers the clinical responses consistent with a “reset” hypothesis.
After a response, “we are seeing drug-free remissions in some patients as long as they have been followed,” Dr. Schett said. Based on the fact that disease control is being observed off all other therapies, “this only makes sense to me if there is some sort of immunologic reset.”
CAR T-Cell Studies in Autoimmune Diseases Are Proliferating
At last count, there were about 40 studies being performed with CAR T cells in various autoimmune diseases, most of which were rheumatologic disorders, according to Dr. Schett. He noted that funding is coming from multinational drug companies, small biotech startups, and investigator-initiated studies at academic centers.
At EULAR, beyond case studies and anecdotal reports, all of the clinical studies were still at the level of phase 1 or 1/2. Consistent with the data presented by Dr. Schett, the drugs have been nearly uniformly effective, with major responses persisting in patients off other therapies. Adverse events have been manageable.
Examples include a phase 1/2 multinational study with the investigational CAR T-cell therapy YTB323 (Novartis), which demonstrated acceptable safety and a strong signal of benefit in six patients with SLE. In this report, CRS was also common, but no case of CRS was more severe than grade 2. There was no neurotoxicity. Infections did occur but were of relatively mild grades and resolved with treatment.
For efficacy in the ongoing follow-up, SLE symptoms as measured with the SLE Disease Activity Index began to abate at about 14 days after the single-infusion treatment. Improvement on the Physician Global Assessment was also observed between 14 and 28 days. C3 and C4 complement levels started to rise at about 28 days. While the responses have correlated with the observed changes in biomarkers of immune function, they have endured through a median follow-up that now exceeds 6 months.
Complete B-Cell Depletion Is Followed by Full Recovery
“Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic studies revealed peak expansion of CAR T cells approximately 13-21 days post infusion, which was accompanied by deep B-cell depletion followed by subsequent B-cell recovery,” reported Josefina Cortés-Hernández, MD, PhD, a senior lecturer at Vall d’Hebron Research Institute, Barcelona, Spain.
Dr. Schett had reported the same pattern of expansion followed by a rapid elimination of detectable CAR T cells despite the sustained clinical benefit.
Dr. Cortés-Hernández said that the signal of efficacy in the context of acceptable safety supports an expansion of clinical studies with this CAR T-cell product in SLE and perhaps other autoimmune disorders.
In another early-stage study, patients with SLE who had failed multiple prior lines of therapy have been enrolled in an ongoing study with a compound CAR (cCAR) T cell. This experimental proprietary product (iCAR Bio Therapeutics, Zhongshan, China) targets both the B-cell maturation antigen and CD19, according to Greg Deener, the chief executive officer of iCell Gene Therapeutics, New York City.
cCAR T-Cell Construct Targets Immune Reset
With this construct, the goal is to deplete long-lived plasma cells as well as B cells in order to achieve a more complete humoral reset. While preliminary data from the phase 1 trial were published earlier this year in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, Mr. Deener focused his presentation at EULAR 2024 on 12 patients with SLE and lupus nephritis, a severe form of SLE that threatens glomerular structures and can lead to end-stage liver disease.
B cells in the peripheral blood could not be detected within 10 days of the cCAR infusion, and the immunoglobulins IgM and IgA were undetectable by day 42.
However, after B-cell recovery by day 150, “flow cytometry and B-cell receptor sequencing confirmed full humoral reset was achieved,” Mr. Deener said.
The remission has been durable in 11 of the 12 patients after a mean follow-up of 458 days, Mr. Deener reported. He noted that an improvement in renal function has been observed in the majority of patients.
Like others, he reported that treatment has been relatively well tolerated. In this series of patients, there have been no cases of CRS more severe than grade 1.
Overall, the cCAR data in lupus nephritis support the hypothesis that CAR T cells are reprogramming the immune system, according to Mr. Deener.
Combined with a reasonable safety profile, the consistency of benefit from CAR T cells in autoimmune rheumatic diseases is good news, but all of the investigators who spoke at EULAR agreed that there are still many unanswered questions. Not least, it is unclear whether patients can be effectively and safely retreated when and if relapses occur. Even though Dr. Schett did report a response with retreatment following a relapse, he said that there is no conclusion to draw from a single patient.
Yet, the high rates of remissions in patients with disease refractory to other therapeutic options is highly encouraging, particularly with the manageable side effects now reported by multiple investigators using different CAR T-cell products.
“Roughly 100 patients with rheumatic diseases have been treated with CAR T-cells, and we have not seen a high-grade CRS or neurotoxicity,” he said.
Long-term efficacy is less clear. With the first clinical studies in autoimmune diseases initiated in 2021, few patients have been followed for more than 2 years. Even with the high rates of response that will certainly fuel efforts to rapidly bring these treatments forward, long-term data are now the missing piece.
