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Full resolution of psoriasis in half of ixekizumab patients

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Full resolution of psoriasis in half of ixekizumab patients

More than half of the patients treated with the interleukin-17A antagonist, ixekizumab, achieved full resolution of skin plaques after a year of 2- to 4-week dosing, according to the latest analysis of data from the three UNCOVER trials of almost 4,000 patients with moderate to severe psoriasis.

The results of the three randomized, double-blind placebo-controlled pivotal trials were published online in the New England Journal of Medicine (doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1512711).

Ixekizumab was approved in March for the treatment of adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis who are candidates for systemic therapy or phototherapy; it is marketed as Taltz by Eli Lilly. Some of the UNCOVER data have been previously reported. The UNCOVER studies were conducted at more than 100 sites in 21 countries.

Patients in the UNCOVER trials were randomized to 80 mg of ixekizumab every 2 weeks after a starting dose of 160 mg, 80 mg every 4 weeks after the same starting dose, or subcutaneous placebo injections, for 12 weeks.

In the UNCOVER-2 and UNCOVER-3 trials, additional cohorts were also randomized to twice-weekly etanercept (50 mg). All three trials also included a long-term extension period to 60 weeks, which was randomly assigned in UNCOVER-3 (where patients received 80 mg of ixekizumab every 4 weeks), or was implemented for all patients who responded to ixekizumab in the other two trials (where patients were randomized to 80 mg every 4 or 12 weeks, or placebo).

In the UNCOVER-1 trial in 1,296 patients, 89.1% of patients in the 2-week dosing group and 82.6% of the 4-week dosing group had achieved a 75% reduction in the Psoriasis Area and Severity Index score (PASI 75) by week 12, compared with 3.9% in the placebo group (P less than .0001 for all). Similarly, 35.3% of patients in the 2-week dosing group and 33.6% of those in the 4-week dosing group achieved a PASI score of 100 by week 12.

The high response rates seen during the induction period “were generally maintained during the long-term extension period in UNCOVER-3,” wrote Dr. Kenneth B. Gordon, professor of dermatology, Northwestern University, Chicago, and his coauthors. In the analysis of the long-term data from UNCOVER-3, the researchers reported that by week 60, 55% of patients receiving 80 mg of ixekizumab every 2 weeks during the induction period had achieved a PASI 100, and 52% of patients receiving ixekizumab every 4 weeks during the induction period had achieved a PASI 100.

Patients randomized to 80 mg of ixekizumab every 12 weeks after the first 12 weeks of treatment also showed significant long-term responses in the UNCOVER-1 and -2 trials. Nearly half (49.1%) of those who were initiated on 2-week dosing and 44.9% of those initiated on 4-week dosing achieved a PASI score of 75 on the 12-week dosing schedule, compared with 8%-9% of those randomized to placebo from week 12 through week 60.

The authors concluded that ixekizumab “provided high levels of clinical response at week 12 and through week 60,” adding, however, that “as with any treatment, the benefits need to be weighed against the adverse events, and the safety profile of longer-term treatment with ixekizumab should be examined.”

Although low serum IL-17 levels have previously been linked with cardiovascular disease, the study found no significant differences between the treatment and placebo groups in adverse cardiovascular events. Candidal infections were more common among those treated with ixekizumab, “a finding that is consistent with the role of IL-17A in the mucocutaneous defense against fungal infections,” they wrote.

There were 11 cases of inflammatory bowel disease reported among patients during treatment with ixekizumab and another three cases in patients receiving placebo during a randomized withdrawal period, who had received ixekizumab during the induction* period. These results “suggest that further evaluation is needed to understand the relationship between IL-17A inhibitors and inflammatory bowel disease,” the investigators said.

The authors of the study include Eli Lilly employees, several of whom also have stock options; the other authors declared a range of funding, advisory board positions, and speakers fees from pharmaceutical companies, including Eli Lilly. The UNCOVER studies were sponsored by Eli Lilly.

*A previous version of this article misstated the period during which three placebo patients received ixekizumab.

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More than half of the patients treated with the interleukin-17A antagonist, ixekizumab, achieved full resolution of skin plaques after a year of 2- to 4-week dosing, according to the latest analysis of data from the three UNCOVER trials of almost 4,000 patients with moderate to severe psoriasis.

The results of the three randomized, double-blind placebo-controlled pivotal trials were published online in the New England Journal of Medicine (doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1512711).

Ixekizumab was approved in March for the treatment of adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis who are candidates for systemic therapy or phototherapy; it is marketed as Taltz by Eli Lilly. Some of the UNCOVER data have been previously reported. The UNCOVER studies were conducted at more than 100 sites in 21 countries.

Patients in the UNCOVER trials were randomized to 80 mg of ixekizumab every 2 weeks after a starting dose of 160 mg, 80 mg every 4 weeks after the same starting dose, or subcutaneous placebo injections, for 12 weeks.

In the UNCOVER-2 and UNCOVER-3 trials, additional cohorts were also randomized to twice-weekly etanercept (50 mg). All three trials also included a long-term extension period to 60 weeks, which was randomly assigned in UNCOVER-3 (where patients received 80 mg of ixekizumab every 4 weeks), or was implemented for all patients who responded to ixekizumab in the other two trials (where patients were randomized to 80 mg every 4 or 12 weeks, or placebo).

In the UNCOVER-1 trial in 1,296 patients, 89.1% of patients in the 2-week dosing group and 82.6% of the 4-week dosing group had achieved a 75% reduction in the Psoriasis Area and Severity Index score (PASI 75) by week 12, compared with 3.9% in the placebo group (P less than .0001 for all). Similarly, 35.3% of patients in the 2-week dosing group and 33.6% of those in the 4-week dosing group achieved a PASI score of 100 by week 12.

The high response rates seen during the induction period “were generally maintained during the long-term extension period in UNCOVER-3,” wrote Dr. Kenneth B. Gordon, professor of dermatology, Northwestern University, Chicago, and his coauthors. In the analysis of the long-term data from UNCOVER-3, the researchers reported that by week 60, 55% of patients receiving 80 mg of ixekizumab every 2 weeks during the induction period had achieved a PASI 100, and 52% of patients receiving ixekizumab every 4 weeks during the induction period had achieved a PASI 100.

Patients randomized to 80 mg of ixekizumab every 12 weeks after the first 12 weeks of treatment also showed significant long-term responses in the UNCOVER-1 and -2 trials. Nearly half (49.1%) of those who were initiated on 2-week dosing and 44.9% of those initiated on 4-week dosing achieved a PASI score of 75 on the 12-week dosing schedule, compared with 8%-9% of those randomized to placebo from week 12 through week 60.

The authors concluded that ixekizumab “provided high levels of clinical response at week 12 and through week 60,” adding, however, that “as with any treatment, the benefits need to be weighed against the adverse events, and the safety profile of longer-term treatment with ixekizumab should be examined.”

Although low serum IL-17 levels have previously been linked with cardiovascular disease, the study found no significant differences between the treatment and placebo groups in adverse cardiovascular events. Candidal infections were more common among those treated with ixekizumab, “a finding that is consistent with the role of IL-17A in the mucocutaneous defense against fungal infections,” they wrote.

There were 11 cases of inflammatory bowel disease reported among patients during treatment with ixekizumab and another three cases in patients receiving placebo during a randomized withdrawal period, who had received ixekizumab during the induction* period. These results “suggest that further evaluation is needed to understand the relationship between IL-17A inhibitors and inflammatory bowel disease,” the investigators said.

The authors of the study include Eli Lilly employees, several of whom also have stock options; the other authors declared a range of funding, advisory board positions, and speakers fees from pharmaceutical companies, including Eli Lilly. The UNCOVER studies were sponsored by Eli Lilly.

*A previous version of this article misstated the period during which three placebo patients received ixekizumab.

More than half of the patients treated with the interleukin-17A antagonist, ixekizumab, achieved full resolution of skin plaques after a year of 2- to 4-week dosing, according to the latest analysis of data from the three UNCOVER trials of almost 4,000 patients with moderate to severe psoriasis.

The results of the three randomized, double-blind placebo-controlled pivotal trials were published online in the New England Journal of Medicine (doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1512711).

Ixekizumab was approved in March for the treatment of adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis who are candidates for systemic therapy or phototherapy; it is marketed as Taltz by Eli Lilly. Some of the UNCOVER data have been previously reported. The UNCOVER studies were conducted at more than 100 sites in 21 countries.

Patients in the UNCOVER trials were randomized to 80 mg of ixekizumab every 2 weeks after a starting dose of 160 mg, 80 mg every 4 weeks after the same starting dose, or subcutaneous placebo injections, for 12 weeks.

In the UNCOVER-2 and UNCOVER-3 trials, additional cohorts were also randomized to twice-weekly etanercept (50 mg). All three trials also included a long-term extension period to 60 weeks, which was randomly assigned in UNCOVER-3 (where patients received 80 mg of ixekizumab every 4 weeks), or was implemented for all patients who responded to ixekizumab in the other two trials (where patients were randomized to 80 mg every 4 or 12 weeks, or placebo).

In the UNCOVER-1 trial in 1,296 patients, 89.1% of patients in the 2-week dosing group and 82.6% of the 4-week dosing group had achieved a 75% reduction in the Psoriasis Area and Severity Index score (PASI 75) by week 12, compared with 3.9% in the placebo group (P less than .0001 for all). Similarly, 35.3% of patients in the 2-week dosing group and 33.6% of those in the 4-week dosing group achieved a PASI score of 100 by week 12.

The high response rates seen during the induction period “were generally maintained during the long-term extension period in UNCOVER-3,” wrote Dr. Kenneth B. Gordon, professor of dermatology, Northwestern University, Chicago, and his coauthors. In the analysis of the long-term data from UNCOVER-3, the researchers reported that by week 60, 55% of patients receiving 80 mg of ixekizumab every 2 weeks during the induction period had achieved a PASI 100, and 52% of patients receiving ixekizumab every 4 weeks during the induction period had achieved a PASI 100.

Patients randomized to 80 mg of ixekizumab every 12 weeks after the first 12 weeks of treatment also showed significant long-term responses in the UNCOVER-1 and -2 trials. Nearly half (49.1%) of those who were initiated on 2-week dosing and 44.9% of those initiated on 4-week dosing achieved a PASI score of 75 on the 12-week dosing schedule, compared with 8%-9% of those randomized to placebo from week 12 through week 60.

The authors concluded that ixekizumab “provided high levels of clinical response at week 12 and through week 60,” adding, however, that “as with any treatment, the benefits need to be weighed against the adverse events, and the safety profile of longer-term treatment with ixekizumab should be examined.”

Although low serum IL-17 levels have previously been linked with cardiovascular disease, the study found no significant differences between the treatment and placebo groups in adverse cardiovascular events. Candidal infections were more common among those treated with ixekizumab, “a finding that is consistent with the role of IL-17A in the mucocutaneous defense against fungal infections,” they wrote.

There were 11 cases of inflammatory bowel disease reported among patients during treatment with ixekizumab and another three cases in patients receiving placebo during a randomized withdrawal period, who had received ixekizumab during the induction* period. These results “suggest that further evaluation is needed to understand the relationship between IL-17A inhibitors and inflammatory bowel disease,” the investigators said.

The authors of the study include Eli Lilly employees, several of whom also have stock options; the other authors declared a range of funding, advisory board positions, and speakers fees from pharmaceutical companies, including Eli Lilly. The UNCOVER studies were sponsored by Eli Lilly.

*A previous version of this article misstated the period during which three placebo patients received ixekizumab.

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Full resolution of psoriasis in half of ixekizumab patients
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Full resolution of psoriasis in half of ixekizumab patients
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FROM THE NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE

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Key clinical point: Half of patients treated with the IL-17A–neutralizing ixekizumab achieve full resolution of psoriasis plaques after 1 year.

Major finding: Among psoriasis patients treated with two weekly or four weekly doses of ixekizumab, 55% and 52%, respectively, achieve full resolution of plaques at 60 weeks.

Data source: Randomized, double-blind placebo-controlled trials (UNCOVER-1, -2, and -3) in 3,866 patients with psoriasis.

Disclosures: The studies were supported by Eli Lilly. The authors included employees of Eli Lilly, some of whom have stock options, while the other authors all declared a range of funding, advisory board positions, and speakers fees from pharmaceutical companies, including Eli Lilly.

VIDEO: Updated axial SpA recommendations include IL-17 inhibitors

IL-17 inhibitors represent a step forward
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VIDEO: Updated axial SpA recommendations include IL-17 inhibitors

LONDON – The option of treating axial spondyloarthritis with an interleukin-17 inhibitor has become an officially recommended option for the first time in a new update to management recommendations for this disease released by a task force assembled jointly by the Assessment of SpondyloArthritis International Society and the European League Against Rheumatism.

The update replaces recommendations last released by the two groups for managing patients with ankylosing spondylitis in 2010 (Ann Rheum Dis. 2011 June;70[6]:896-904), as well as the prior recommendations from the two organizations for using tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitors on these patients (Ann Rheum Dis. 2011 June;70[6]:905-8). The new update also broadens the disease spectrum from ankylosing spondylitis to axial spondyloarthritis (SpA).

Mitchel L. Zoler/Frontline Medical News
Dr. Désirée van der Heijde

The latest recommendations continue to place nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) as first-line pharmacotherapy for patients with axial SpA to control pain and stiffness, and continue to place treatment with a biological disease modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD) – identified in the recommendations as most typically a TNF inhibitor by current practice – as second-line treatment after NSAIDs. The recommendations specify that initiation of a biological DMARD should target patients who have both failed treatment with at least two different NSAIDs over the course of at least 4 weeks of treatment, and who have active disease documented by either of two standard measures of disease activity in patients with axial SpA: either a score of at least 2.1 on the ankylosing spondylitis disease activity score (ASDAS) or a score of at least 4 on the Bath ankylosing spondylitis disease activity index (BASDAI).

Incorporation of the ASDAS as a potential alternative to the BASDAI for assessing disease activity in these patients is another new feature of these recommendations, noted Dr. Désirée van der Heijde, convenor of the update task force, who presented the new recommendations at the European Congress of Rheumatology.

The new recommendations place use of an interleukin (IL)-17 inhibitor as a third-line management option, for patients who fail to adequately respond to a first TNF inhibitor, and they also say that an alternative to starting an IL-17 inhibitor at this stage of management is to instead try treatment with a second type of TNF inhibitor. The IL-17 inhibitor class includes secukinumab (Cosentyx), which received approval from the Food and Drug Administration for treating active ankylosing spondylitis in January 2016, and which also has approval for the same indication from the European Medicines Agency.

The updated recommendations leave unchanged from the prior version advice to use biological DMARDs only after failure of other treatments, as well as advocacy of nondrug therapy with regular exercise, smoking cessation, and physical therapy when appropriate as the very first therapeutic step to take, before even starting a NSAID regimen. For patients with axial SpA who have peripheral arthritis, the recommendations say that clinicians can consider treatment with a local injection of a glucocorticoid, and a treatment course with sulfasalazine. The recommendations do not endorse treatment with a conventional, synthetic DMARD for patients with purely axial disease, and they also recommend against long-term treatment with a systemic corticosteroid. The update calls analgesics contraindicated.

Another new feature of the updated recommendations is endorsement of treating axial SpA patients to a predefined treatment target, although the recommendations left the nature of that target undefined and is something for the treating clinician to discuss and tailor to each patient individually, said Dr. van der Heijde, professor of rheumatology at Leiden University Medical Center in The Netherlands. The update also introduces for the first time the recommendation to consider tapering down treatment with a biological DMARD for patients who achieve remission.

Dr. van der Heijde said that she has been a consultant to 17 drug companies.

[email protected]

On Twitter @mitchelzoler

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel
References

Body

It’s important to have updated treatment recommendations as we accrue new evidence and treatment options. These recommendations can now address interleukin-17 inhibitors, which were not available for U.S. use to treat ankylosing spondylitis when the American College of Rheumatology and its collaborating organizations released updated recommendations for treating ankylosing spondylitis and nonradiographic axial spondyloarthritis in September 2015 (Arthritis Rheum. 2016 Feb;68[2]:282-98). Having interleukin (IL)-17 inhibitors now available and joining tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitors as a second class of biological drugs to treat these patients is a big step forward.

I do not believe strong evidence exists to make IL-17 inhibitors second-line agents behind TNF inhibitors as was done in the new European recommendations. That was an expert-opinion based decision rather than something based on clear evidence.

Another notable feature of the updated European recommendations is that they anchor several treatment decisions to measuring a patient’s disease activity and comparing the level of activity against defined thresholds. This is very different from the approach generally used in U.S. practice, where we do not require patients to have a certain level of quantifiable disease activity to either initiate or stop treatment. In U.S. practice, the rheumatologist’s assessment of disease activity is what matters, however that is done.

The European recommendations also call specifically for considering tapering down a biological drug once a patient achieves remission of active disease. In my experience, when a patient achieves remission it is more often the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug that rheumatologists prefer to taper because they attribute the patient’s good response primarily to his/her biological treatment. And the evidence is good that when a patient with ankylosing spondylitis stops treatment with a TNF inhibitor his/her disease tends to reactivate.

During the near future, we can expect an increased focus on diagnosing patients with axial spondyloarthritis and ankylosing spondylitis earlier and starting treatment earlier. I expect that this could lead to improved patient outcomes. I also expect that we will soon see more evidence regarding the effect of drug treatment on extra-articular manifestations of these diseases, and that this evidence will help dictate the specific treatments we choose for each patient. In the future, we will administer more personalized management for these disorders that is better tailored to each individual patient.

Dr. Lianne S. Gensler is a rheumatologist and director of the Ankylosing Spondylitis Clinic at the University of California, San Francisco. She has been a consultant to or has received research support from Abbvie, Amgen, Janssen, Novartis, and UCB. She made these comments in an interview.

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It’s important to have updated treatment recommendations as we accrue new evidence and treatment options. These recommendations can now address interleukin-17 inhibitors, which were not available for U.S. use to treat ankylosing spondylitis when the American College of Rheumatology and its collaborating organizations released updated recommendations for treating ankylosing spondylitis and nonradiographic axial spondyloarthritis in September 2015 (Arthritis Rheum. 2016 Feb;68[2]:282-98). Having interleukin (IL)-17 inhibitors now available and joining tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitors as a second class of biological drugs to treat these patients is a big step forward.

I do not believe strong evidence exists to make IL-17 inhibitors second-line agents behind TNF inhibitors as was done in the new European recommendations. That was an expert-opinion based decision rather than something based on clear evidence.

Another notable feature of the updated European recommendations is that they anchor several treatment decisions to measuring a patient’s disease activity and comparing the level of activity against defined thresholds. This is very different from the approach generally used in U.S. practice, where we do not require patients to have a certain level of quantifiable disease activity to either initiate or stop treatment. In U.S. practice, the rheumatologist’s assessment of disease activity is what matters, however that is done.

The European recommendations also call specifically for considering tapering down a biological drug once a patient achieves remission of active disease. In my experience, when a patient achieves remission it is more often the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug that rheumatologists prefer to taper because they attribute the patient’s good response primarily to his/her biological treatment. And the evidence is good that when a patient with ankylosing spondylitis stops treatment with a TNF inhibitor his/her disease tends to reactivate.

During the near future, we can expect an increased focus on diagnosing patients with axial spondyloarthritis and ankylosing spondylitis earlier and starting treatment earlier. I expect that this could lead to improved patient outcomes. I also expect that we will soon see more evidence regarding the effect of drug treatment on extra-articular manifestations of these diseases, and that this evidence will help dictate the specific treatments we choose for each patient. In the future, we will administer more personalized management for these disorders that is better tailored to each individual patient.

Dr. Lianne S. Gensler is a rheumatologist and director of the Ankylosing Spondylitis Clinic at the University of California, San Francisco. She has been a consultant to or has received research support from Abbvie, Amgen, Janssen, Novartis, and UCB. She made these comments in an interview.

Body

It’s important to have updated treatment recommendations as we accrue new evidence and treatment options. These recommendations can now address interleukin-17 inhibitors, which were not available for U.S. use to treat ankylosing spondylitis when the American College of Rheumatology and its collaborating organizations released updated recommendations for treating ankylosing spondylitis and nonradiographic axial spondyloarthritis in September 2015 (Arthritis Rheum. 2016 Feb;68[2]:282-98). Having interleukin (IL)-17 inhibitors now available and joining tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitors as a second class of biological drugs to treat these patients is a big step forward.

I do not believe strong evidence exists to make IL-17 inhibitors second-line agents behind TNF inhibitors as was done in the new European recommendations. That was an expert-opinion based decision rather than something based on clear evidence.

Another notable feature of the updated European recommendations is that they anchor several treatment decisions to measuring a patient’s disease activity and comparing the level of activity against defined thresholds. This is very different from the approach generally used in U.S. practice, where we do not require patients to have a certain level of quantifiable disease activity to either initiate or stop treatment. In U.S. practice, the rheumatologist’s assessment of disease activity is what matters, however that is done.

The European recommendations also call specifically for considering tapering down a biological drug once a patient achieves remission of active disease. In my experience, when a patient achieves remission it is more often the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug that rheumatologists prefer to taper because they attribute the patient’s good response primarily to his/her biological treatment. And the evidence is good that when a patient with ankylosing spondylitis stops treatment with a TNF inhibitor his/her disease tends to reactivate.

During the near future, we can expect an increased focus on diagnosing patients with axial spondyloarthritis and ankylosing spondylitis earlier and starting treatment earlier. I expect that this could lead to improved patient outcomes. I also expect that we will soon see more evidence regarding the effect of drug treatment on extra-articular manifestations of these diseases, and that this evidence will help dictate the specific treatments we choose for each patient. In the future, we will administer more personalized management for these disorders that is better tailored to each individual patient.

Dr. Lianne S. Gensler is a rheumatologist and director of the Ankylosing Spondylitis Clinic at the University of California, San Francisco. She has been a consultant to or has received research support from Abbvie, Amgen, Janssen, Novartis, and UCB. She made these comments in an interview.

Title
IL-17 inhibitors represent a step forward
IL-17 inhibitors represent a step forward

LONDON – The option of treating axial spondyloarthritis with an interleukin-17 inhibitor has become an officially recommended option for the first time in a new update to management recommendations for this disease released by a task force assembled jointly by the Assessment of SpondyloArthritis International Society and the European League Against Rheumatism.

The update replaces recommendations last released by the two groups for managing patients with ankylosing spondylitis in 2010 (Ann Rheum Dis. 2011 June;70[6]:896-904), as well as the prior recommendations from the two organizations for using tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitors on these patients (Ann Rheum Dis. 2011 June;70[6]:905-8). The new update also broadens the disease spectrum from ankylosing spondylitis to axial spondyloarthritis (SpA).

Mitchel L. Zoler/Frontline Medical News
Dr. Désirée van der Heijde

The latest recommendations continue to place nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) as first-line pharmacotherapy for patients with axial SpA to control pain and stiffness, and continue to place treatment with a biological disease modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD) – identified in the recommendations as most typically a TNF inhibitor by current practice – as second-line treatment after NSAIDs. The recommendations specify that initiation of a biological DMARD should target patients who have both failed treatment with at least two different NSAIDs over the course of at least 4 weeks of treatment, and who have active disease documented by either of two standard measures of disease activity in patients with axial SpA: either a score of at least 2.1 on the ankylosing spondylitis disease activity score (ASDAS) or a score of at least 4 on the Bath ankylosing spondylitis disease activity index (BASDAI).

Incorporation of the ASDAS as a potential alternative to the BASDAI for assessing disease activity in these patients is another new feature of these recommendations, noted Dr. Désirée van der Heijde, convenor of the update task force, who presented the new recommendations at the European Congress of Rheumatology.

The new recommendations place use of an interleukin (IL)-17 inhibitor as a third-line management option, for patients who fail to adequately respond to a first TNF inhibitor, and they also say that an alternative to starting an IL-17 inhibitor at this stage of management is to instead try treatment with a second type of TNF inhibitor. The IL-17 inhibitor class includes secukinumab (Cosentyx), which received approval from the Food and Drug Administration for treating active ankylosing spondylitis in January 2016, and which also has approval for the same indication from the European Medicines Agency.

The updated recommendations leave unchanged from the prior version advice to use biological DMARDs only after failure of other treatments, as well as advocacy of nondrug therapy with regular exercise, smoking cessation, and physical therapy when appropriate as the very first therapeutic step to take, before even starting a NSAID regimen. For patients with axial SpA who have peripheral arthritis, the recommendations say that clinicians can consider treatment with a local injection of a glucocorticoid, and a treatment course with sulfasalazine. The recommendations do not endorse treatment with a conventional, synthetic DMARD for patients with purely axial disease, and they also recommend against long-term treatment with a systemic corticosteroid. The update calls analgesics contraindicated.

Another new feature of the updated recommendations is endorsement of treating axial SpA patients to a predefined treatment target, although the recommendations left the nature of that target undefined and is something for the treating clinician to discuss and tailor to each patient individually, said Dr. van der Heijde, professor of rheumatology at Leiden University Medical Center in The Netherlands. The update also introduces for the first time the recommendation to consider tapering down treatment with a biological DMARD for patients who achieve remission.

Dr. van der Heijde said that she has been a consultant to 17 drug companies.

[email protected]

On Twitter @mitchelzoler

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel

LONDON – The option of treating axial spondyloarthritis with an interleukin-17 inhibitor has become an officially recommended option for the first time in a new update to management recommendations for this disease released by a task force assembled jointly by the Assessment of SpondyloArthritis International Society and the European League Against Rheumatism.

The update replaces recommendations last released by the two groups for managing patients with ankylosing spondylitis in 2010 (Ann Rheum Dis. 2011 June;70[6]:896-904), as well as the prior recommendations from the two organizations for using tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitors on these patients (Ann Rheum Dis. 2011 June;70[6]:905-8). The new update also broadens the disease spectrum from ankylosing spondylitis to axial spondyloarthritis (SpA).

Mitchel L. Zoler/Frontline Medical News
Dr. Désirée van der Heijde

The latest recommendations continue to place nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) as first-line pharmacotherapy for patients with axial SpA to control pain and stiffness, and continue to place treatment with a biological disease modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD) – identified in the recommendations as most typically a TNF inhibitor by current practice – as second-line treatment after NSAIDs. The recommendations specify that initiation of a biological DMARD should target patients who have both failed treatment with at least two different NSAIDs over the course of at least 4 weeks of treatment, and who have active disease documented by either of two standard measures of disease activity in patients with axial SpA: either a score of at least 2.1 on the ankylosing spondylitis disease activity score (ASDAS) or a score of at least 4 on the Bath ankylosing spondylitis disease activity index (BASDAI).

Incorporation of the ASDAS as a potential alternative to the BASDAI for assessing disease activity in these patients is another new feature of these recommendations, noted Dr. Désirée van der Heijde, convenor of the update task force, who presented the new recommendations at the European Congress of Rheumatology.

The new recommendations place use of an interleukin (IL)-17 inhibitor as a third-line management option, for patients who fail to adequately respond to a first TNF inhibitor, and they also say that an alternative to starting an IL-17 inhibitor at this stage of management is to instead try treatment with a second type of TNF inhibitor. The IL-17 inhibitor class includes secukinumab (Cosentyx), which received approval from the Food and Drug Administration for treating active ankylosing spondylitis in January 2016, and which also has approval for the same indication from the European Medicines Agency.

The updated recommendations leave unchanged from the prior version advice to use biological DMARDs only after failure of other treatments, as well as advocacy of nondrug therapy with regular exercise, smoking cessation, and physical therapy when appropriate as the very first therapeutic step to take, before even starting a NSAID regimen. For patients with axial SpA who have peripheral arthritis, the recommendations say that clinicians can consider treatment with a local injection of a glucocorticoid, and a treatment course with sulfasalazine. The recommendations do not endorse treatment with a conventional, synthetic DMARD for patients with purely axial disease, and they also recommend against long-term treatment with a systemic corticosteroid. The update calls analgesics contraindicated.

Another new feature of the updated recommendations is endorsement of treating axial SpA patients to a predefined treatment target, although the recommendations left the nature of that target undefined and is something for the treating clinician to discuss and tailor to each patient individually, said Dr. van der Heijde, professor of rheumatology at Leiden University Medical Center in The Netherlands. The update also introduces for the first time the recommendation to consider tapering down treatment with a biological DMARD for patients who achieve remission.

Dr. van der Heijde said that she has been a consultant to 17 drug companies.

[email protected]

On Twitter @mitchelzoler

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel
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AT THE EULAR 2016 CONGRESS

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Secukinumab may slow structural ankylosing spondylitis progression

Evidence for AS structural control needs confirmation
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Secukinumab may slow structural ankylosing spondylitis progression

LONDON – Long-term treatment with the interleukin 17A inhibitor secukinumab showed suggestive evidence of inhibiting structural progression of spinal disease in 168 patients with ankylosing spondylitis, the first time any evidence for an effect like this has been seen with a biologic drug or any other agent used to treat ankylosing spondylitis.

However, the effect occurred in uncontrolled, 2-year open-label treatment of patients originally enrolled in one of the secukinumab pivotal trials, and the analysis did not include comparison against a historical control group, caveats that demand confirmation of this effect in additional studies, Dr. Jürgen Braun said at the European Congress of Rheumatology.

Mitchel L. Zoler/Frontline Medical News
Dr. Jürgen Braun

In a second, unrelated study, the oral Janus kinase inhibitor tofacitinib showed promising efficacy for controlling clinical symptoms in patients with active ankylosing spondylitis (AS) during 12 weeks of treatment in a placebo-controlled, dose-ranging phase II study.

The open-label secukinumab extension study involved patients who had been enrolled in the MEASURE 1 study, one of the pivotal trials that had established secukinumab as safe and effective for improving the clinical status of patients with active AS. The primary endpoint of MEASURE 1 had been the percentage of patients achieving at least a 20% improvement in their Assessment of Spondyloarthritis international Society (ASAS20) response after 16 weeks of treatment (New Engl J Med. 2015 Dec 24;373[26]:2534-48).

Based in part on these data the Food and Drug Administration approved secukinumab (Cosentyx) for the treatment of ankylosing spondylitis in January 2016. The new data reported by Dr. Braun assessed the level of spinal pathology in a subgroup of the MEASURE 1 patients when measured by radiography using the modified Stoke Ankylosing Spondylitis Spine Score (mSASSS) at baseline and after 104 weeks on secukinumab treatment.

Patients in MEASURE 1 who began on active treatment received 10 mg/kg intravenous secukinumab for 4 weeks, followed by subcutaneous dosages of either 75 mg or 150 mg every 4 weeks for 104 weeks. His analysis also included some patients who entered MEASURE 1 in the placebo group and then switched to open-label, subcutaneous secukinumab treatment after 16 or 24 weeks on placebo.

Analysis of 168 patients who started on intravenous secukinumab and later received any subcutaneous secukinumab treatment out to 104 weeks showed an average increase in mSASSS of 0.30 after 104 weeks when compared against their baseline scores, reported Dr. Braun, professor and medical director of the Ruhr Rheumatology Center of the University of Bochum, Germany.

Among an additional 89 patients who began in the placebo group and then switched to subcutaneous secukinumab, the average change in mSASSS from baseline to 104 weeks was 0.54. By comparison, Dr. Braun noted that AS patients treated with a tumor necrosis factor inhibitor have shown 2-year progression in their mSASSS of about 0.8-0.9, and AS patients not treated with an active biologic drug have shown 2-year mSASSS progression of about 1.0.

Dr. Désirée van der Heijde

A second analysis of the data reported by Dr. Braun showed that among the 168 patients treated for the full 104 weeks with secukinumab about 80% showed no mSASSS progression, but about 20% did have some level of detectable mSASSS progression.

The phase II study of tofacitinib (Xeljanz) randomized 208 patients with active AS to either tofacitinib at daily dosages of 2 mg bid, 5 mg bid, 10 mg bid, or placebo. The study’s primary endpoint was their ASAS20 response after 12 weeks that underwent a Bayesian Emax model analysis to estimate incremental efficacy when compared against placebo.

The primary efficacy analysis showed the greatest EmaxASAS20 response among patients treated with 5 mg bid daily, 63%, which was about 23% above the placebo level, reportedDr. Désirée van der Heijde, professor of rheumatology at the Leiden University Medical Center, The Netherlands. The absolute ASAS20 response rate of the 52 patients randomized to this tofacitinib dosage was about 81%, about 40% higher than the response rate seen in the 51 patients in the placebo arm.

All dosages of tofacitinib tested were well tolerated, with safety data similar to what has previously been shown for tofacitinib, a drug that has Food and Drug Administration approval for treating rheumatoid arthritis.

[email protected]

On Twitter @mitchelzoler

References

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The results on radiographic progression in ankylosing spondylitis patients who continued on secukinumab treatment for 104 weeks suggest for the first time that a biologic drug can reduce radiographic progression of ankylosing spondylitis. This effect has not been seen in patients treated with a tumor necrosis factor inhibitor. The results showed that roughly 80% of the patients maintained for 2 years on secukinumab did not have radiographic progression, although the results also showed that about 20% of these patients did have detectable radiographic progression.