Other Case Series Presented at EULAR
Several other abstracts reported on patients with SSc who were treated with CD19-targeting CAR T cells:
Three patients for whom autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation was contraindicated or unsuccessful were successfully and safely treated.
Six patients with diffuse and progressive disease achieved stable disease activity without additional immunosuppression for up to 1 year after treatment.
Dr. Schett reported no potential conflicts of interest, and the study he presented was not funded by industry. Dr. Cortés-Hernández reported a financial relationship with Novartis, which funded the study of the CAR T-cell therapy YTB323, as well as with GlaxoSmithKline, which was not involved in the study she presented. Mr. Deener is an employee of iCell Gene Therapeutics, which provided funding for the trial he presented.
August 7, 2024 — Editor's note: This article was updated with additional disclosure information for Dr. Josefina Cortés-Hernández.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM EULAR 2024
Pediatric Studies Produce Mixed Messages on Relationship Between COVID and Asthma
In one of several recently published studies on the relationship between COVID-19 infection and asthma,
according to data drawn from the National Survey of Children’s Health (NSCH).The inverse correlation between symptoms and vaccination was strong and statistically significant, according to investigators led by Matthew M. Davis, MD, Physician in Chief and Chief Scientific Officer, Nemours Children’s Health, Wilmington, Delaware.
“With each increase of 10 percentage points in COVID-19 vaccination coverage, the parent-reported child asthma symptoms prevalence decreased by 0.36 percentage points (P < .05),” Dr. Davis and his coinvestigators reported in a research letter published in JAMA Network Open.
Studies Explore Relationship of COVID and Asthma
The reduced risk of asthma symptoms with COVID-19 vaccination in children at the population level is just one of several recently published studies exploring the interaction between COVID-19 infection and asthma, but two studies that posed the same question did not reach the same conclusion.
In one, COVID-19 infection in children was not found to be a trigger for new-onset asthma, but the second found that it was. In a third study, the preponderance of evidence from a meta-analysis found that patients with asthma – whether children or adults – did not necessarily experience a more severe course of COVID-19 infection than in those without asthma.
The NSCH database study calculated state-level change in scores for patient-reported childhood asthma symptoms in the years in the years 2018-2019, which preceded the pandemic and the years 2020-2021, when the pandemic began. The hypothesis was that the proportion of the population 5 years of age or older who completed the COVID-19 primary vaccination would be inversely related to asthma symptom prevalence.
Relative to the 2018-2019 years, the mean rate of parent-reported asthma symptoms was 0.85% lower (6.93% vs 7.77%; P < .001) in 2020-2021, when the mean primary series COVID-19 vaccination rate was 72.3%.
The study was not able to evaluate the impact of COVID-19 vaccination specifically in children with asthma, because history of asthma is not captured in the NSCH data, but Dr. Davis contended that the reduction in symptomatic asthma among children with increased vaccination offers validation for the state-level findings.
“Moreover, the absence of an association of COVID-19 vaccination administered predominantly in 2021 with population-level COVID-19 mortality in 2020 serves as a negative control,” he and his colleagues wrote in their research letter.
Protection from Respiratory Viruses Seen for Asthma Patients
In an interview, Dr. Davis reported that these data are consistent with previous evidence that immunization against influenza also reduces risk of asthma symptoms. In a meta-analysis published in 2017, it was estimated that live vaccines reduced risk of influenza by 81% and prevented 59%-72% of asthma attacks leading to hospitalizations or emergency room visits.
“The similarity of our findings regarding COVID-19 vaccination to prior data regarding influenza vaccination underscores the importance of preventing viral illnesses in individuals with a history of asthma,” Dr. Davis said. It is not yet clear if this is true of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV). Because of the short time that the RSV vaccine has been available, it is too soon to conduct an analysis.
One message from this study is that “clinicians should continue to encourage COVID-19 vaccination for children because of its general benefits in preventing coronavirus-related illness and the apparent specific benefits for children with a history of asthma,” he said.
While vaccination appears to reduce asthmatic symptoms related to COVID-19 infection, one study suggests that COVID-19 does not trigger new-onset asthma. In a retrospective study published in Pediatrics, no association between COVID-19 infection and new-onset asthma could be made in an analysis of 27,423 children (ages, 1-16 years) from the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) Care Network.
Across all the pediatric age groups evaluated, the consistent finding was “SARS-CoV-2 positivity does not confer an additional risk for asthma diagnosis at least within the first 18 months after a [polymerase chain reaction] test,” concluded the investigators, led by David A. Hill, MD, PhD, Division of Allergy and Immunology, CHOP, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Risk of Asthma Doubled After COVID-19 Infection
However, the opposite conclusion was reached by investigators evaluating data from two cohorts of children ages 5-18 drawn from the TriNetX database, a global health research network with data on more than 250 million individuals. Cohort 1 included more than 250,000 children. These children had never received COVID-19 vaccination. The 50,000 patients in cohort 2 had all received COVID19 vaccination.