This analysis has several limitations and caveats. The study did not include a control group, not even a historical control group, and it involved open-label treatment. In addition, the treatment effect observed was very close to the level of a measurement error. It would help to compare these results with a historic control group, or to run a new study that compares the effect of secukinumab on long-term radiographic progression directly with the effect of treatment with a tumor necrosis factor inhibitor.

Because of these limitations the results of this analysis are of limited immediate value. Prior results have shown that clinically the efficacy of secukinumab for treating ankylosing spondylitis is more or less the same as the efficacy of various tumor necrosis factor inhibitors. If an additional effect from secukinumab on slowing radiographic progression in these patients were proven, it would be of clear added value, but further study is needed to show this.

The phase II study assessing the impact of tofacitinib, an oral Janus kinase inhibitor, on the clinical activity of ankylosing spondylitis shows promise for this drug in this setting. Currently, the only biologic drugs with proven activity in patients with ankylosing spondylitis are tumor necrosis factor inhibitors and the interleukin 17A inhibitor secukinumab. The data reported by Dr. van der Heijde show that tofacitinib is a good candidate to move to a phase III trial. In this phase II trial the activity seen with 5 mg bid of tofacitinib for reducing disease activity was more or less the same as has been seen with other active biologic drugs.

Dr. Denis Poddubnyy is a professor of rheumatology and head of rheumatology at the Benjamin Franklin campus of Charité Medical University in Berlin. He made these comments in an interview. He has been a consultant to Novartis and to Pfizer and to several other drug companies.

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The results on radiographic progression in ankylosing spondylitis patients who continued on secukinumab treatment for 104 weeks suggest for the first time that a biologic drug can reduce radiographic progression of ankylosing spondylitis. This effect has not been seen in patients treated with a tumor necrosis factor inhibitor. The results showed that roughly 80% of the patients maintained for 2 years on secukinumab did not have radiographic progression, although the results also showed that about 20% of these patients did have detectable radiographic progression.

This analysis has several limitations and caveats. The study did not include a control group, not even a historical control group, and it involved open-label treatment. In addition, the treatment effect observed was very close to the level of a measurement error. It would help to compare these results with a historic control group, or to run a new study that compares the effect of secukinumab on long-term radiographic progression directly with the effect of treatment with a tumor necrosis factor inhibitor.

Because of these limitations the results of this analysis are of limited immediate value. Prior results have shown that clinically the efficacy of secukinumab for treating ankylosing spondylitis is more or less the same as the efficacy of various tumor necrosis factor inhibitors. If an additional effect from secukinumab on slowing radiographic progression in these patients were proven, it would be of clear added value, but further study is needed to show this.

The phase II study assessing the impact of tofacitinib, an oral Janus kinase inhibitor, on the clinical activity of ankylosing spondylitis shows promise for this drug in this setting. Currently, the only biologic drugs with proven activity in patients with ankylosing spondylitis are tumor necrosis factor inhibitors and the interleukin 17A inhibitor secukinumab. The data reported by Dr. van der Heijde show that tofacitinib is a good candidate to move to a phase III trial. In this phase II trial the activity seen with 5 mg bid of tofacitinib for reducing disease activity was more or less the same as has been seen with other active biologic drugs.

Dr. Denis Poddubnyy is a professor of rheumatology and head of rheumatology at the Benjamin Franklin campus of Charité Medical University in Berlin. He made these comments in an interview. He has been a consultant to Novartis and to Pfizer and to several other drug companies.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel
Body

The results on radiographic progression in ankylosing spondylitis patients who continued on secukinumab treatment for 104 weeks suggest for the first time that a biologic drug can reduce radiographic progression of ankylosing spondylitis. This effect has not been seen in patients treated with a tumor necrosis factor inhibitor. The results showed that roughly 80% of the patients maintained for 2 years on secukinumab did not have radiographic progression, although the results also showed that about 20% of these patients did have detectable radiographic progression.

This analysis has several limitations and caveats. The study did not include a control group, not even a historical control group, and it involved open-label treatment. In addition, the treatment effect observed was very close to the level of a measurement error. It would help to compare these results with a historic control group, or to run a new study that compares the effect of secukinumab on long-term radiographic progression directly with the effect of treatment with a tumor necrosis factor inhibitor.

Because of these limitations the results of this analysis are of limited immediate value. Prior results have shown that clinically the efficacy of secukinumab for treating ankylosing spondylitis is more or less the same as the efficacy of various tumor necrosis factor inhibitors. If an additional effect from secukinumab on slowing radiographic progression in these patients were proven, it would be of clear added value, but further study is needed to show this.

The phase II study assessing the impact of tofacitinib, an oral Janus kinase inhibitor, on the clinical activity of ankylosing spondylitis shows promise for this drug in this setting. Currently, the only biologic drugs with proven activity in patients with ankylosing spondylitis are tumor necrosis factor inhibitors and the interleukin 17A inhibitor secukinumab. The data reported by Dr. van der Heijde show that tofacitinib is a good candidate to move to a phase III trial. In this phase II trial the activity seen with 5 mg bid of tofacitinib for reducing disease activity was more or less the same as has been seen with other active biologic drugs.

Dr. Denis Poddubnyy is a professor of rheumatology and head of rheumatology at the Benjamin Franklin campus of Charité Medical University in Berlin. He made these comments in an interview. He has been a consultant to Novartis and to Pfizer and to several other drug companies.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel
Title
Evidence for AS structural control needs confirmation
Evidence for AS structural control needs confirmation

LONDON – Long-term treatment with the interleukin 17A inhibitor secukinumab showed suggestive evidence of inhibiting structural progression of spinal disease in 168 patients with ankylosing spondylitis, the first time any evidence for an effect like this has been seen with a biologic drug or any other agent used to treat ankylosing spondylitis.

However, the effect occurred in uncontrolled, 2-year open-label treatment of patients originally enrolled in one of the secukinumab pivotal trials, and the analysis did not include comparison against a historical control group, caveats that demand confirmation of this effect in additional studies, Dr. Jürgen Braun said at the European Congress of Rheumatology.

Mitchel L. Zoler/Frontline Medical News
Dr. Jürgen Braun

In a second, unrelated study, the oral Janus kinase inhibitor tofacitinib showed promising efficacy for controlling clinical symptoms in patients with active ankylosing spondylitis (AS) during 12 weeks of treatment in a placebo-controlled, dose-ranging phase II study.

The open-label secukinumab extension study involved patients who had been enrolled in the MEASURE 1 study, one of the pivotal trials that had established secukinumab as safe and effective for improving the clinical status of patients with active AS. The primary endpoint of MEASURE 1 had been the percentage of patients achieving at least a 20% improvement in their Assessment of Spondyloarthritis international Society (ASAS20) response after 16 weeks of treatment (New Engl J Med. 2015 Dec 24;373[26]:2534-48).

Based in part on these data the Food and Drug Administration approved secukinumab (Cosentyx) for the treatment of ankylosing spondylitis in January 2016. The new data reported by Dr. Braun assessed the level of spinal pathology in a subgroup of the MEASURE 1 patients when measured by radiography using the modified Stoke Ankylosing Spondylitis Spine Score (mSASSS) at baseline and after 104 weeks on secukinumab treatment.

Patients in MEASURE 1 who began on active treatment received 10 mg/kg intravenous secukinumab for 4 weeks, followed by subcutaneous dosages of either 75 mg or 150 mg every 4 weeks for 104 weeks. His analysis also included some patients who entered MEASURE 1 in the placebo group and then switched to open-label, subcutaneous secukinumab treatment after 16 or 24 weeks on placebo.

Analysis of 168 patients who started on intravenous secukinumab and later received any subcutaneous secukinumab treatment out to 104 weeks showed an average increase in mSASSS of 0.30 after 104 weeks when compared against their baseline scores, reported Dr. Braun, professor and medical director of the Ruhr Rheumatology Center of the University of Bochum, Germany.

Among an additional 89 patients who began in the placebo group and then switched to subcutaneous secukinumab, the average change in mSASSS from baseline to 104 weeks was 0.54. By comparison, Dr. Braun noted that AS patients treated with a tumor necrosis factor inhibitor have shown 2-year progression in their mSASSS of about 0.8-0.9, and AS patients not treated with an active biologic drug have shown 2-year mSASSS progression of about 1.0.

Dr. Désirée van der Heijde

A second analysis of the data reported by Dr. Braun showed that among the 168 patients treated for the full 104 weeks with secukinumab about 80% showed no mSASSS progression, but about 20% did have some level of detectable mSASSS progression.

The phase II study of tofacitinib (Xeljanz) randomized 208 patients with active AS to either tofacitinib at daily dosages of 2 mg bid, 5 mg bid, 10 mg bid, or placebo. The study’s primary endpoint was their ASAS20 response after 12 weeks that underwent a Bayesian Emax model analysis to estimate incremental efficacy when compared against placebo.

The primary efficacy analysis showed the greatest EmaxASAS20 response among patients treated with 5 mg bid daily, 63%, which was about 23% above the placebo level, reportedDr. Désirée van der Heijde, professor of rheumatology at the Leiden University Medical Center, The Netherlands. The absolute ASAS20 response rate of the 52 patients randomized to this tofacitinib dosage was about 81%, about 40% higher than the response rate seen in the 51 patients in the placebo arm.

All dosages of tofacitinib tested were well tolerated, with safety data similar to what has previously been shown for tofacitinib, a drug that has Food and Drug Administration approval for treating rheumatoid arthritis.

[email protected]

On Twitter @mitchelzoler

LONDON – Long-term treatment with the interleukin 17A inhibitor secukinumab showed suggestive evidence of inhibiting structural progression of spinal disease in 168 patients with ankylosing spondylitis, the first time any evidence for an effect like this has been seen with a biologic drug or any other agent used to treat ankylosing spondylitis.

However, the effect occurred in uncontrolled, 2-year open-label treatment of patients originally enrolled in one of the secukinumab pivotal trials, and the analysis did not include comparison against a historical control group, caveats that demand confirmation of this effect in additional studies, Dr. Jürgen Braun said at the European Congress of Rheumatology.

Mitchel L. Zoler/Frontline Medical News
Dr. Jürgen Braun

In a second, unrelated study, the oral Janus kinase inhibitor tofacitinib showed promising efficacy for controlling clinical symptoms in patients with active ankylosing spondylitis (AS) during 12 weeks of treatment in a placebo-controlled, dose-ranging phase II study.

The open-label secukinumab extension study involved patients who had been enrolled in the MEASURE 1 study, one of the pivotal trials that had established secukinumab as safe and effective for improving the clinical status of patients with active AS. The primary endpoint of MEASURE 1 had been the percentage of patients achieving at least a 20% improvement in their Assessment of Spondyloarthritis international Society (ASAS20) response after 16 weeks of treatment (New Engl J Med. 2015 Dec 24;373[26]:2534-48).

Based in part on these data the Food and Drug Administration approved secukinumab (Cosentyx) for the treatment of ankylosing spondylitis in January 2016. The new data reported by Dr. Braun assessed the level of spinal pathology in a subgroup of the MEASURE 1 patients when measured by radiography using the modified Stoke Ankylosing Spondylitis Spine Score (mSASSS) at baseline and after 104 weeks on secukinumab treatment.

Patients in MEASURE 1 who began on active treatment received 10 mg/kg intravenous secukinumab for 4 weeks, followed by subcutaneous dosages of either 75 mg or 150 mg every 4 weeks for 104 weeks. His analysis also included some patients who entered MEASURE 1 in the placebo group and then switched to open-label, subcutaneous secukinumab treatment after 16 or 24 weeks on placebo.

Analysis of 168 patients who started on intravenous secukinumab and later received any subcutaneous secukinumab treatment out to 104 weeks showed an average increase in mSASSS of 0.30 after 104 weeks when compared against their baseline scores, reported Dr. Braun, professor and medical director of the Ruhr Rheumatology Center of the University of Bochum, Germany.

Among an additional 89 patients who began in the placebo group and then switched to subcutaneous secukinumab, the average change in mSASSS from baseline to 104 weeks was 0.54. By comparison, Dr. Braun noted that AS patients treated with a tumor necrosis factor inhibitor have shown 2-year progression in their mSASSS of about 0.8-0.9, and AS patients not treated with an active biologic drug have shown 2-year mSASSS progression of about 1.0.

Dr. Désirée van der Heijde

A second analysis of the data reported by Dr. Braun showed that among the 168 patients treated for the full 104 weeks with secukinumab about 80% showed no mSASSS progression, but about 20% did have some level of detectable mSASSS progression.

The phase II study of tofacitinib (Xeljanz) randomized 208 patients with active AS to either tofacitinib at daily dosages of 2 mg bid, 5 mg bid, 10 mg bid, or placebo. The study’s primary endpoint was their ASAS20 response after 12 weeks that underwent a Bayesian Emax model analysis to estimate incremental efficacy when compared against placebo.

The primary efficacy analysis showed the greatest EmaxASAS20 response among patients treated with 5 mg bid daily, 63%, which was about 23% above the placebo level, reportedDr. Désirée van der Heijde, professor of rheumatology at the Leiden University Medical Center, The Netherlands. The absolute ASAS20 response rate of the 52 patients randomized to this tofacitinib dosage was about 81%, about 40% higher than the response rate seen in the 51 patients in the placebo arm.

All dosages of tofacitinib tested were well tolerated, with safety data similar to what has previously been shown for tofacitinib, a drug that has Food and Drug Administration approval for treating rheumatoid arthritis.

[email protected]

On Twitter @mitchelzoler

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Secukinumab may slow structural ankylosing spondylitis progression
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ankylosing spondylitis, secukinumab, toficitinib, spinal progression, ASAS20, Braun, van der Heijde, Poddubnyy
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Key clinical point: Ankylosing spondylitis patients maintained on open-label secukinumab treatment for 2 years showed a low level of structural spinal progression in an uncontrolled study. Also, in a placebo-controlled phase II study, 12 weeks’ treatment of patients with active ankylosing spondylitis with 5 mg tofacitinib bid led to significant clinical responses, compared with placebo.

Major finding: Little to no radiographic progression occurred in about 80% of ankylosing spondylitis patients maintained on secukinumab for 104 weeks.

Data source: The secukinumab study involved an open-label, nonrandomized extension of treatment in 168 of the 371 patients originally enrolled in MEASURE 1. The tofacitinib study included 208 patients.

Disclosures: Patients in the secukinumab study had been enrolled in MEASURE 1, a study sponsored by Novartis, the company that markets secukinumab (Cosentyx). Dr. Braun has been a consultant to Novartis, and several other drug companies, and three of his coauthors are Novartis employees. The tofacitinib study was sponsored by Pfizer, the company that markets tofacitinib (Xeljanz). Dr. van der Heijde has been a consultant to Pfizer and several other drug companies, and five of her coauthors are Pfizer employees.

High spondyloarthritis risk found in first-degree relatives of ankylosing spondylitis patients

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High spondyloarthritis risk found in first-degree relatives of ankylosing spondylitis patients

As many as one-third of healthy first-degree relatives of individuals with ankylosing spondylitis may meet the criteria for spondyloarthritis, according to results from a prospective cohort study.

Dr. Maureen C. Turina of the Amsterdam Rheumatology and Immunology Center at the University of Amsterdam and her coauthors enrolled 51 first-degree relatives of individuals with HLA-B27–positive ankylosing spondylitis in the study to see whether any of these otherwise healthy individuals showed early signs of the disease. They found that 17 (33%) of these first-degree relatives fulfilled any of the spondyloarthritis (SpA) classification criteria at baseline – a higher rate than reported in previous studies – and 7 (14%) met both the Assessment of Spondyloarthritis International Society (ASAS) criteria and European Spondyloarthropathy Study Group (ESSG) criteria.

©Rocky89/Thinkstock.com

The authors suggested that the higher rate, compared with previous studies, could be due to channeling bias, as individuals with clinical symptoms may have been more willing to participate in the study.

However, 4 of the 38 individuals who did not fulfill either of these criteria for SpA still showed imaging abnormalities – including syndesmophytes on the cervical spine and bone marrow edema in the sacroiliac joint.

The authors suggested these imaging abnormalities may represent a subclinical phase of SpA (Arthritis Rheumatol. 2016 May 23. doi: 10.1002/art.39766).

The participants who met the ASAS and/or ESSG classification criteria for SpA had more axial, entheseal, and joint pain, compared with those who did not meet the criteria. All of these patients also reported back pain, compared with 35% of those who did not fulfill the criteria.

However, the individuals meeting the SpA criteria had low overall disease scores, and did not show any increase in inflammatory serum markers.

“Importantly, some key features of SpA including the presence of peripheral disease or extra-articular manifestations and increased inflammatory parameters were only rarely observed in FDRs [first-degree relatives] and were also not different in those fulfilling the ASAS axSpA and/or ESSG classification criteria versus those who did not,” the authors reported.

“Future follow-up will learn if and which of these FDRs will evolve into the clinically established phase of SpA.”

When specifically asked, more than half (57%) of the first-degree relatives said they had back pain, and 40% said they had experienced or were experiencing arthralgia.

“The fact that these FDRs were not investigated for or diagnosed with axial SpA before inclusion in the study may be related either to the fact that the back pain symptoms were relatively mild or to ignorance of general physicians for these alarm symptoms,” the authors wrote.

One person said they had past or present peripheral arthritis but none reported enthesitis or dactylitis.

While none of the subjects had arthritis, 16% reported at least one tender joint, and 22% had a modified Schober score of less than 4.5 cm, with 4% showing a chest expansion of less than 3.6 cm.

Researchers also examined whether HLA-B27 status had any impact on the first-degree relatives, as previous studies had suggested that SpA is more likely to present in HLA-B27–positive first-degree relatives.

However they found no differences between the HLA-B27–positive and HLA-B27–negative groups in terms of demographics, symptom history, disease activity, clinical examination, or laboratory or imaging data; a finding the authors described as “intriguing.”

“However, if confirmed in a larger sample set, further follow-up of these FDRs will allow us to determine if FDRs showing signs and symptoms of SpA will evolve to more active and severe disease, independently of HLA-B27 status or, alternatively, if the presence of HLA-B27 may promote exacerbation and persistence of subclinical pathology.”

The study was supported by the Dutch Arthritis Foundation. No conflicts of interest were declared.

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As many as one-third of healthy first-degree relatives of individuals with ankylosing spondylitis may meet the criteria for spondyloarthritis, according to results from a prospective cohort study.

Dr. Maureen C. Turina of the Amsterdam Rheumatology and Immunology Center at the University of Amsterdam and her coauthors enrolled 51 first-degree relatives of individuals with HLA-B27–positive ankylosing spondylitis in the study to see whether any of these otherwise healthy individuals showed early signs of the disease. They found that 17 (33%) of these first-degree relatives fulfilled any of the spondyloarthritis (SpA) classification criteria at baseline – a higher rate than reported in previous studies – and 7 (14%) met both the Assessment of Spondyloarthritis International Society (ASAS) criteria and European Spondyloarthropathy Study Group (ESSG) criteria.

©Rocky89/Thinkstock.com

The authors suggested that the higher rate, compared with previous studies, could be due to channeling bias, as individuals with clinical symptoms may have been more willing to participate in the study.

However, 4 of the 38 individuals who did not fulfill either of these criteria for SpA still showed imaging abnormalities – including syndesmophytes on the cervical spine and bone marrow edema in the sacroiliac joint.

The authors suggested these imaging abnormalities may represent a subclinical phase of SpA (Arthritis Rheumatol. 2016 May 23. doi: 10.1002/art.39766).

The participants who met the ASAS and/or ESSG classification criteria for SpA had more axial, entheseal, and joint pain, compared with those who did not meet the criteria. All of these patients also reported back pain, compared with 35% of those who did not fulfill the criteria.

However, the individuals meeting the SpA criteria had low overall disease scores, and did not show any increase in inflammatory serum markers.

“Importantly, some key features of SpA including the presence of peripheral disease or extra-articular manifestations and increased inflammatory parameters were only rarely observed in FDRs [first-degree relatives] and were also not different in those fulfilling the ASAS axSpA and/or ESSG classification criteria versus those who did not,” the authors reported.

“Future follow-up will learn if and which of these FDRs will evolve into the clinically established phase of SpA.”

When specifically asked, more than half (57%) of the first-degree relatives said they had back pain, and 40% said they had experienced or were experiencing arthralgia.

“The fact that these FDRs were not investigated for or diagnosed with axial SpA before inclusion in the study may be related either to the fact that the back pain symptoms were relatively mild or to ignorance of general physicians for these alarm symptoms,” the authors wrote.

One person said they had past or present peripheral arthritis but none reported enthesitis or dactylitis.

While none of the subjects had arthritis, 16% reported at least one tender joint, and 22% had a modified Schober score of less than 4.5 cm, with 4% showing a chest expansion of less than 3.6 cm.

Researchers also examined whether HLA-B27 status had any impact on the first-degree relatives, as previous studies had suggested that SpA is more likely to present in HLA-B27–positive first-degree relatives.

However they found no differences between the HLA-B27–positive and HLA-B27–negative groups in terms of demographics, symptom history, disease activity, clinical examination, or laboratory or imaging data; a finding the authors described as “intriguing.”

“However, if confirmed in a larger sample set, further follow-up of these FDRs will allow us to determine if FDRs showing signs and symptoms of SpA will evolve to more active and severe disease, independently of HLA-B27 status or, alternatively, if the presence of HLA-B27 may promote exacerbation and persistence of subclinical pathology.”

The study was supported by the Dutch Arthritis Foundation. No conflicts of interest were declared.

As many as one-third of healthy first-degree relatives of individuals with ankylosing spondylitis may meet the criteria for spondyloarthritis, according to results from a prospective cohort study.

Dr. Maureen C. Turina of the Amsterdam Rheumatology and Immunology Center at the University of Amsterdam and her coauthors enrolled 51 first-degree relatives of individuals with HLA-B27–positive ankylosing spondylitis in the study to see whether any of these otherwise healthy individuals showed early signs of the disease. They found that 17 (33%) of these first-degree relatives fulfilled any of the spondyloarthritis (SpA) classification criteria at baseline – a higher rate than reported in previous studies – and 7 (14%) met both the Assessment of Spondyloarthritis International Society (ASAS) criteria and European Spondyloarthropathy Study Group (ESSG) criteria.

©Rocky89/Thinkstock.com

The authors suggested that the higher rate, compared with previous studies, could be due to channeling bias, as individuals with clinical symptoms may have been more willing to participate in the study.

However, 4 of the 38 individuals who did not fulfill either of these criteria for SpA still showed imaging abnormalities – including syndesmophytes on the cervical spine and bone marrow edema in the sacroiliac joint.

The authors suggested these imaging abnormalities may represent a subclinical phase of SpA (Arthritis Rheumatol. 2016 May 23. doi: 10.1002/art.39766).

The participants who met the ASAS and/or ESSG classification criteria for SpA had more axial, entheseal, and joint pain, compared with those who did not meet the criteria. All of these patients also reported back pain, compared with 35% of those who did not fulfill the criteria.

However, the individuals meeting the SpA criteria had low overall disease scores, and did not show any increase in inflammatory serum markers.

“Importantly, some key features of SpA including the presence of peripheral disease or extra-articular manifestations and increased inflammatory parameters were only rarely observed in FDRs [first-degree relatives] and were also not different in those fulfilling the ASAS axSpA and/or ESSG classification criteria versus those who did not,” the authors reported.

“Future follow-up will learn if and which of these FDRs will evolve into the clinically established phase of SpA.”

When specifically asked, more than half (57%) of the first-degree relatives said they had back pain, and 40% said they had experienced or were experiencing arthralgia.

“The fact that these FDRs were not investigated for or diagnosed with axial SpA before inclusion in the study may be related either to the fact that the back pain symptoms were relatively mild or to ignorance of general physicians for these alarm symptoms,” the authors wrote.

One person said they had past or present peripheral arthritis but none reported enthesitis or dactylitis.

While none of the subjects had arthritis, 16% reported at least one tender joint, and 22% had a modified Schober score of less than 4.5 cm, with 4% showing a chest expansion of less than 3.6 cm.

Researchers also examined whether HLA-B27 status had any impact on the first-degree relatives, as previous studies had suggested that SpA is more likely to present in HLA-B27–positive first-degree relatives.

However they found no differences between the HLA-B27–positive and HLA-B27–negative groups in terms of demographics, symptom history, disease activity, clinical examination, or laboratory or imaging data; a finding the authors described as “intriguing.”

“However, if confirmed in a larger sample set, further follow-up of these FDRs will allow us to determine if FDRs showing signs and symptoms of SpA will evolve to more active and severe disease, independently of HLA-B27 status or, alternatively, if the presence of HLA-B27 may promote exacerbation and persistence of subclinical pathology.”

The study was supported by the Dutch Arthritis Foundation. No conflicts of interest were declared.

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High spondyloarthritis risk found in first-degree relatives of ankylosing spondylitis patients
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Key clinical point: Healthy first-degree relatives of individuals with ankylosing spondylitis may have signs of preclinical spondyloarthritis.

Major finding: One-third of first-degree relatives of individuals with ankylosing spondylitis meet one of two sets of criteria for spondyloarthritis.

Data source: Prospective cohort study of 51 first-degree relatives of individuals with HLA-B27–positive ankylosing spondylitis.

Disclosures: The study was supported by the Dutch Arthritis Foundation. No conflicts of interest were declared.

Doctors ask Congress to stop Part B drug payment test

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Doctors ask Congress to stop Part B drug payment test

WASHINGTON – Physician organizations are calling on Congress to stop a proposed federal regulation that would test how Medicare pays for drugs administered in a physician’s office.

Subcommittee member Rep. Larry Bucshon (R-Ind.), a cardiothoracic surgeon, called the premise of the proposed rule – that physicians are making prescribing decisions based on the cost of drugs – “almost an insult to the medical profession.” He has introduced legislation, H.R. 5122, that would require the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to rescind the proposed rule.

CMS argues in the proposed rule that the current payment formula – average sales price (ASP) plus 6% – incentivizes the use of expensive drugs over lower-cost alternatives. Therefore, the agency seeks to run a test – half of doctors would continue to receive ASP plus 6%, while others would receive ASP plus 2.5% and a flat fee of $16.80. The proposed rule also would test other value-based tools. At the May 17 hearing, physicians presented their concerns regarding the proposed rule.

Dr. Debra A. Patt

“CMS has yet to produce any evidence indicating that physician prescribing patterns show any correlation to that of choosing higher priced drugs as opposed to appropriate therapeutic treatment for patients,” said Dr. Debra A. Patt, vice president of Texas Oncology. Dr. Patt testified on behalf of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, the Community Oncology Alliance, and the U.S. Oncology Network. “Additionally, there is no evidence that the payment changes contemplated by CMS’s model will improve the quality of care, or for that matter, ensure patients have access to the same level of care they are currently receiving.”Dr. Michael Schweitz, national advocacy chair of the Coalition of State Rheumatology Organizations (CSRO), cited CMS’s admission that this rule will likely have no impact on ASP.

“While we appreciate CMS’s attention to the topic of drug costs, we feel that this proposal is misguided,” Dr. Schweitz testified. “As CMS acknowledges in the rule, the proposed approach ‘does not directly address the manufacturer’s ASP, which is a more significant driver of drug expenditures than the add-on payment amount for Part B drugs.’ Given that a slash to the ASP add-on is unlikely to actually lower costs for patients ... and may jeopardize access, we have requested that CMS withdraw the model and we urge the committee to do the same.”

Dr. Patt also questioned ASP, noting that it is simply an average, and the prices actually paid by rural and small group providers could be higher than larger group and hospital practices – and that difference puts the smaller and rural practices at a potentially significant financial disadvantage.

“Average sales price is by its very nature an average,” Dr. Patt testified. “Some people will pay higher amounts for procurement and some people will pay lower amounts. Larger hospital systems and larger practices have the ability to have contracting arrangements where they purchase at a lower price. … Smaller practices disproportionately pay a higher amount.”

Small practices that are slated to receive ASP plus 2.5% and that flat fee “could be losing money on all of the drugs that they buy. It will be impossible for smaller practices in rural areas to be open,” she added, noting that such a situation could cause care to be shifted to hospital outpatient departments, raising costs as well as access issues. “Cutting provider reimbursement without addressing the ASP, the actual cost of the drug in the first place, is just the wrong approach,” Rep. Bucshon said.

According to the proposed rule, whether or not a practice is in the test or control group would be based on ZIP code. Dr. Patt also noted that if she were in a test ZIP code and a neighboring ZIP code was not, she might have to refer patients to that area still receiving ASP plus 6% and “not at my center.”

Witnesses at the hearing also condemned the way CMS devised the proposed tests. Unlike the recent work on the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act regulations and more specialized programs like the Oncology Care Model, Dr. Schweitz and Dr. Patt both testified that CMS made no outreach to the provider community with regards to getting their input before issuing the proposed rule.

They also took exception to the scope of the proposed test, which covers 49 of the 50 states (Maryland is excluded) and provides no mechanism for physicians to opt out under the proposed rule.

“I do see this as an experiment, but we conduct clinical research at our cancer and patients have informed consent,” Dr Patt said.

 

 

Dr. Schweitz agreed. “When you look at the goals of this plan, initially it appeared that it was to direct a way to save costs. But in meeting with [the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation], we were advised that this is budget neutral. … So the goal of the program is to collect information which makes it a study, a test. So if the goal is to collect information, and the patients are part of that process, they should be signing informed consent.”

Several physician organizations have called on CMS to withdraw the proposal.

“We are deeply concerned that because the new methodology will frequently not properly cover the cost of physician administration of infused drugs, they will be forced to stop offering patients the ability to receive infusion treatments,” the American College of Rheumatology wrote in comments submitted on the proposed rule. Likewise, CSRO “must oppose the Part B drug payment model as it suffers from serious procedural and substantive flaws that we believe render it unworkable – and it does nothing to actually address drug prices,” according its comments.

While the proposal has garnered backlash from several directions, rheumatologists are seeing it as particularly burdensome because of the high price of medications with very limited options to substitute for lower-cost alternatives.

“Although we certainly seek to control costs for patients and Medicare whenever possible, the proposed new methodology does not adequately consider the higher average cost many of our physicians have acquiring, handling, administering, and billing for drugs and biologics,” according to the comments submitted by the ACR.

Indeed, comments from CSRO point out that when factoring in budget sequestration, the actual reimbursement physicians are receiving is ASP plus 4.4%, and doctors are actually losing money on certain drug purchases.

Of additional concern is that the proposed rule does not address ASP itself.

“A far greater concern than the add-on percentage is the underlying ASP, and the steep, fast price increases that these medications show each quarter, according to comments from the CSRO.

From 2007 to 2016, first-quarter ASP for infliximab rose from $53.73 to $79.90; ASP for abatacept rose from $18.70 to $39.44, according to CSRO comments. “These ASP increases are unsustainable for both the Medicare program and its beneficiaries, and we would like to work with CMS to explore actual solutions to stem the increases in those underlying prices.”

In its comments, ACR proposed a number of potential paths forward, starting with certain practices that should be exempted from the proposed demonstration: physician groups with 25 or fewer physicians; physician-owned practices that are located in rural and medically underserved areas; reimbursement changes for drugs and biologics that do not have an alternative with more than a 20% ASP differential; and drugs and biologics where there are three or fewer members of the drug class or biologics.

ACR also proposed altering the add-on formula that takes into account the costs of storing and administering supplies.

“For example, CMS could use a formula for reimbursement of ASP plus 6% or $500 (whichever is lower),” ACR said in its comments. “This formula would allow CMS to effectively target spending on expensive drugs, while leaving in place reimbursement rates for cheaper drugs.”

Additionally, ACR called for CMS to delay the testing of more value-based tools until it understands the impact of the ASP changes that are to be tested under this proposal.

CSRO does not have any specific policy recommendations to replace or modify the proposed rule, but rather calls for CMS to bring together all stakeholders, including patients, providers, payers, and manufacturers to devise a system that would work to the benefit of all while ensuring the best outcomes for patients, Dr. Schweitz said in an interview.

[email protected]

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WASHINGTON – Physician organizations are calling on Congress to stop a proposed federal regulation that would test how Medicare pays for drugs administered in a physician’s office.

Subcommittee member Rep. Larry Bucshon (R-Ind.), a cardiothoracic surgeon, called the premise of the proposed rule – that physicians are making prescribing decisions based on the cost of drugs – “almost an insult to the medical profession.” He has introduced legislation, H.R. 5122, that would require the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to rescind the proposed rule.

CMS argues in the proposed rule that the current payment formula – average sales price (ASP) plus 6% – incentivizes the use of expensive drugs over lower-cost alternatives. Therefore, the agency seeks to run a test – half of doctors would continue to receive ASP plus 6%, while others would receive ASP plus 2.5% and a flat fee of $16.80. The proposed rule also would test other value-based tools. At the May 17 hearing, physicians presented their concerns regarding the proposed rule.

Dr. Debra A. Patt

“CMS has yet to produce any evidence indicating that physician prescribing patterns show any correlation to that of choosing higher priced drugs as opposed to appropriate therapeutic treatment for patients,” said Dr. Debra A. Patt, vice president of Texas Oncology. Dr. Patt testified on behalf of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, the Community Oncology Alliance, and the U.S. Oncology Network. “Additionally, there is no evidence that the payment changes contemplated by CMS’s model will improve the quality of care, or for that matter, ensure patients have access to the same level of care they are currently receiving.”Dr. Michael Schweitz, national advocacy chair of the Coalition of State Rheumatology Organizations (CSRO), cited CMS’s admission that this rule will likely have no impact on ASP.