To compare the impact of COVID-19 infection on new-onset asthma, the patients who were infected with COVID-19 were compared with those who were not infected after propensity score matching over 18 months of follow-up.
In cohort 1, the rate of new onset asthma was more than twofold greater among those with COVID-19 infection (4.7% vs 2.0%). The hazard ratio (HR) of 2.25 had tight confidence intervals (95% CI, 2.158-2.367).
In cohort 2, the risk of new-onset asthma at 18 months among those who had a COVID-19 infection relative to those without was even greater (8.3% vs 3.1%). The relative risk approached a 3-fold increase (HR 2.745; 95% CI, 2.521-2.99).
The conclusion of these investigators, led by Chia-Chi Lung, PhD, Department of Public Health, Chung Shan Medical University, Taichung City, Taiwan, was that there is “a critical need for ongoing monitoring and customized healthcare strategies to mitigate the long-term respiratory impacts of COVID-19 in children.”
These health risks might not be as significant as once feared. In the recently published study from Environmental Health Insights, the goal of a meta-analysis was to determine if patients with asthma relative to those without asthma face a higher risk of serious disease from COVID-19 infection. The meta-analysis included studies of children and adults. The answer, according an in-depth analysis of 21 articles in a “scoping review,” was a qualified no.
Of the 21 articles, 4 concluded that asthma is a risk factor for serious COVID-19 infection, but 17 did not, according to Chukwudi S. Ubah, PhD, Department of Public Health, Brody School of Medicine, East Caroline University, Greenville, North Carolina.
None of These Questions are Fully Resolved
However, given the disparity in the results and the fact that many of the studies included in this analysis had small sample sizes, Dr. Ubah called for larger studies and studies with better controls. He noted, for example, that the studies did not consistently evaluate mitigating factors, such as used of inhaled or oral corticosteroids, which might affect risk of the severity of a COVID-19 infection.
Rather, “our findings pointed out that the type of medication prescribed for asthma may have implications for the severity of COVID-19 infection in these patients,” Dr. Ubah said in an interview.
Overall, the data do not support a major interaction between asthma and COVID-19, even if the data are not conclusive. Each of the senior authors of these studies called for larger and better investigations to further explore whether COVID-19 infection and preexisting asthma interact. So far, the data indicate that if COVID-19 infection poses a risk of precipitating new-onset asthma or inducing a more severe infection in children with asthma, it is low, but the degree of risk, if any, remains unresolved in subgroups defined by asthma treatment or asthma severity.
Dr. Davis, Dr. Hill, Dr. Lung, and Dr. Ubah reported no potential conflicts of interest. None of these studies received funding from commercial interests.
In one of several recently published studies on the relationship between COVID-19 infection and asthma,
according to data drawn from the National Survey of Children’s Health (NSCH).The inverse correlation between symptoms and vaccination was strong and statistically significant, according to investigators led by Matthew M. Davis, MD, Physician in Chief and Chief Scientific Officer, Nemours Children’s Health, Wilmington, Delaware.
“With each increase of 10 percentage points in COVID-19 vaccination coverage, the parent-reported child asthma symptoms prevalence decreased by 0.36 percentage points (P < .05),” Dr. Davis and his coinvestigators reported in a research letter published in JAMA Network Open.
Studies Explore Relationship of COVID and Asthma
The reduced risk of asthma symptoms with COVID-19 vaccination in children at the population level is just one of several recently published studies exploring the interaction between COVID-19 infection and asthma, but two studies that posed the same question did not reach the same conclusion.
In one, COVID-19 infection in children was not found to be a trigger for new-onset asthma, but the second found that it was. In a third study, the preponderance of evidence from a meta-analysis found that patients with asthma – whether children or adults – did not necessarily experience a more severe course of COVID-19 infection than in those without asthma.
The NSCH database study calculated state-level change in scores for patient-reported childhood asthma symptoms in the years in the years 2018-2019, which preceded the pandemic and the years 2020-2021, when the pandemic began. The hypothesis was that the proportion of the population 5 years of age or older who completed the COVID-19 primary vaccination would be inversely related to asthma symptom prevalence.
Relative to the 2018-2019 years, the mean rate of parent-reported asthma symptoms was 0.85% lower (6.93% vs 7.77%; P < .001) in 2020-2021, when the mean primary series COVID-19 vaccination rate was 72.3%.
The study was not able to evaluate the impact of COVID-19 vaccination specifically in children with asthma, because history of asthma is not captured in the NSCH data, but Dr. Davis contended that the reduction in symptomatic asthma among children with increased vaccination offers validation for the state-level findings.
“Moreover, the absence of an association of COVID-19 vaccination administered predominantly in 2021 with population-level COVID-19 mortality in 2020 serves as a negative control,” he and his colleagues wrote in their research letter.