“While we appreciate CMS’s attention to the topic of drug costs, we feel that this proposal is misguided,” Dr. Schweitz testified. “As CMS acknowledges in the rule, the proposed approach ‘does not directly address the manufacturer’s ASP, which is a more significant driver of drug expenditures than the add-on payment amount for Part B drugs.’ Given that a slash to the ASP add-on is unlikely to actually lower costs for patients ... and may jeopardize access, we have requested that CMS withdraw the model and we urge the committee to do the same.”

Dr. Patt also questioned ASP, noting that it is simply an average, and the prices actually paid by rural and small group providers could be higher than larger group and hospital practices – and that difference puts the smaller and rural practices at a potentially significant financial disadvantage.

“Average sales price is by its very nature an average,” Dr. Patt testified. “Some people will pay higher amounts for procurement and some people will pay lower amounts. Larger hospital systems and larger practices have the ability to have contracting arrangements where they purchase at a lower price. … Smaller practices disproportionately pay a higher amount.”

Small practices that are slated to receive ASP plus 2.5% and that flat fee “could be losing money on all of the drugs that they buy. It will be impossible for smaller practices in rural areas to be open,” she added, noting that such a situation could cause care to be shifted to hospital outpatient departments, raising costs as well as access issues. “Cutting provider reimbursement without addressing the ASP, the actual cost of the drug in the first place, is just the wrong approach,” Rep. Bucshon said.

According to the proposed rule, whether or not a practice is in the test or control group would be based on ZIP code. Dr. Patt also noted that if she were in a test ZIP code and a neighboring ZIP code was not, she might have to refer patients to that area still receiving ASP plus 6% and “not at my center.”

Witnesses at the hearing also condemned the way CMS devised the proposed tests. Unlike the recent work on the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act regulations and more specialized programs like the Oncology Care Model, Dr. Schweitz and Dr. Patt both testified that CMS made no outreach to the provider community with regards to getting their input before issuing the proposed rule.

They also took exception to the scope of the proposed test, which covers 49 of the 50 states (Maryland is excluded) and provides no mechanism for physicians to opt out under the proposed rule.

“I do see this as an experiment, but we conduct clinical research at our cancer and patients have informed consent,” Dr Patt said.

 

 

Dr. Schweitz agreed. “When you look at the goals of this plan, initially it appeared that it was to direct a way to save costs. But in meeting with [the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation], we were advised that this is budget neutral. … So the goal of the program is to collect information which makes it a study, a test. So if the goal is to collect information, and the patients are part of that process, they should be signing informed consent.”

Several physician organizations have called on CMS to withdraw the proposal.

“We are deeply concerned that because the new methodology will frequently not properly cover the cost of physician administration of infused drugs, they will be forced to stop offering patients the ability to receive infusion treatments,” the American College of Rheumatology wrote in comments submitted on the proposed rule. Likewise, CSRO “must oppose the Part B drug payment model as it suffers from serious procedural and substantive flaws that we believe render it unworkable – and it does nothing to actually address drug prices,” according its comments.

While the proposal has garnered backlash from several directions, rheumatologists are seeing it as particularly burdensome because of the high price of medications with very limited options to substitute for lower-cost alternatives.

“Although we certainly seek to control costs for patients and Medicare whenever possible, the proposed new methodology does not adequately consider the higher average cost many of our physicians have acquiring, handling, administering, and billing for drugs and biologics,” according to the comments submitted by the ACR.

Indeed, comments from CSRO point out that when factoring in budget sequestration, the actual reimbursement physicians are receiving is ASP plus 4.4%, and doctors are actually losing money on certain drug purchases.

Of additional concern is that the proposed rule does not address ASP itself.

“A far greater concern than the add-on percentage is the underlying ASP, and the steep, fast price increases that these medications show each quarter, according to comments from the CSRO.

From 2007 to 2016, first-quarter ASP for infliximab rose from $53.73 to $79.90; ASP for abatacept rose from $18.70 to $39.44, according to CSRO comments. “These ASP increases are unsustainable for both the Medicare program and its beneficiaries, and we would like to work with CMS to explore actual solutions to stem the increases in those underlying prices.”

In its comments, ACR proposed a number of potential paths forward, starting with certain practices that should be exempted from the proposed demonstration: physician groups with 25 or fewer physicians; physician-owned practices that are located in rural and medically underserved areas; reimbursement changes for drugs and biologics that do not have an alternative with more than a 20% ASP differential; and drugs and biologics where there are three or fewer members of the drug class or biologics.

ACR also proposed altering the add-on formula that takes into account the costs of storing and administering supplies.

“For example, CMS could use a formula for reimbursement of ASP plus 6% or $500 (whichever is lower),” ACR said in its comments. “This formula would allow CMS to effectively target spending on expensive drugs, while leaving in place reimbursement rates for cheaper drugs.”

Additionally, ACR called for CMS to delay the testing of more value-based tools until it understands the impact of the ASP changes that are to be tested under this proposal.

CSRO does not have any specific policy recommendations to replace or modify the proposed rule, but rather calls for CMS to bring together all stakeholders, including patients, providers, payers, and manufacturers to devise a system that would work to the benefit of all while ensuring the best outcomes for patients, Dr. Schweitz said in an interview.

[email protected]

WASHINGTON – Physician organizations are calling on Congress to stop a proposed federal regulation that would test how Medicare pays for drugs administered in a physician’s office.

Subcommittee member Rep. Larry Bucshon (R-Ind.), a cardiothoracic surgeon, called the premise of the proposed rule – that physicians are making prescribing decisions based on the cost of drugs – “almost an insult to the medical profession.” He has introduced legislation, H.R. 5122, that would require the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to rescind the proposed rule.

CMS argues in the proposed rule that the current payment formula – average sales price (ASP) plus 6% – incentivizes the use of expensive drugs over lower-cost alternatives. Therefore, the agency seeks to run a test – half of doctors would continue to receive ASP plus 6%, while others would receive ASP plus 2.5% and a flat fee of $16.80. The proposed rule also would test other value-based tools. At the May 17 hearing, physicians presented their concerns regarding the proposed rule.

Dr. Debra A. Patt

“CMS has yet to produce any evidence indicating that physician prescribing patterns show any correlation to that of choosing higher priced drugs as opposed to appropriate therapeutic treatment for patients,” said Dr. Debra A. Patt, vice president of Texas Oncology. Dr. Patt testified on behalf of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, the Community Oncology Alliance, and the U.S. Oncology Network. “Additionally, there is no evidence that the payment changes contemplated by CMS’s model will improve the quality of care, or for that matter, ensure patients have access to the same level of care they are currently receiving.”Dr. Michael Schweitz, national advocacy chair of the Coalition of State Rheumatology Organizations (CSRO), cited CMS’s admission that this rule will likely have no impact on ASP.

“While we appreciate CMS’s attention to the topic of drug costs, we feel that this proposal is misguided,” Dr. Schweitz testified. “As CMS acknowledges in the rule, the proposed approach ‘does not directly address the manufacturer’s ASP, which is a more significant driver of drug expenditures than the add-on payment amount for Part B drugs.’ Given that a slash to the ASP add-on is unlikely to actually lower costs for patients ... and may jeopardize access, we have requested that CMS withdraw the model and we urge the committee to do the same.”

Dr. Patt also questioned ASP, noting that it is simply an average, and the prices actually paid by rural and small group providers could be higher than larger group and hospital practices – and that difference puts the smaller and rural practices at a potentially significant financial disadvantage.

“Average sales price is by its very nature an average,” Dr. Patt testified. “Some people will pay higher amounts for procurement and some people will pay lower amounts. Larger hospital systems and larger practices have the ability to have contracting arrangements where they purchase at a lower price. … Smaller practices disproportionately pay a higher amount.”

Small practices that are slated to receive ASP plus 2.5% and that flat fee “could be losing money on all of the drugs that they buy. It will be impossible for smaller practices in rural areas to be open,” she added, noting that such a situation could cause care to be shifted to hospital outpatient departments, raising costs as well as access issues. “Cutting provider reimbursement without addressing the ASP, the actual cost of the drug in the first place, is just the wrong approach,” Rep. Bucshon said.

According to the proposed rule, whether or not a practice is in the test or control group would be based on ZIP code. Dr. Patt also noted that if she were in a test ZIP code and a neighboring ZIP code was not, she might have to refer patients to that area still receiving ASP plus 6% and “not at my center.”

Witnesses at the hearing also condemned the way CMS devised the proposed tests. Unlike the recent work on the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act regulations and more specialized programs like the Oncology Care Model, Dr. Schweitz and Dr. Patt both testified that CMS made no outreach to the provider community with regards to getting their input before issuing the proposed rule.

They also took exception to the scope of the proposed test, which covers 49 of the 50 states (Maryland is excluded) and provides no mechanism for physicians to opt out under the proposed rule.

“I do see this as an experiment, but we conduct clinical research at our cancer and patients have informed consent,” Dr Patt said.

 

 

Dr. Schweitz agreed. “When you look at the goals of this plan, initially it appeared that it was to direct a way to save costs. But in meeting with [the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation], we were advised that this is budget neutral. … So the goal of the program is to collect information which makes it a study, a test. So if the goal is to collect information, and the patients are part of that process, they should be signing informed consent.”

Several physician organizations have called on CMS to withdraw the proposal.

“We are deeply concerned that because the new methodology will frequently not properly cover the cost of physician administration of infused drugs, they will be forced to stop offering patients the ability to receive infusion treatments,” the American College of Rheumatology wrote in comments submitted on the proposed rule. Likewise, CSRO “must oppose the Part B drug payment model as it suffers from serious procedural and substantive flaws that we believe render it unworkable – and it does nothing to actually address drug prices,” according its comments.

While the proposal has garnered backlash from several directions, rheumatologists are seeing it as particularly burdensome because of the high price of medications with very limited options to substitute for lower-cost alternatives.

“Although we certainly seek to control costs for patients and Medicare whenever possible, the proposed new methodology does not adequately consider the higher average cost many of our physicians have acquiring, handling, administering, and billing for drugs and biologics,” according to the comments submitted by the ACR.

Indeed, comments from CSRO point out that when factoring in budget sequestration, the actual reimbursement physicians are receiving is ASP plus 4.4%, and doctors are actually losing money on certain drug purchases.

Of additional concern is that the proposed rule does not address ASP itself.

“A far greater concern than the add-on percentage is the underlying ASP, and the steep, fast price increases that these medications show each quarter, according to comments from the CSRO.

From 2007 to 2016, first-quarter ASP for infliximab rose from $53.73 to $79.90; ASP for abatacept rose from $18.70 to $39.44, according to CSRO comments. “These ASP increases are unsustainable for both the Medicare program and its beneficiaries, and we would like to work with CMS to explore actual solutions to stem the increases in those underlying prices.”

In its comments, ACR proposed a number of potential paths forward, starting with certain practices that should be exempted from the proposed demonstration: physician groups with 25 or fewer physicians; physician-owned practices that are located in rural and medically underserved areas; reimbursement changes for drugs and biologics that do not have an alternative with more than a 20% ASP differential; and drugs and biologics where there are three or fewer members of the drug class or biologics.

ACR also proposed altering the add-on formula that takes into account the costs of storing and administering supplies.

“For example, CMS could use a formula for reimbursement of ASP plus 6% or $500 (whichever is lower),” ACR said in its comments. “This formula would allow CMS to effectively target spending on expensive drugs, while leaving in place reimbursement rates for cheaper drugs.”

Additionally, ACR called for CMS to delay the testing of more value-based tools until it understands the impact of the ASP changes that are to be tested under this proposal.

CSRO does not have any specific policy recommendations to replace or modify the proposed rule, but rather calls for CMS to bring together all stakeholders, including patients, providers, payers, and manufacturers to devise a system that would work to the benefit of all while ensuring the best outcomes for patients, Dr. Schweitz said in an interview.

[email protected]

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Serious infections are increasing among psoriasis inpatients

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Serious infections are increasing among psoriasis inpatients

SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – From enterocolitis to MRSA, serious infections are on the rise among inpatients with psoriasis, and psoriasis is an independent risk factor for serious infections, according to findings from large retrospective studies from the United States and the United Kingdom.

Inpatients with psoriasis in the United States also were at greater risk of serious infections, compared with nonpsoriatic inpatients at every time point studied, and serious infections were associated with increased hospital costs, length of stay, and risk of mortality, reported Derek Hsu, a medical student at Northwestern University, Chicago, and his associates. “Research is needed to determine how to reduce the risk of serious infections in patients with psoriasis,” the investigators emphasized.

©David Parr/ thinkstockphotos.com

Psoriasis affects some 7 million adults in the United States. Biologics, which are transforming the treatment landscape for moderate-to-severe psoriasis, “should reduce inherent infectious risk by controlling the inflammatory process and reducing disease severity, [but] these effects may be immunosuppressing and increase the risk of infection in other ways,” according to Mr. Hsu and his associates. For their study, they analyzed data for 2002-2012 from the Nationwide Inpatient Sample, which covers 20% of hospitalizations in the United States. They extracted validated ICD-9 codes for psoriasis and serious infections, and calculated costs of care after adjusting for 2014 inflation, based on the United States Consumer Price Index.

Overall rates of serious infection and rates of pneumonia, MRSA, septicemia, diverticulitis, enterocolitis, encephalitis, and any viral or fungal infection rose significantly among inpatients with psoriasis between 2002 and 2012 (all P-values less than .05). Predictors of serious infections among inpatients with psoriasis included diabetes mellitus, obesity, and being of non-Caucasian race or ethnicity, female, older than 60 years, and on Medicare or Medicaid, the researchers reported at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology.

Furthermore, after controlling for age, sex, and race, psoriasis was a significant risk factor for many different types of serious infections. Among these were cellulitis, herpes simplex virus, infectious arthritis, osteomyelitis, meningitis, influenza, encephalitis, septicemia, enterocolitis, MRSA, methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus infections, and Clostridium difficile. Further, inpatients with psoriasis were more prone to urinary tract infection, peritonitis or intestinal abscess, appendicitis, tuberculosis, and viral and fungal infections (all P-values less than .05). The average cost of hospital stay for inpatients with psoriasis was more than $2,200 greater when they were diagnosed with one or more serious infections than otherwise, and their average length of hospital stay was 2 days longer.

The study in the United Kingdom included nearly 200,000 patients with psoriasis and almost 1 million patients without psoriasis from The Health Improvement Network electronic medical record database. Between 2002 and 2013, patients without psoriasis developed an estimated 78.5 serious infections per 100,000 person-years, compared with 88.9, 85.7, and 145.7 serious infections per 100,000 person-years, respectively, for all psoriasis patients, patients with mild disease, and patients with severe disease requiring systemic or phototherapy, said Dr. Junko Takeshita and her colleagues at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. After controlling for many potential demographic and clinical confounders, psoriasis increased the risk of serious infection by about 21% (hazard ratio, 1.21; 95% confidence interval, 1.18-1.23). Patients with severe psoriasis had a 63% greater risk of infection than patients without psoriasis, compared with an 18% increase for patients with mild psoriasis.

The findings show “serious infection, particularly respiratory and skin or soft tissue infections, to be an important and common cause of morbidity among patients with psoriasis, especially those with more severe disease,” Dr. Takeshita and her associates said. Notably, the link between psoriasis and risk of serious infection persisted after excluding patients on immunosuppressive therapies, suggesting “that the greater infection risk is at least partially attributable to more severe psoriasis, itself,” they added.

The analysis of Nationwide Inpatient Sample data was funded by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and by the Dermatology Foundation. The analysis of Health Improvement Network data was funded by the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, which is part of the National Institutes of Health, and by the Dermatology Foundation. None of the investigators reported conflicts of interest.

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SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – From enterocolitis to MRSA, serious infections are on the rise among inpatients with psoriasis, and psoriasis is an independent risk factor for serious infections, according to findings from large retrospective studies from the United States and the United Kingdom.

Inpatients with psoriasis in the United States also were at greater risk of serious infections, compared with nonpsoriatic inpatients at every time point studied, and serious infections were associated with increased hospital costs, length of stay, and risk of mortality, reported Derek Hsu, a medical student at Northwestern University, Chicago, and his associates. “Research is needed to determine how to reduce the risk of serious infections in patients with psoriasis,” the investigators emphasized.

©David Parr/ thinkstockphotos.com

Psoriasis affects some 7 million adults in the United States. Biologics, which are transforming the treatment landscape for moderate-to-severe psoriasis, “should reduce inherent infectious risk by controlling the inflammatory process and reducing disease severity, [but] these effects may be immunosuppressing and increase the risk of infection in other ways,” according to Mr. Hsu and his associates. For their study, they analyzed data for 2002-2012 from the Nationwide Inpatient Sample, which covers 20% of hospitalizations in the United States. They extracted validated ICD-9 codes for psoriasis and serious infections, and calculated costs of care after adjusting for 2014 inflation, based on the United States Consumer Price Index.

Overall rates of serious infection and rates of pneumonia, MRSA, septicemia, diverticulitis, enterocolitis, encephalitis, and any viral or fungal infection rose significantly among inpatients with psoriasis between 2002 and 2012 (all P-values less than .05). Predictors of serious infections among inpatients with psoriasis included diabetes mellitus, obesity, and being of non-Caucasian race or ethnicity, female, older than 60 years, and on Medicare or Medicaid, the researchers reported at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology.

Furthermore, after controlling for age, sex, and race, psoriasis was a significant risk factor for many different types of serious infections. Among these were cellulitis, herpes simplex virus, infectious arthritis, osteomyelitis, meningitis, influenza, encephalitis, septicemia, enterocolitis, MRSA, methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus infections, and Clostridium difficile. Further, inpatients with psoriasis were more prone to urinary tract infection, peritonitis or intestinal abscess, appendicitis, tuberculosis, and viral and fungal infections (all P-values less than .05). The average cost of hospital stay for inpatients with psoriasis was more than $2,200 greater when they were diagnosed with one or more serious infections than otherwise, and their average length of hospital stay was 2 days longer.

The study in the United Kingdom included nearly 200,000 patients with psoriasis and almost 1 million patients without psoriasis from The Health Improvement Network electronic medical record database. Between 2002 and 2013, patients without psoriasis developed an estimated 78.5 serious infections per 100,000 person-years, compared with 88.9, 85.7, and 145.7 serious infections per 100,000 person-years, respectively, for all psoriasis patients, patients with mild disease, and patients with severe disease requiring systemic or phototherapy, said Dr. Junko Takeshita and her colleagues at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. After controlling for many potential demographic and clinical confounders, psoriasis increased the risk of serious infection by about 21% (hazard ratio, 1.21; 95% confidence interval, 1.18-1.23). Patients with severe psoriasis had a 63% greater risk of infection than patients without psoriasis, compared with an 18% increase for patients with mild psoriasis.

The findings show “serious infection, particularly respiratory and skin or soft tissue infections, to be an important and common cause of morbidity among patients with psoriasis, especially those with more severe disease,” Dr. Takeshita and her associates said. Notably, the link between psoriasis and risk of serious infection persisted after excluding patients on immunosuppressive therapies, suggesting “that the greater infection risk is at least partially attributable to more severe psoriasis, itself,” they added.

The analysis of Nationwide Inpatient Sample data was funded by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and by the Dermatology Foundation. The analysis of Health Improvement Network data was funded by the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, which is part of the National Institutes of Health, and by the Dermatology Foundation. None of the investigators reported conflicts of interest.

SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. – From enterocolitis to MRSA, serious infections are on the rise among inpatients with psoriasis, and psoriasis is an independent risk factor for serious infections, according to findings from large retrospective studies from the United States and the United Kingdom.

Inpatients with psoriasis in the United States also were at greater risk of serious infections, compared with nonpsoriatic inpatients at every time point studied, and serious infections were associated with increased hospital costs, length of stay, and risk of mortality, reported Derek Hsu, a medical student at Northwestern University, Chicago, and his associates. “Research is needed to determine how to reduce the risk of serious infections in patients with psoriasis,” the investigators emphasized.

©David Parr/ thinkstockphotos.com

Psoriasis affects some 7 million adults in the United States. Biologics, which are transforming the treatment landscape for moderate-to-severe psoriasis, “should reduce inherent infectious risk by controlling the inflammatory process and reducing disease severity, [but] these effects may be immunosuppressing and increase the risk of infection in other ways,” according to Mr. Hsu and his associates. For their study, they analyzed data for 2002-2012 from the Nationwide Inpatient Sample, which covers 20% of hospitalizations in the United States. They extracted validated ICD-9 codes for psoriasis and serious infections, and calculated costs of care after adjusting for 2014 inflation, based on the United States Consumer Price Index.

Overall rates of serious infection and rates of pneumonia, MRSA, septicemia, diverticulitis, enterocolitis, encephalitis, and any viral or fungal infection rose significantly among inpatients with psoriasis between 2002 and 2012 (all P-values less than .05). Predictors of serious infections among inpatients with psoriasis included diabetes mellitus, obesity, and being of non-Caucasian race or ethnicity, female, older than 60 years, and on Medicare or Medicaid, the researchers reported at the annual meeting of the Society for Investigative Dermatology.

Furthermore, after controlling for age, sex, and race, psoriasis was a significant risk factor for many different types of serious infections. Among these were cellulitis, herpes simplex virus, infectious arthritis, osteomyelitis, meningitis, influenza, encephalitis, septicemia, enterocolitis, MRSA, methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus infections, and Clostridium difficile. Further, inpatients with psoriasis were more prone to urinary tract infection, peritonitis or intestinal abscess, appendicitis, tuberculosis, and viral and fungal infections (all P-values less than .05). The average cost of hospital stay for inpatients with psoriasis was more than $2,200 greater when they were diagnosed with one or more serious infections than otherwise, and their average length of hospital stay was 2 days longer.

The study in the United Kingdom included nearly 200,000 patients with psoriasis and almost 1 million patients without psoriasis from The Health Improvement Network electronic medical record database. Between 2002 and 2013, patients without psoriasis developed an estimated 78.5 serious infections per 100,000 person-years, compared with 88.9, 85.7, and 145.7 serious infections per 100,000 person-years, respectively, for all psoriasis patients, patients with mild disease, and patients with severe disease requiring systemic or phototherapy, said Dr. Junko Takeshita and her colleagues at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. After controlling for many potential demographic and clinical confounders, psoriasis increased the risk of serious infection by about 21% (hazard ratio, 1.21; 95% confidence interval, 1.18-1.23). Patients with severe psoriasis had a 63% greater risk of infection than patients without psoriasis, compared with an 18% increase for patients with mild psoriasis.

The findings show “serious infection, particularly respiratory and skin or soft tissue infections, to be an important and common cause of morbidity among patients with psoriasis, especially those with more severe disease,” Dr. Takeshita and her associates said. Notably, the link between psoriasis and risk of serious infection persisted after excluding patients on immunosuppressive therapies, suggesting “that the greater infection risk is at least partially attributable to more severe psoriasis, itself,” they added.

The analysis of Nationwide Inpatient Sample data was funded by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and by the Dermatology Foundation. The analysis of Health Improvement Network data was funded by the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, which is part of the National Institutes of Health, and by the Dermatology Foundation. None of the investigators reported conflicts of interest.

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AT THE 2016 SID ANNUAL MEETING

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Inside the Article

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Key clinical point: Psoriasis is an independent risk factor for serious infections, and serious infections are increasing among inpatients with psoriasis.

Major finding: Overall rates of serious infection and rates of pneumonia, MRSA, septicemia, diverticulitis, enterocolitis, encephalitis, and any viral or fungal infection rose significantly among inpatients in the United States with psoriasis between 2002 and 2012 (all P-values less than .05). In the United Kingdom during the same time period, patients with severe psoriasis had a 63% greater risk of serious infection than patients without psoriasis.

Data source: Analyses of data from the Nationwide Inpatient Sample for 2002 through 2012, and from The Health Improvement Network for 2003 through 2012.

Disclosures: The Nationwide Inpatient Sample analysis was funded by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and the Dermatology Foundation. The analysis of The Health Improvement Network was funded by the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, which is part of the National Institutes of Health, and by the Dermatology Foundation. None of the investigators reported conflicts of interest.

PIANO study provides insight on safety of biologics in pregnancy

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PIANO study provides insight on safety of biologics in pregnancy

MAUI, HAWAII – The consensus among gastroenterologists with expertise in inflammatory bowel disease is that continuation of biologics or immunomodulators in affected women throughout pregnancy and breastfeeding poses no increased risks to the fetus – and therein lies a message for rheumatologists and obstetricians, Dr. Uma Mahadevan said at the 2016 Rheumatology Winter Clinical Symposium.

“The risk of uncontrolled disease must be weighed against the risk of medical therapy. And this is something that is often missed,” according to Dr. Mahadevan, professor of medicine and co–medical director of the Center for Colitis and Crohn’s Disease at the University of California, San Francisco.

 

Dr. Uma Mahadevan

Gastroenterologists – at least, those whose practices focus on inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) – have led the way within medicine in terms of establishing the safety of biologics and immunomodulators such as azathioprine in pregnant women with chronic inflammatory diseases and their babies. And having accomplished that, they have been ahead of the curve in terms of continuing such therapy throughout pregnancy and breastfeeding. That’s because active Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis are particularly common in women during their childbearing years. And a disease flare during pregnancy is associated with a markedly increased risk of preterm birth and other adverse outcomes.

Gastroenterologists’ longstanding interest in the safety to mother and fetus of continued use of effective, potent medications throughout pregnancy was the impetus for the ongoing prospective U.S. Pregnancy in Inflammatory Bowel Disease and Neonatal Outcomes (PIANO) study, now in its ninth year, with an enrollment of roughly 1,500 women with IBD. The study has included comparisons of outcomes of women on different medications during pregnancy versus unmedicated women.

In multiple publications, Dr. Mahadevan and other PIANO investigators have established that increased IBD activity adversely affects pregnancy outcomes, and that stabilization of disease and effective maintenance therapy throughout pregnancy is important. The PIANO group has demonstrated that IBD medication exposure well into the third trimester in patients in sustained remission was not associated with an increase in congenital anomalies, spontaneous abortions, intrauterine growth restriction, or low birth weight.

To the surprise of many gastroenterologists, the PIANO study has shown that women with Crohn’s disease generally have smoother pregnancies than do those with ulcerative colitis, who tend to get sicker and have more complications.

Since PIANO data show an increased rate of preterm birth and low birth weight in IBD patients on combination therapy with azathioprine plus a biologic throughout pregnancy, Dr. Mahadevan and others try to discontinue the azathioprine, even though the need for combination therapy is a marker for patients with more severe disease.

Anti-TNF-alpha use during third trimester

Of particular interest to rheumatologists, who rely heavily on many of the same biologic agents gastroenterologists use to treat IBD, the use of anti–tumor necrosis factor–alpha biologics in the third trimester was not associated with an increase in preterm birth or maternal disease activity in the third trimester or the first 4 months post partum. When women on certolizumab pegol (Cimzia) during the third trimester were excluded from the analysis, since this biologic uniquely does not cross the placenta at all, the most recent PIANO data show a modest yet statistically significant 35% increase in infections in infants at age 12 months whose mothers were on other biologics in the third trimester. But Dr. Mahadevan said she doesn’t yet consider this finding definitive.

“It’s still a small group of patients, and every year when we update the results the infant infection risk goes back and forth from statistically significant to nonsignificant. I think there’s a signal here; we just need to keep collecting more data,” she said.

Particularly reassuring is the finding that the offspring of PIANO participants who had in utero exposure to biologics and immunomodulators didn’t have any developmental delay, compared with unexposed babies, according to the validated Ages and Stages Questionnaire at ages 1, 2, 3, and 4 years and Denver Childhood Developmental Score at months 4, 9, and 12.

“These kids do great later in life. Actually, they have better scores than unexposed kids. Not to say that biologics make your kid smarter. It probably has to do with better IBD control,” Dr. Mahadevan said.

Effects while breastfeeding

Breastfeeding while on biologics or azathioprine didn’t adversely affect infant growth, infection rate, or developmental milestones. More specifically, levels of biologics in the mothers, babies, or cord serum were not associated with the likelihood of a neonatal intensive care unit stay, an increase in infant infections, or achievement of developmental milestones.

“Almost all the agents are detectable in breast milk, but only at the nanogram level. We tell all our patients on biologics they can breastfeed. It doesn’t matter when their last dose was, don’t worry about it,” the gastroenterologist said.

 

 

Importance of preconception counseling

Key practical lessons she has learned in taking care of large numbers of patients with severe IBD referred to her tertiary center include the importance of preconception counseling. A woman should stop methotrexate at least 3 months prior to conception. Providing information on medication safety and the risks of poorly controlled disease helps in adherence.

It’s best to communicate with the patient’s obstetrician about the importance of continuing her IBD therapy during pregnancy before she becomes pregnant.

“It’s better to have this discussion ahead of time and have a plan in place. Once a patient is pregnant it’s very difficult if her doula or someone else has told them to stop a medication to convince them to continue it,” said Dr. Mahadevan.

All women with IBD should be followed as high-risk pregnancies. Mode of delivery is at the discretion of the obstetrician unless the patient has an open rectovaginal fistula; even if it’s inactive, cesarean delivery is preferable in that situation, she said.

Steps taken in the third trimester

In the third trimester, she routinely sends a letter to the patient’s pediatrician requesting no live virus vaccines in the coming baby’s first 6 months – in the United States, that’s the rotavirus vaccine – if the infant was exposed in utero to a biologic other than certolizumab pegol, but that all other vaccines can be given on schedule. She also asks that the pediatrician monitor an exposed baby for infections.

“That being said, there have been 20-plus exposures to rotavirus vaccine in the first 6 months of life recorded in the PIANO registry in the infants of mothers on biologics and we haven’t seen any adverse events. So maybe the CDC is overstating the risk, but at this point the rule is still no live virus vaccines,” she said.

She tries to time her last dose of biologic agents during pregnancy as follows: at week 30-32 for infliximab or vedolizumab and week 36-38 for adalimumab or golimumab. As for certolizumab pegol, “they can take that on their way to labor and delivery,” she quipped.

“I give the next dose of a biologic agent soon after delivery, often while the patient is still in the hospital, 24 hours after vaginal delivery and 48 hours after a C-section, assuming no infection,” Dr. Mahadevan said.

The elements of her approach to management of the pregnant patient with IBD are in accord with a recent report, The Toronto Consensus Statements for the Management of Inflammatory Bowel Disease in Pregnancy, in which she participated (Gastroenterology. 2016 Mar;150[3]:734-57).

Rheumatologists’ habits with biologics in pregnancy

 

Dr. John J. Cush

Dr. John J. Cush rose from the audience to observe that the situation in rheumatology with regard to biologics in pregnancy is quite a bit different from what’s going on in gastroenterology.

“I think a lot of rheumatologists don’t let their patients get pregnant on biologics for fear of what may happen. And that’s because they don’t know the data. I think you’ve shown very clearly that you can get pregnant on biologics and do well. But for many of us who do allow our patients to get pregnant on biologic monotherapy, the practice is to stop it once they get pregnant. The idea is we want them to be in a very deep remission to increase the odds of getting pregnant and having a successful pregnancy, but then we stop the drug and we assume the disease state is going to stay the same. Often, though, it doesn’t stay the same, it gets worse. Yet this is a common practice in rheumatology. What’s your response?” asked Dr. Cush, professor of medicine and rheumatology at Baylor University Medical Center, Dallas, and director of clinical rheumatology at the Baylor Research Institute.

“I think in IBD it’s very clear that patients with active disease in pregnancy do much, much worse,” Dr. Mahadevan replied. “They have preterm birth, they get very sick, they’re hospitalized and placed on steroids. So for us, the benefit is very clear. I don’t know the data in rheumatoid arthritis – whether active disease leads to increased complication rates – but I do know from colleagues that in the postpartum period women with poorly controlled rheumatoid arthritis can’t take care of their baby because their hands are so damaged. And that’s a big deal.

“So when you see that the drugs are not associated with an increased risk of birth defects and on monotherapy there’s no increase in infections and other complications, you’d think that in the right patient continuing treatment until the late third trimester would be the way to go, especially since if you’ve put the patient on a biologic it must mean she has severe disease,” the gastroenterologist observed.

 

 

Dr. Roy Fleischmann of the University of Texas, Dallas, asked why gastroenterologists don’t put all IBD patients of childbearing age on certolizumab pegol if they need biologic therapy, since it doesn’t cross the placenta.

“Maybe IBD is different, but our biologics don’t necessarily have the longest persistence,” Dr. Mahadevan replied. “If you start a woman on certolizumab pegol at age 20 the chances of her still being on it at 28 are probably pretty low.”

Conference director Dr. Arthur Kavanaugh, professor of medicine at the University of California, San Diego, asked if the message regarding management of IBD in pregnancy being put forth by Dr. Mahadevan and the IBD in Pregnancy Consensus Group has gained wide acceptance by gastroenterologists across the country.

“I think the people who do IBD as a concentrated practice, whether in private or academic practice, are very aware of this literature,” she said.

“In general, IBD has become more and more centered among a group of people who want to take care of IBD. If you look at the big private practices, they have a hepatitis C person, an IBD person, and everyone else just wants to scope. I think the message is getting across to non-IBD gastroenterologists, but there is some confusion because the Europeans are very firm about stopping biologics at 22 weeks’ gestation if the patient is in deep remission and we in North America continue treatment,” said Dr. Mahadevan.