Protection from Respiratory Viruses Seen for Asthma Patients
In an interview, Dr. Davis reported that these data are consistent with previous evidence that immunization against influenza also reduces risk of asthma symptoms. In a meta-analysis published in 2017, it was estimated that live vaccines reduced risk of influenza by 81% and prevented 59%-72% of asthma attacks leading to hospitalizations or emergency room visits.
“The similarity of our findings regarding COVID-19 vaccination to prior data regarding influenza vaccination underscores the importance of preventing viral illnesses in individuals with a history of asthma,” Dr. Davis said. It is not yet clear if this is true of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV). Because of the short time that the RSV vaccine has been available, it is too soon to conduct an analysis.
One message from this study is that “clinicians should continue to encourage COVID-19 vaccination for children because of its general benefits in preventing coronavirus-related illness and the apparent specific benefits for children with a history of asthma,” he said.
While vaccination appears to reduce asthmatic symptoms related to COVID-19 infection, one study suggests that COVID-19 does not trigger new-onset asthma. In a retrospective study published in Pediatrics, no association between COVID-19 infection and new-onset asthma could be made in an analysis of 27,423 children (ages, 1-16 years) from the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) Care Network.
Across all the pediatric age groups evaluated, the consistent finding was “SARS-CoV-2 positivity does not confer an additional risk for asthma diagnosis at least within the first 18 months after a [polymerase chain reaction] test,” concluded the investigators, led by David A. Hill, MD, PhD, Division of Allergy and Immunology, CHOP, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Risk of Asthma Doubled After COVID-19 Infection
However, the opposite conclusion was reached by investigators evaluating data from two cohorts of children ages 5-18 drawn from the TriNetX database, a global health research network with data on more than 250 million individuals. Cohort 1 included more than 250,000 children. These children had never received COVID-19 vaccination. The 50,000 patients in cohort 2 had all received COVID19 vaccination.
To compare the impact of COVID-19 infection on new-onset asthma, the patients who were infected with COVID-19 were compared with those who were not infected after propensity score matching over 18 months of follow-up.
In cohort 1, the rate of new onset asthma was more than twofold greater among those with COVID-19 infection (4.7% vs 2.0%). The hazard ratio (HR) of 2.25 had tight confidence intervals (95% CI, 2.158-2.367).
In cohort 2, the risk of new-onset asthma at 18 months among those who had a COVID-19 infection relative to those without was even greater (8.3% vs 3.1%). The relative risk approached a 3-fold increase (HR 2.745; 95% CI, 2.521-2.99).
The conclusion of these investigators, led by Chia-Chi Lung, PhD, Department of Public Health, Chung Shan Medical University, Taichung City, Taiwan, was that there is “a critical need for ongoing monitoring and customized healthcare strategies to mitigate the long-term respiratory impacts of COVID-19 in children.”
These health risks might not be as significant as once feared. In the recently published study from Environmental Health Insights, the goal of a meta-analysis was to determine if patients with asthma relative to those without asthma face a higher risk of serious disease from COVID-19 infection. The meta-analysis included studies of children and adults. The answer, according an in-depth analysis of 21 articles in a “scoping review,” was a qualified no.
Of the 21 articles, 4 concluded that asthma is a risk factor for serious COVID-19 infection, but 17 did not, according to Chukwudi S. Ubah, PhD, Department of Public Health, Brody School of Medicine, East Caroline University, Greenville, North Carolina.
None of These Questions are Fully Resolved
However, given the disparity in the results and the fact that many of the studies included in this analysis had small sample sizes, Dr. Ubah called for larger studies and studies with better controls. He noted, for example, that the studies did not consistently evaluate mitigating factors, such as used of inhaled or oral corticosteroids, which might affect risk of the severity of a COVID-19 infection.
Rather, “our findings pointed out that the type of medication prescribed for asthma may have implications for the severity of COVID-19 infection in these patients,” Dr. Ubah said in an interview.
Overall, the data do not support a major interaction between asthma and COVID-19, even if the data are not conclusive. Each of the senior authors of these studies called for larger and better investigations to further explore whether COVID-19 infection and preexisting asthma interact. So far, the data indicate that if COVID-19 infection poses a risk of precipitating new-onset asthma or inducing a more severe infection in children with asthma, it is low, but the degree of risk, if any, remains unresolved in subgroups defined by asthma treatment or asthma severity.
Dr. Davis, Dr. Hill, Dr. Lung, and Dr. Ubah reported no potential conflicts of interest. None of these studies received funding from commercial interests.
In one of several recently published studies on the relationship between COVID-19 infection and asthma,
according to data drawn from the National Survey of Children’s Health (NSCH).The inverse correlation between symptoms and vaccination was strong and statistically significant, according to investigators led by Matthew M. Davis, MD, Physician in Chief and Chief Scientific Officer, Nemours Children’s Health, Wilmington, Delaware.
“With each increase of 10 percentage points in COVID-19 vaccination coverage, the parent-reported child asthma symptoms prevalence decreased by 0.36 percentage points (P < .05),” Dr. Davis and his coinvestigators reported in a research letter published in JAMA Network Open.
Studies Explore Relationship of COVID and Asthma
The reduced risk of asthma symptoms with COVID-19 vaccination in children at the population level is just one of several recently published studies exploring the interaction between COVID-19 infection and asthma, but two studies that posed the same question did not reach the same conclusion.
In one, COVID-19 infection in children was not found to be a trigger for new-onset asthma, but the second found that it was. In a third study, the preponderance of evidence from a meta-analysis found that patients with asthma – whether children or adults – did not necessarily experience a more severe course of COVID-19 infection than in those without asthma.
The NSCH database study calculated state-level change in scores for patient-reported childhood asthma symptoms in the years in the years 2018-2019, which preceded the pandemic and the years 2020-2021, when the pandemic began. The hypothesis was that the proportion of the population 5 years of age or older who completed the COVID-19 primary vaccination would be inversely related to asthma symptom prevalence.
Relative to the 2018-2019 years, the mean rate of parent-reported asthma symptoms was 0.85% lower (6.93% vs 7.77%; P < .001) in 2020-2021, when the mean primary series COVID-19 vaccination rate was 72.3%.
The study was not able to evaluate the impact of COVID-19 vaccination specifically in children with asthma, because history of asthma is not captured in the NSCH data, but Dr. Davis contended that the reduction in symptomatic asthma among children with increased vaccination offers validation for the state-level findings.
“Moreover, the absence of an association of COVID-19 vaccination administered predominantly in 2021 with population-level COVID-19 mortality in 2020 serves as a negative control,” he and his colleagues wrote in their research letter.
Protection from Respiratory Viruses Seen for Asthma Patients
In an interview, Dr. Davis reported that these data are consistent with previous evidence that immunization against influenza also reduces risk of asthma symptoms. In a meta-analysis published in 2017, it was estimated that live vaccines reduced risk of influenza by 81% and prevented 59%-72% of asthma attacks leading to hospitalizations or emergency room visits.
“The similarity of our findings regarding COVID-19 vaccination to prior data regarding influenza vaccination underscores the importance of preventing viral illnesses in individuals with a history of asthma,” Dr. Davis said. It is not yet clear if this is true of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV). Because of the short time that the RSV vaccine has been available, it is too soon to conduct an analysis.
One message from this study is that “clinicians should continue to encourage COVID-19 vaccination for children because of its general benefits in preventing coronavirus-related illness and the apparent specific benefits for children with a history of asthma,” he said.
While vaccination appears to reduce asthmatic symptoms related to COVID-19 infection, one study suggests that COVID-19 does not trigger new-onset asthma. In a retrospective study published in Pediatrics, no association between COVID-19 infection and new-onset asthma could be made in an analysis of 27,423 children (ages, 1-16 years) from the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) Care Network.
Across all the pediatric age groups evaluated, the consistent finding was “SARS-CoV-2 positivity does not confer an additional risk for asthma diagnosis at least within the first 18 months after a [polymerase chain reaction] test,” concluded the investigators, led by David A. Hill, MD, PhD, Division of Allergy and Immunology, CHOP, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Risk of Asthma Doubled After COVID-19 Infection
However, the opposite conclusion was reached by investigators evaluating data from two cohorts of children ages 5-18 drawn from the TriNetX database, a global health research network with data on more than 250 million individuals. Cohort 1 included more than 250,000 children. These children had never received COVID-19 vaccination. The 50,000 patients in cohort 2 had all received COVID19 vaccination.
To compare the impact of COVID-19 infection on new-onset asthma, the patients who were infected with COVID-19 were compared with those who were not infected after propensity score matching over 18 months of follow-up.
In cohort 1, the rate of new onset asthma was more than twofold greater among those with COVID-19 infection (4.7% vs 2.0%). The hazard ratio (HR) of 2.25 had tight confidence intervals (95% CI, 2.158-2.367).
In cohort 2, the risk of new-onset asthma at 18 months among those who had a COVID-19 infection relative to those without was even greater (8.3% vs 3.1%). The relative risk approached a 3-fold increase (HR 2.745; 95% CI, 2.521-2.99).
The conclusion of these investigators, led by Chia-Chi Lung, PhD, Department of Public Health, Chung Shan Medical University, Taichung City, Taiwan, was that there is “a critical need for ongoing monitoring and customized healthcare strategies to mitigate the long-term respiratory impacts of COVID-19 in children.”
These health risks might not be as significant as once feared. In the recently published study from Environmental Health Insights, the goal of a meta-analysis was to determine if patients with asthma relative to those without asthma face a higher risk of serious disease from COVID-19 infection. The meta-analysis included studies of children and adults. The answer, according an in-depth analysis of 21 articles in a “scoping review,” was a qualified no.