Her work with the PIANO study is funded by the Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation of America. In addition, Dr. Mahadevan disclosed ties to more than half a dozen pharmaceutical companies.

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MAUI, HAWAII – The consensus among gastroenterologists with expertise in inflammatory bowel disease is that continuation of biologics or immunomodulators in affected women throughout pregnancy and breastfeeding poses no increased risks to the fetus – and therein lies a message for rheumatologists and obstetricians, Dr. Uma Mahadevan said at the 2016 Rheumatology Winter Clinical Symposium.

“The risk of uncontrolled disease must be weighed against the risk of medical therapy. And this is something that is often missed,” according to Dr. Mahadevan, professor of medicine and co–medical director of the Center for Colitis and Crohn’s Disease at the University of California, San Francisco.

 

Dr. Uma Mahadevan

Gastroenterologists – at least, those whose practices focus on inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) – have led the way within medicine in terms of establishing the safety of biologics and immunomodulators such as azathioprine in pregnant women with chronic inflammatory diseases and their babies. And having accomplished that, they have been ahead of the curve in terms of continuing such therapy throughout pregnancy and breastfeeding. That’s because active Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis are particularly common in women during their childbearing years. And a disease flare during pregnancy is associated with a markedly increased risk of preterm birth and other adverse outcomes.

Gastroenterologists’ longstanding interest in the safety to mother and fetus of continued use of effective, potent medications throughout pregnancy was the impetus for the ongoing prospective U.S. Pregnancy in Inflammatory Bowel Disease and Neonatal Outcomes (PIANO) study, now in its ninth year, with an enrollment of roughly 1,500 women with IBD. The study has included comparisons of outcomes of women on different medications during pregnancy versus unmedicated women.

In multiple publications, Dr. Mahadevan and other PIANO investigators have established that increased IBD activity adversely affects pregnancy outcomes, and that stabilization of disease and effective maintenance therapy throughout pregnancy is important. The PIANO group has demonstrated that IBD medication exposure well into the third trimester in patients in sustained remission was not associated with an increase in congenital anomalies, spontaneous abortions, intrauterine growth restriction, or low birth weight.

To the surprise of many gastroenterologists, the PIANO study has shown that women with Crohn’s disease generally have smoother pregnancies than do those with ulcerative colitis, who tend to get sicker and have more complications.

Since PIANO data show an increased rate of preterm birth and low birth weight in IBD patients on combination therapy with azathioprine plus a biologic throughout pregnancy, Dr. Mahadevan and others try to discontinue the azathioprine, even though the need for combination therapy is a marker for patients with more severe disease.

Anti-TNF-alpha use during third trimester

Of particular interest to rheumatologists, who rely heavily on many of the same biologic agents gastroenterologists use to treat IBD, the use of anti–tumor necrosis factor–alpha biologics in the third trimester was not associated with an increase in preterm birth or maternal disease activity in the third trimester or the first 4 months post partum. When women on certolizumab pegol (Cimzia) during the third trimester were excluded from the analysis, since this biologic uniquely does not cross the placenta at all, the most recent PIANO data show a modest yet statistically significant 35% increase in infections in infants at age 12 months whose mothers were on other biologics in the third trimester. But Dr. Mahadevan said she doesn’t yet consider this finding definitive.

“It’s still a small group of patients, and every year when we update the results the infant infection risk goes back and forth from statistically significant to nonsignificant. I think there’s a signal here; we just need to keep collecting more data,” she said.

Particularly reassuring is the finding that the offspring of PIANO participants who had in utero exposure to biologics and immunomodulators didn’t have any developmental delay, compared with unexposed babies, according to the validated Ages and Stages Questionnaire at ages 1, 2, 3, and 4 years and Denver Childhood Developmental Score at months 4, 9, and 12.

“These kids do great later in life. Actually, they have better scores than unexposed kids. Not to say that biologics make your kid smarter. It probably has to do with better IBD control,” Dr. Mahadevan said.

Effects while breastfeeding

Breastfeeding while on biologics or azathioprine didn’t adversely affect infant growth, infection rate, or developmental milestones. More specifically, levels of biologics in the mothers, babies, or cord serum were not associated with the likelihood of a neonatal intensive care unit stay, an increase in infant infections, or achievement of developmental milestones.

“Almost all the agents are detectable in breast milk, but only at the nanogram level. We tell all our patients on biologics they can breastfeed. It doesn’t matter when their last dose was, don’t worry about it,” the gastroenterologist said.

 

 

Importance of preconception counseling

Key practical lessons she has learned in taking care of large numbers of patients with severe IBD referred to her tertiary center include the importance of preconception counseling. A woman should stop methotrexate at least 3 months prior to conception. Providing information on medication safety and the risks of poorly controlled disease helps in adherence.

It’s best to communicate with the patient’s obstetrician about the importance of continuing her IBD therapy during pregnancy before she becomes pregnant.

“It’s better to have this discussion ahead of time and have a plan in place. Once a patient is pregnant it’s very difficult if her doula or someone else has told them to stop a medication to convince them to continue it,” said Dr. Mahadevan.

All women with IBD should be followed as high-risk pregnancies. Mode of delivery is at the discretion of the obstetrician unless the patient has an open rectovaginal fistula; even if it’s inactive, cesarean delivery is preferable in that situation, she said.

Steps taken in the third trimester

In the third trimester, she routinely sends a letter to the patient’s pediatrician requesting no live virus vaccines in the coming baby’s first 6 months – in the United States, that’s the rotavirus vaccine – if the infant was exposed in utero to a biologic other than certolizumab pegol, but that all other vaccines can be given on schedule. She also asks that the pediatrician monitor an exposed baby for infections.

“That being said, there have been 20-plus exposures to rotavirus vaccine in the first 6 months of life recorded in the PIANO registry in the infants of mothers on biologics and we haven’t seen any adverse events. So maybe the CDC is overstating the risk, but at this point the rule is still no live virus vaccines,” she said.

She tries to time her last dose of biologic agents during pregnancy as follows: at week 30-32 for infliximab or vedolizumab and week 36-38 for adalimumab or golimumab. As for certolizumab pegol, “they can take that on their way to labor and delivery,” she quipped.

“I give the next dose of a biologic agent soon after delivery, often while the patient is still in the hospital, 24 hours after vaginal delivery and 48 hours after a C-section, assuming no infection,” Dr. Mahadevan said.

The elements of her approach to management of the pregnant patient with IBD are in accord with a recent report, The Toronto Consensus Statements for the Management of Inflammatory Bowel Disease in Pregnancy, in which she participated (Gastroenterology. 2016 Mar;150[3]:734-57).

Rheumatologists’ habits with biologics in pregnancy

 

Dr. John J. Cush

Dr. John J. Cush rose from the audience to observe that the situation in rheumatology with regard to biologics in pregnancy is quite a bit different from what’s going on in gastroenterology.

“I think a lot of rheumatologists don’t let their patients get pregnant on biologics for fear of what may happen. And that’s because they don’t know the data. I think you’ve shown very clearly that you can get pregnant on biologics and do well. But for many of us who do allow our patients to get pregnant on biologic monotherapy, the practice is to stop it once they get pregnant. The idea is we want them to be in a very deep remission to increase the odds of getting pregnant and having a successful pregnancy, but then we stop the drug and we assume the disease state is going to stay the same. Often, though, it doesn’t stay the same, it gets worse. Yet this is a common practice in rheumatology. What’s your response?” asked Dr. Cush, professor of medicine and rheumatology at Baylor University Medical Center, Dallas, and director of clinical rheumatology at the Baylor Research Institute.

“I think in IBD it’s very clear that patients with active disease in pregnancy do much, much worse,” Dr. Mahadevan replied. “They have preterm birth, they get very sick, they’re hospitalized and placed on steroids. So for us, the benefit is very clear. I don’t know the data in rheumatoid arthritis – whether active disease leads to increased complication rates – but I do know from colleagues that in the postpartum period women with poorly controlled rheumatoid arthritis can’t take care of their baby because their hands are so damaged. And that’s a big deal.

“So when you see that the drugs are not associated with an increased risk of birth defects and on monotherapy there’s no increase in infections and other complications, you’d think that in the right patient continuing treatment until the late third trimester would be the way to go, especially since if you’ve put the patient on a biologic it must mean she has severe disease,” the gastroenterologist observed.

 

 

Dr. Roy Fleischmann of the University of Texas, Dallas, asked why gastroenterologists don’t put all IBD patients of childbearing age on certolizumab pegol if they need biologic therapy, since it doesn’t cross the placenta.

“Maybe IBD is different, but our biologics don’t necessarily have the longest persistence,” Dr. Mahadevan replied. “If you start a woman on certolizumab pegol at age 20 the chances of her still being on it at 28 are probably pretty low.”

Conference director Dr. Arthur Kavanaugh, professor of medicine at the University of California, San Diego, asked if the message regarding management of IBD in pregnancy being put forth by Dr. Mahadevan and the IBD in Pregnancy Consensus Group has gained wide acceptance by gastroenterologists across the country.

“I think the people who do IBD as a concentrated practice, whether in private or academic practice, are very aware of this literature,” she said.

“In general, IBD has become more and more centered among a group of people who want to take care of IBD. If you look at the big private practices, they have a hepatitis C person, an IBD person, and everyone else just wants to scope. I think the message is getting across to non-IBD gastroenterologists, but there is some confusion because the Europeans are very firm about stopping biologics at 22 weeks’ gestation if the patient is in deep remission and we in North America continue treatment,” said Dr. Mahadevan.

Her work with the PIANO study is funded by the Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation of America. In addition, Dr. Mahadevan disclosed ties to more than half a dozen pharmaceutical companies.

[email protected]

MAUI, HAWAII – The consensus among gastroenterologists with expertise in inflammatory bowel disease is that continuation of biologics or immunomodulators in affected women throughout pregnancy and breastfeeding poses no increased risks to the fetus – and therein lies a message for rheumatologists and obstetricians, Dr. Uma Mahadevan said at the 2016 Rheumatology Winter Clinical Symposium.

“The risk of uncontrolled disease must be weighed against the risk of medical therapy. And this is something that is often missed,” according to Dr. Mahadevan, professor of medicine and co–medical director of the Center for Colitis and Crohn’s Disease at the University of California, San Francisco.

 

Dr. Uma Mahadevan

Gastroenterologists – at least, those whose practices focus on inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) – have led the way within medicine in terms of establishing the safety of biologics and immunomodulators such as azathioprine in pregnant women with chronic inflammatory diseases and their babies. And having accomplished that, they have been ahead of the curve in terms of continuing such therapy throughout pregnancy and breastfeeding. That’s because active Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis are particularly common in women during their childbearing years. And a disease flare during pregnancy is associated with a markedly increased risk of preterm birth and other adverse outcomes.

Gastroenterologists’ longstanding interest in the safety to mother and fetus of continued use of effective, potent medications throughout pregnancy was the impetus for the ongoing prospective U.S. Pregnancy in Inflammatory Bowel Disease and Neonatal Outcomes (PIANO) study, now in its ninth year, with an enrollment of roughly 1,500 women with IBD. The study has included comparisons of outcomes of women on different medications during pregnancy versus unmedicated women.

In multiple publications, Dr. Mahadevan and other PIANO investigators have established that increased IBD activity adversely affects pregnancy outcomes, and that stabilization of disease and effective maintenance therapy throughout pregnancy is important. The PIANO group has demonstrated that IBD medication exposure well into the third trimester in patients in sustained remission was not associated with an increase in congenital anomalies, spontaneous abortions, intrauterine growth restriction, or low birth weight.

To the surprise of many gastroenterologists, the PIANO study has shown that women with Crohn’s disease generally have smoother pregnancies than do those with ulcerative colitis, who tend to get sicker and have more complications.

Since PIANO data show an increased rate of preterm birth and low birth weight in IBD patients on combination therapy with azathioprine plus a biologic throughout pregnancy, Dr. Mahadevan and others try to discontinue the azathioprine, even though the need for combination therapy is a marker for patients with more severe disease.

Anti-TNF-alpha use during third trimester

Of particular interest to rheumatologists, who rely heavily on many of the same biologic agents gastroenterologists use to treat IBD, the use of anti–tumor necrosis factor–alpha biologics in the third trimester was not associated with an increase in preterm birth or maternal disease activity in the third trimester or the first 4 months post partum. When women on certolizumab pegol (Cimzia) during the third trimester were excluded from the analysis, since this biologic uniquely does not cross the placenta at all, the most recent PIANO data show a modest yet statistically significant 35% increase in infections in infants at age 12 months whose mothers were on other biologics in the third trimester. But Dr. Mahadevan said she doesn’t yet consider this finding definitive.

“It’s still a small group of patients, and every year when we update the results the infant infection risk goes back and forth from statistically significant to nonsignificant. I think there’s a signal here; we just need to keep collecting more data,” she said.

Particularly reassuring is the finding that the offspring of PIANO participants who had in utero exposure to biologics and immunomodulators didn’t have any developmental delay, compared with unexposed babies, according to the validated Ages and Stages Questionnaire at ages 1, 2, 3, and 4 years and Denver Childhood Developmental Score at months 4, 9, and 12.

“These kids do great later in life. Actually, they have better scores than unexposed kids. Not to say that biologics make your kid smarter. It probably has to do with better IBD control,” Dr. Mahadevan said.

Effects while breastfeeding

Breastfeeding while on biologics or azathioprine didn’t adversely affect infant growth, infection rate, or developmental milestones. More specifically, levels of biologics in the mothers, babies, or cord serum were not associated with the likelihood of a neonatal intensive care unit stay, an increase in infant infections, or achievement of developmental milestones.

“Almost all the agents are detectable in breast milk, but only at the nanogram level. We tell all our patients on biologics they can breastfeed. It doesn’t matter when their last dose was, don’t worry about it,” the gastroenterologist said.

 

 

Importance of preconception counseling

Key practical lessons she has learned in taking care of large numbers of patients with severe IBD referred to her tertiary center include the importance of preconception counseling. A woman should stop methotrexate at least 3 months prior to conception. Providing information on medication safety and the risks of poorly controlled disease helps in adherence.

It’s best to communicate with the patient’s obstetrician about the importance of continuing her IBD therapy during pregnancy before she becomes pregnant.

“It’s better to have this discussion ahead of time and have a plan in place. Once a patient is pregnant it’s very difficult if her doula or someone else has told them to stop a medication to convince them to continue it,” said Dr. Mahadevan.

All women with IBD should be followed as high-risk pregnancies. Mode of delivery is at the discretion of the obstetrician unless the patient has an open rectovaginal fistula; even if it’s inactive, cesarean delivery is preferable in that situation, she said.

Steps taken in the third trimester

In the third trimester, she routinely sends a letter to the patient’s pediatrician requesting no live virus vaccines in the coming baby’s first 6 months – in the United States, that’s the rotavirus vaccine – if the infant was exposed in utero to a biologic other than certolizumab pegol, but that all other vaccines can be given on schedule. She also asks that the pediatrician monitor an exposed baby for infections.

“That being said, there have been 20-plus exposures to rotavirus vaccine in the first 6 months of life recorded in the PIANO registry in the infants of mothers on biologics and we haven’t seen any adverse events. So maybe the CDC is overstating the risk, but at this point the rule is still no live virus vaccines,” she said.

She tries to time her last dose of biologic agents during pregnancy as follows: at week 30-32 for infliximab or vedolizumab and week 36-38 for adalimumab or golimumab. As for certolizumab pegol, “they can take that on their way to labor and delivery,” she quipped.

“I give the next dose of a biologic agent soon after delivery, often while the patient is still in the hospital, 24 hours after vaginal delivery and 48 hours after a C-section, assuming no infection,” Dr. Mahadevan said.

The elements of her approach to management of the pregnant patient with IBD are in accord with a recent report, The Toronto Consensus Statements for the Management of Inflammatory Bowel Disease in Pregnancy, in which she participated (Gastroenterology. 2016 Mar;150[3]:734-57).

Rheumatologists’ habits with biologics in pregnancy

 

Dr. John J. Cush

Dr. John J. Cush rose from the audience to observe that the situation in rheumatology with regard to biologics in pregnancy is quite a bit different from what’s going on in gastroenterology.

“I think a lot of rheumatologists don’t let their patients get pregnant on biologics for fear of what may happen. And that’s because they don’t know the data. I think you’ve shown very clearly that you can get pregnant on biologics and do well. But for many of us who do allow our patients to get pregnant on biologic monotherapy, the practice is to stop it once they get pregnant. The idea is we want them to be in a very deep remission to increase the odds of getting pregnant and having a successful pregnancy, but then we stop the drug and we assume the disease state is going to stay the same. Often, though, it doesn’t stay the same, it gets worse. Yet this is a common practice in rheumatology. What’s your response?” asked Dr. Cush, professor of medicine and rheumatology at Baylor University Medical Center, Dallas, and director of clinical rheumatology at the Baylor Research Institute.