Of the 21 articles, 4 concluded that asthma is a risk factor for serious COVID-19 infection, but 17 did not, according to Chukwudi S. Ubah, PhD, Department of Public Health, Brody School of Medicine, East Caroline University, Greenville, North Carolina.
None of These Questions are Fully Resolved
However, given the disparity in the results and the fact that many of the studies included in this analysis had small sample sizes, Dr. Ubah called for larger studies and studies with better controls. He noted, for example, that the studies did not consistently evaluate mitigating factors, such as used of inhaled or oral corticosteroids, which might affect risk of the severity of a COVID-19 infection.
Rather, “our findings pointed out that the type of medication prescribed for asthma may have implications for the severity of COVID-19 infection in these patients,” Dr. Ubah said in an interview.
Overall, the data do not support a major interaction between asthma and COVID-19, even if the data are not conclusive. Each of the senior authors of these studies called for larger and better investigations to further explore whether COVID-19 infection and preexisting asthma interact. So far, the data indicate that if COVID-19 infection poses a risk of precipitating new-onset asthma or inducing a more severe infection in children with asthma, it is low, but the degree of risk, if any, remains unresolved in subgroups defined by asthma treatment or asthma severity.
Dr. Davis, Dr. Hill, Dr. Lung, and Dr. Ubah reported no potential conflicts of interest. None of these studies received funding from commercial interests.
FROM JAMA NETWORK OPEN
First-line Canakinumab Without Steroids Shows Effectiveness for Systemic Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis
VIENNA — The interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1RA) canakinumab provided control of systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (sJIA) without the use of glucocorticoids for up to a year in most study participants after three monthly injections.
In this study of 20 patients with newly diagnosed sJIA treated off glucocorticoids, fever was controlled after a single injection in all patients, and 16 patients reached the primary outcome of remission after three injections, said Gerd Horneff, MD, PhD, Asklepios Children’s Hospital, Sankt Augustin, Germany.
Results of this open-label study, called CANAKINUMAB FIRST, were presented as late-breaking findings at the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology (EULAR) 2024 Annual Meeting.
“Steroid-free, first-line treatment with canakinumab led to sustained responses in most patients, with a considerable number achieving remission,” said Dr. Horneff, adding that the observation in this group is ongoing.
Building on Earlier Data
The efficacy of canakinumab was previously reported in anecdotal experiences and one small patient series published 10 years ago. Dr. Horneff noted that he has offered this drug off label to patients with challenging cases.
The objective was to evaluate canakinumab as a first-line monotherapy administered in the absence of glucocorticoids. The study was open to children aged 2-18 years with active sJIA/juvenile Still disease confirmed with published criteria. All were naive to biologic or nonbiologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs as well as steroids.
The median age of the children was 8.4 years. A total of 60% were men. The median disease duration at the time of entry was 1.2 months. Most had fever (95%) and rash (80%) with high levels of inflammatory markers at baseline. The mean number of painful joints was 3.1, and the mean number of systemic manifestations was 2.8. No patient was without any systemic involvement, but four of the patients did not have any painful joints.
At enrollment, patients were scheduled to receive three injections of canakinumab at monthly intervals during an active treatment phase, after which they entered an observation phase lasting 40 weeks. In the event of nonresponse or flares in either phase, they were transitioned to usual care.
Symptoms Resolve After Single Injection
After the first injection, active joint disease and all systemic manifestations resolved in 16 (80%) of the 20 patients. Joint activity and systemic manifestations also remained controlled after the second and third injections in 16 of the 20 patients.
One patient in this series achieved inactive disease after a single injection but developed what appeared to be a treatment-related allergic reaction. He received no further treatment and was excluded from the study, although he is being followed separately.
“According to sJADAS [systemic JIA Disease Activity Score] criteria at month 3, 14 had inactive disease, three had minimal disease activity, and one patient had moderate disease activity,” Dr. Horneff said.
At week 24, or 3 months after the last injection, there was still no joint activity in 16 patients. Systemic manifestations remained controlled in 13 patients, but 1 patient by this point had a flare. Another flare occurred after this point, and other patients have not yet completed the 52-week observation period.
“Of the 10 patients who remained in the study and have completed the 52-week observation period, eight have had a drug-free remission,” Dr. Horneff said.
MAS Event Observed in One Patient
In addition to the allergic skin reaction, which was considered probably related to the study drug, there were three flares, one of which was a macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) event. The MAS occurred 8 weeks after the last injection, but it was managed successfully.
Of 30 infections that developed during the observation period, 18 involved the upper airway. All were treated successfully. There were also two injection-site reactions and one case of cytopenia.
Among the studies planned for follow-up, investigators will examine genomic and gene activation in relation to disease activity and the effect of canakinumab.
Comoderator of the abstract session and chair of the EULAR 2024 Abstract Selection Committee, Christian Dejaco, MD, PhD, a consultant rheumatologist and associate professor at the Medical University of Graz in Graz, Austria, suggested that these are highly encouraging data for a disease that does not currently have any approved therapies. Clearly, larger studies with a longer follow-up period are needed, but he pointed out that phase 3 trials in a rare disease like sJIA are challenging.
Because of the limited number of cases, “it will be difficult to conduct a placebo-controlled trial,” he pointed out. However, he hopes this study will provide the basis for larger studies and sufficient data to lead to an indication for this therapy.
In the meantime, he also believes that these data are likely to support empirical use in a difficult disease, even in advance of formal regulatory approval.
“We heard that canakinumab is already being used off label in JIA, and these data might encourage more of that,” he said.
Dr. Horneff reported financial relationships with AbbVie, Boehringer Ingelheim, Celgene, Chugai, GlaxoSmithKline, Janssen, Merck Sharpe & Dohme, Novartis, Pfizer, Roche, Sanofi, and Sobe. Dr. Dejaco reported no potential conflicts of interest.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
VIENNA — The interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1RA) canakinumab provided control of systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (sJIA) without the use of glucocorticoids for up to a year in most study participants after three monthly injections.
In this study of 20 patients with newly diagnosed sJIA treated off glucocorticoids, fever was controlled after a single injection in all patients, and 16 patients reached the primary outcome of remission after three injections, said Gerd Horneff, MD, PhD, Asklepios Children’s Hospital, Sankt Augustin, Germany.
Results of this open-label study, called CANAKINUMAB FIRST, were presented as late-breaking findings at the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology (EULAR) 2024 Annual Meeting.
“Steroid-free, first-line treatment with canakinumab led to sustained responses in most patients, with a considerable number achieving remission,” said Dr. Horneff, adding that the observation in this group is ongoing.
Building on Earlier Data
The efficacy of canakinumab was previously reported in anecdotal experiences and one small patient series published 10 years ago. Dr. Horneff noted that he has offered this drug off label to patients with challenging cases.
The objective was to evaluate canakinumab as a first-line monotherapy administered in the absence of glucocorticoids. The study was open to children aged 2-18 years with active sJIA/juvenile Still disease confirmed with published criteria. All were naive to biologic or nonbiologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs as well as steroids.
The median age of the children was 8.4 years. A total of 60% were men. The median disease duration at the time of entry was 1.2 months. Most had fever (95%) and rash (80%) with high levels of inflammatory markers at baseline. The mean number of painful joints was 3.1, and the mean number of systemic manifestations was 2.8. No patient was without any systemic involvement, but four of the patients did not have any painful joints.
At enrollment, patients were scheduled to receive three injections of canakinumab at monthly intervals during an active treatment phase, after which they entered an observation phase lasting 40 weeks. In the event of nonresponse or flares in either phase, they were transitioned to usual care.
Symptoms Resolve After Single Injection
After the first injection, active joint disease and all systemic manifestations resolved in 16 (80%) of the 20 patients. Joint activity and systemic manifestations also remained controlled after the second and third injections in 16 of the 20 patients.
One patient in this series achieved inactive disease after a single injection but developed what appeared to be a treatment-related allergic reaction. He received no further treatment and was excluded from the study, although he is being followed separately.
“According to sJADAS [systemic JIA Disease Activity Score] criteria at month 3, 14 had inactive disease, three had minimal disease activity, and one patient had moderate disease activity,” Dr. Horneff said.
At week 24, or 3 months after the last injection, there was still no joint activity in 16 patients. Systemic manifestations remained controlled in 13 patients, but 1 patient by this point had a flare. Another flare occurred after this point, and other patients have not yet completed the 52-week observation period.
“Of the 10 patients who remained in the study and have completed the 52-week observation period, eight have had a drug-free remission,” Dr. Horneff said.
MAS Event Observed in One Patient
In addition to the allergic skin reaction, which was considered probably related to the study drug, there were three flares, one of which was a macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) event. The MAS occurred 8 weeks after the last injection, but it was managed successfully.
Of 30 infections that developed during the observation period, 18 involved the upper airway. All were treated successfully. There were also two injection-site reactions and one case of cytopenia.
Among the studies planned for follow-up, investigators will examine genomic and gene activation in relation to disease activity and the effect of canakinumab.
Comoderator of the abstract session and chair of the EULAR 2024 Abstract Selection Committee, Christian Dejaco, MD, PhD, a consultant rheumatologist and associate professor at the Medical University of Graz in Graz, Austria, suggested that these are highly encouraging data for a disease that does not currently have any approved therapies. Clearly, larger studies with a longer follow-up period are needed, but he pointed out that phase 3 trials in a rare disease like sJIA are challenging.
Because of the limited number of cases, “it will be difficult to conduct a placebo-controlled trial,” he pointed out. However, he hopes this study will provide the basis for larger studies and sufficient data to lead to an indication for this therapy.
In the meantime, he also believes that these data are likely to support empirical use in a difficult disease, even in advance of formal regulatory approval.
“We heard that canakinumab is already being used off label in JIA, and these data might encourage more of that,” he said.
Dr. Horneff reported financial relationships with AbbVie, Boehringer Ingelheim, Celgene, Chugai, GlaxoSmithKline, Janssen, Merck Sharpe & Dohme, Novartis, Pfizer, Roche, Sanofi, and Sobe. Dr. Dejaco reported no potential conflicts of interest.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
VIENNA — The interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1RA) canakinumab provided control of systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (sJIA) without the use of glucocorticoids for up to a year in most study participants after three monthly injections.
In this study of 20 patients with newly diagnosed sJIA treated off glucocorticoids, fever was controlled after a single injection in all patients, and 16 patients reached the primary outcome of remission after three injections, said Gerd Horneff, MD, PhD, Asklepios Children’s Hospital, Sankt Augustin, Germany.
Results of this open-label study, called CANAKINUMAB FIRST, were presented as late-breaking findings at the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology (EULAR) 2024 Annual Meeting.
“Steroid-free, first-line treatment with canakinumab led to sustained responses in most patients, with a considerable number achieving remission,” said Dr. Horneff, adding that the observation in this group is ongoing.
Building on Earlier Data
The efficacy of canakinumab was previously reported in anecdotal experiences and one small patient series published 10 years ago. Dr. Horneff noted that he has offered this drug off label to patients with challenging cases.
The objective was to evaluate canakinumab as a first-line monotherapy administered in the absence of glucocorticoids. The study was open to children aged 2-18 years with active sJIA/juvenile Still disease confirmed with published criteria. All were naive to biologic or nonbiologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs as well as steroids.
The median age of the children was 8.4 years. A total of 60% were men. The median disease duration at the time of entry was 1.2 months. Most had fever (95%) and rash (80%) with high levels of inflammatory markers at baseline. The mean number of painful joints was 3.1, and the mean number of systemic manifestations was 2.8. No patient was without any systemic involvement, but four of the patients did not have any painful joints.
At enrollment, patients were scheduled to receive three injections of canakinumab at monthly intervals during an active treatment phase, after which they entered an observation phase lasting 40 weeks. In the event of nonresponse or flares in either phase, they were transitioned to usual care.
Symptoms Resolve After Single Injection
After the first injection, active joint disease and all systemic manifestations resolved in 16 (80%) of the 20 patients. Joint activity and systemic manifestations also remained controlled after the second and third injections in 16 of the 20 patients.
One patient in this series achieved inactive disease after a single injection but developed what appeared to be a treatment-related allergic reaction. He received no further treatment and was excluded from the study, although he is being followed separately.
“According to sJADAS [systemic JIA Disease Activity Score] criteria at month 3, 14 had inactive disease, three had minimal disease activity, and one patient had moderate disease activity,” Dr. Horneff said.
At week 24, or 3 months after the last injection, there was still no joint activity in 16 patients. Systemic manifestations remained controlled in 13 patients, but 1 patient by this point had a flare. Another flare occurred after this point, and other patients have not yet completed the 52-week observation period.
“Of the 10 patients who remained in the study and have completed the 52-week observation period, eight have had a drug-free remission,” Dr. Horneff said.
MAS Event Observed in One Patient
In addition to the allergic skin reaction, which was considered probably related to the study drug, there were three flares, one of which was a macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) event. The MAS occurred 8 weeks after the last injection, but it was managed successfully.
Of 30 infections that developed during the observation period, 18 involved the upper airway. All were treated successfully. There were also two injection-site reactions and one case of cytopenia.
Among the studies planned for follow-up, investigators will examine genomic and gene activation in relation to disease activity and the effect of canakinumab.
Comoderator of the abstract session and chair of the EULAR 2024 Abstract Selection Committee, Christian Dejaco, MD, PhD, a consultant rheumatologist and associate professor at the Medical University of Graz in Graz, Austria, suggested that these are highly encouraging data for a disease that does not currently have any approved therapies. Clearly, larger studies with a longer follow-up period are needed, but he pointed out that phase 3 trials in a rare disease like sJIA are challenging.
Because of the limited number of cases, “it will be difficult to conduct a placebo-controlled trial,” he pointed out. However, he hopes this study will provide the basis for larger studies and sufficient data to lead to an indication for this therapy.
In the meantime, he also believes that these data are likely to support empirical use in a difficult disease, even in advance of formal regulatory approval.
“We heard that canakinumab is already being used off label in JIA, and these data might encourage more of that,” he said.
Dr. Horneff reported financial relationships with AbbVie, Boehringer Ingelheim, Celgene, Chugai, GlaxoSmithKline, Janssen, Merck Sharpe & Dohme, Novartis, Pfizer, Roche, Sanofi, and Sobe. Dr. Dejaco reported no potential conflicts of interest.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM EULAR 2024