“I think in IBD it’s very clear that patients with active disease in pregnancy do much, much worse,” Dr. Mahadevan replied. “They have preterm birth, they get very sick, they’re hospitalized and placed on steroids. So for us, the benefit is very clear. I don’t know the data in rheumatoid arthritis – whether active disease leads to increased complication rates – but I do know from colleagues that in the postpartum period women with poorly controlled rheumatoid arthritis can’t take care of their baby because their hands are so damaged. And that’s a big deal.

“So when you see that the drugs are not associated with an increased risk of birth defects and on monotherapy there’s no increase in infections and other complications, you’d think that in the right patient continuing treatment until the late third trimester would be the way to go, especially since if you’ve put the patient on a biologic it must mean she has severe disease,” the gastroenterologist observed.

 

 

Dr. Roy Fleischmann of the University of Texas, Dallas, asked why gastroenterologists don’t put all IBD patients of childbearing age on certolizumab pegol if they need biologic therapy, since it doesn’t cross the placenta.

“Maybe IBD is different, but our biologics don’t necessarily have the longest persistence,” Dr. Mahadevan replied. “If you start a woman on certolizumab pegol at age 20 the chances of her still being on it at 28 are probably pretty low.”

Conference director Dr. Arthur Kavanaugh, professor of medicine at the University of California, San Diego, asked if the message regarding management of IBD in pregnancy being put forth by Dr. Mahadevan and the IBD in Pregnancy Consensus Group has gained wide acceptance by gastroenterologists across the country.

“I think the people who do IBD as a concentrated practice, whether in private or academic practice, are very aware of this literature,” she said.

“In general, IBD has become more and more centered among a group of people who want to take care of IBD. If you look at the big private practices, they have a hepatitis C person, an IBD person, and everyone else just wants to scope. I think the message is getting across to non-IBD gastroenterologists, but there is some confusion because the Europeans are very firm about stopping biologics at 22 weeks’ gestation if the patient is in deep remission and we in North America continue treatment,” said Dr. Mahadevan.

Her work with the PIANO study is funded by the Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation of America. In addition, Dr. Mahadevan disclosed ties to more than half a dozen pharmaceutical companies.

[email protected]

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Brodalumab effective for rare, severe types of psoriasis

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Brodalumab effective for rare, severe types of psoriasis

The investigational interleukin-17 inhibitor brodalumab was safe and effective in a small phase III Japanese study of adults with two rare and severe types of psoriasis, generalized pustular psoriasis (GPP) and psoriatic erythroderma (PsE). The results were published in the British Journal of Dermatology.

The 52-week open label studyevaluated the safety and efficacy of brodalumab in 30 Japanese adults (mean age 48 years) with GPP (12 patients) and PsE (18 patients). Brodalumab, a human monoclonal antibody against human IL-17RA that blocks the biologic activities of IL-17, was administered by subcutaneous injection. Efficacy was assessed via Clinical Global Impression of Improvement (CGI) scores, the primary endpoint (Br J Dermatol. 2016 April 23. doi: 10.1111/bjd.14702).

A high proportion of patients with either disease achieved “improved” or “remission” CGI scores at weeks 2, 12, and 52, reported Dr. Kenshi Yamasaki, of the department of dermatology at Tohoku University, Miyagi, Japan, and his associates

At week 52, almost 92% of those with GPP and 100% of those with PsE had achieved “improved” or “remission” scores. The most common adverse event was nasopharyngitis, which occurred in one-third of patients. Infection-related adverse events were grade 1 or 2, no adverse events were fatal, and none of the five serious adverse events noted were considered to be attributable to treatment, they added. Although anti-brodalumab neutralizing antibodies were not detected, one patient tested positive for anti-brodalumab binding antibodies.

Noting that treatment with brodalumab has been associated with significant improvements in patients with plaque psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis in phase II and III studies, “results from this study confirm that brodalumab can improve patient symptoms not long after treatment is initiated,” in patients with GPP and PsE, the authors concluded. While acknowledging the study limitations, including the open label design and a small sample size, they added, “IL-17RA blocking will be a promising therapeutic target in patients with GPP and PsE.”

The safety profile and low expression of anti-brodalumab antibodies indicated that brodalumab was suitable for long-term use, they said.

The study was funded by Kyowa Hakko Kirin. All authors disclosed ties to pharmaceutical companies, including the funding source; one author is an employee of the company.

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The investigational interleukin-17 inhibitor brodalumab was safe and effective in a small phase III Japanese study of adults with two rare and severe types of psoriasis, generalized pustular psoriasis (GPP) and psoriatic erythroderma (PsE). The results were published in the British Journal of Dermatology.

The 52-week open label studyevaluated the safety and efficacy of brodalumab in 30 Japanese adults (mean age 48 years) with GPP (12 patients) and PsE (18 patients). Brodalumab, a human monoclonal antibody against human IL-17RA that blocks the biologic activities of IL-17, was administered by subcutaneous injection. Efficacy was assessed via Clinical Global Impression of Improvement (CGI) scores, the primary endpoint (Br J Dermatol. 2016 April 23. doi: 10.1111/bjd.14702).

A high proportion of patients with either disease achieved “improved” or “remission” CGI scores at weeks 2, 12, and 52, reported Dr. Kenshi Yamasaki, of the department of dermatology at Tohoku University, Miyagi, Japan, and his associates

At week 52, almost 92% of those with GPP and 100% of those with PsE had achieved “improved” or “remission” scores. The most common adverse event was nasopharyngitis, which occurred in one-third of patients. Infection-related adverse events were grade 1 or 2, no adverse events were fatal, and none of the five serious adverse events noted were considered to be attributable to treatment, they added. Although anti-brodalumab neutralizing antibodies were not detected, one patient tested positive for anti-brodalumab binding antibodies.

Noting that treatment with brodalumab has been associated with significant improvements in patients with plaque psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis in phase II and III studies, “results from this study confirm that brodalumab can improve patient symptoms not long after treatment is initiated,” in patients with GPP and PsE, the authors concluded. While acknowledging the study limitations, including the open label design and a small sample size, they added, “IL-17RA blocking will be a promising therapeutic target in patients with GPP and PsE.”

The safety profile and low expression of anti-brodalumab antibodies indicated that brodalumab was suitable for long-term use, they said.

The study was funded by Kyowa Hakko Kirin. All authors disclosed ties to pharmaceutical companies, including the funding source; one author is an employee of the company.

The investigational interleukin-17 inhibitor brodalumab was safe and effective in a small phase III Japanese study of adults with two rare and severe types of psoriasis, generalized pustular psoriasis (GPP) and psoriatic erythroderma (PsE). The results were published in the British Journal of Dermatology.

The 52-week open label studyevaluated the safety and efficacy of brodalumab in 30 Japanese adults (mean age 48 years) with GPP (12 patients) and PsE (18 patients). Brodalumab, a human monoclonal antibody against human IL-17RA that blocks the biologic activities of IL-17, was administered by subcutaneous injection. Efficacy was assessed via Clinical Global Impression of Improvement (CGI) scores, the primary endpoint (Br J Dermatol. 2016 April 23. doi: 10.1111/bjd.14702).

A high proportion of patients with either disease achieved “improved” or “remission” CGI scores at weeks 2, 12, and 52, reported Dr. Kenshi Yamasaki, of the department of dermatology at Tohoku University, Miyagi, Japan, and his associates

At week 52, almost 92% of those with GPP and 100% of those with PsE had achieved “improved” or “remission” scores. The most common adverse event was nasopharyngitis, which occurred in one-third of patients. Infection-related adverse events were grade 1 or 2, no adverse events were fatal, and none of the five serious adverse events noted were considered to be attributable to treatment, they added. Although anti-brodalumab neutralizing antibodies were not detected, one patient tested positive for anti-brodalumab binding antibodies.

Noting that treatment with brodalumab has been associated with significant improvements in patients with plaque psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis in phase II and III studies, “results from this study confirm that brodalumab can improve patient symptoms not long after treatment is initiated,” in patients with GPP and PsE, the authors concluded. While acknowledging the study limitations, including the open label design and a small sample size, they added, “IL-17RA blocking will be a promising therapeutic target in patients with GPP and PsE.”

The safety profile and low expression of anti-brodalumab antibodies indicated that brodalumab was suitable for long-term use, they said.

The study was funded by Kyowa Hakko Kirin. All authors disclosed ties to pharmaceutical companies, including the funding source; one author is an employee of the company.

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Key clinical point: The interluekin-17 inhibitor brodalumab significantly improved symptoms of generalized pustular psoriasis and psoriatic erythroderma in a small, Japanese open label study.

Major finding: Almost all brodalumab-treated patients with generalized pustular psoriasis (GPP) or psoriatic erythroderma (PsE) showed high levels of clinical improvement and low levels of adverse events.

Data sources: The phase III open-label multicenter study evaluated the safety and efficacy of brodalumab in 30 adults with GPP or PsE over 52 weeks.

Disclosures: Funding was provided by Kyowa Hakko Kirin. All authors disclosed ties to industry sources, including the funding source.

Remicade to infliximab biosimilar switches fare well in real-life practice

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Remicade to infliximab biosimilar switches fare well in real-life practice

GLASGOW – Switching patients on the anti–tumor necrosis factor drug Remicade to a biosimilar infliximab product resulted in good efficacy and tolerability with substantial cost savings in two real-world studies from the United Kingdom.

A total of 52 (88%) of 59 patients who had switched to the biosimilar infliximab CT-P13 (Inflectra) for the treatment of various indications for which Remicade is approved remained on the biosimilar after 10 months of follow-up and experienced comparable adverse events and similar levels of efficacy before and after switching, Dr. Lucy Parker of University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust reported at the British Society for Rheumatology annual conference. A second smaller study reported at the conference also showed similar results with the same infliximab biosimilar, which is also marketed as Remsima in Europe.

CT-P13 had efficacy, immunogenicity, and pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic parameters comparable to Remicade in 1-year follow-up data from the phase III randomized PLANETRAstudy (Arthritis Res Ther. 2016;18:82. doi: 10.1186/s13075-016-0981-6), but whether these study findings hold in a routine practice setting remains to be determined, Dr. Parker noted.

In Dr. Parker and colleagues’ study of data from the Southampton Biological Therapies Review Service, every patient was initially “seen in clinic and had the opportunity to speak to their consultant rheumatologist about the potential switchover from the originator drug to the new version,” she explained. Patients were then contacted directly by letter to explain the potential switch and given an information leaflet on Inflectra. They were also given access to a dedicated helpline number that could be used to re-explain the switch and discuss any concerns after switching had occurred.

In May 2015, all 59 patients being treated with Remicade were gradually switched over to the biosimilar version. Patients were reviewed after 3 months and then at 6-month intervals.

“Every single patient agreed to switch,” Dr. Parker observed. No patient used the helpline service or asked to talk with the consultant rheumatologist. One delegate noted during discussion that it was impressive that all patients agreed to switch, but Dr. Parker suggested that it was probably important that people were invited to switch rather being told that they would be switched. “If anyone had refused, then they would have been kept on Remicade,” she observed.

 

©BrianAJackson/Thinkstock.com

Dr. Parker noted that the patients were taking Remicade for various rheumatologic conditions, including 29 with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), 14 with ankylosing spondylitis (AS), 14 with psoriatic arthritis (PsA), and 2 with enteropathic arthritis. The mean age was 58.9 years, 51% of patients were female, mean disease duration was 18 years, and there was a mean of 5.7 years on Remicade before the switch. Patients had been diagnosed an average of 10 years before the first use of a biologic agent, 56% were also taking methotrexate, and 17% were on another disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD).

There was no significant difference in disease activity before or after switching, with respective mean 28-joint Disease Activity Scores of 3.4 and 3.3 and Bath Ankylosing Spondylitis Disease Activity Index scores of 3.7 and 3.6.

Dr. Parker noted that two 6-month periods before switching were compared to a 6-month period after switching and there were a similarly low number of cases reporting inefficacy, which was defined as any increase in symptoms or disease activity measure. Inefficacy was seen in one patient 12 months before the switch, two patients 6 months before the switch, and three patients after the switch. All three of the latter patients were switched back to Remicade, with one being then further switched to rituximab (Rituxan).

There were four adverse events in patients switched to the biosimilar versus three and four cases in the two 6-month periods before the switch. Adverse events after switching were widespread pain or myalgia and arthralgia after two infusions in two patients with PsA, multiple subjective symptoms such as dizziness and labile blood pressure and forgetfulness in another patient with PsA who also had these symptoms before the switch, and a case of chronic osteomyelitic foot infection in a patient with RA that also predated the switch. Biologic therapy was stopped in the RA patient, one of the PsA patients switched back to Remicade, and the other two were switched to ustekinumab (Stelara).

Dr. Parker reported that switching to the biosimilar has significantly cut the cost of treatment by £197,974 (about $291,000 USD) or 41.5% in their practice.

A team from St. George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust in London reported in a poster session similar findings after switching 31 patients to Remsima (Rheumatology [Oxford]. 2016;55[suppl 1]:i125-i126). Most switches occurred in RA patients (n = 18), followed by seven with AS and five with PsA. One patient did not switch following a consultant decision after the patient in question developed septic arthritis.

 

 

Dr. Ritu Malaiya and associates found equivalent efficacy responses in the vast majority of cases. Only one patient switched back to Remicade. Dr. Malaiya said that their experience of switching was, “on the whole, positive.” Effective planning and education of patients and staff around the switch was again considered vital and “instrumental to our early success,” the team reported. “Overall, patients were keen for others to benefit from more cost-effective drugs.”

Dr. Parker and Dr. Malaiya reported having no financial disclosures. Coauthors of the studies disclosed acting as consultants or receiving research grants from manufacturers of anti-TNF therapies.

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GLASGOW – Switching patients on the anti–tumor necrosis factor drug Remicade to a biosimilar infliximab product resulted in good efficacy and tolerability with substantial cost savings in two real-world studies from the United Kingdom.

A total of 52 (88%) of 59 patients who had switched to the biosimilar infliximab CT-P13 (Inflectra) for the treatment of various indications for which Remicade is approved remained on the biosimilar after 10 months of follow-up and experienced comparable adverse events and similar levels of efficacy before and after switching, Dr. Lucy Parker of University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust reported at the British Society for Rheumatology annual conference. A second smaller study reported at the conference also showed similar results with the same infliximab biosimilar, which is also marketed as Remsima in Europe.

CT-P13 had efficacy, immunogenicity, and pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic parameters comparable to Remicade in 1-year follow-up data from the phase III randomized PLANETRAstudy (Arthritis Res Ther. 2016;18:82. doi: 10.1186/s13075-016-0981-6), but whether these study findings hold in a routine practice setting remains to be determined, Dr. Parker noted.

In Dr. Parker and colleagues’ study of data from the Southampton Biological Therapies Review Service, every patient was initially “seen in clinic and had the opportunity to speak to their consultant rheumatologist about the potential switchover from the originator drug to the new version,” she explained. Patients were then contacted directly by letter to explain the potential switch and given an information leaflet on Inflectra. They were also given access to a dedicated helpline number that could be used to re-explain the switch and discuss any concerns after switching had occurred.

In May 2015, all 59 patients being treated with Remicade were gradually switched over to the biosimilar version. Patients were reviewed after 3 months and then at 6-month intervals.

“Every single patient agreed to switch,” Dr. Parker observed. No patient used the helpline service or asked to talk with the consultant rheumatologist. One delegate noted during discussion that it was impressive that all patients agreed to switch, but Dr. Parker suggested that it was probably important that people were invited to switch rather being told that they would be switched. “If anyone had refused, then they would have been kept on Remicade,” she observed.

 

©BrianAJackson/Thinkstock.com

Dr. Parker noted that the patients were taking Remicade for various rheumatologic conditions, including 29 with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), 14 with ankylosing spondylitis (AS), 14 with psoriatic arthritis (PsA), and 2 with enteropathic arthritis. The mean age was 58.9 years, 51% of patients were female, mean disease duration was 18 years, and there was a mean of 5.7 years on Remicade before the switch. Patients had been diagnosed an average of 10 years before the first use of a biologic agent, 56% were also taking methotrexate, and 17% were on another disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD).

There was no significant difference in disease activity before or after switching, with respective mean 28-joint Disease Activity Scores of 3.4 and 3.3 and Bath Ankylosing Spondylitis Disease Activity Index scores of 3.7 and 3.6.

Dr. Parker noted that two 6-month periods before switching were compared to a 6-month period after switching and there were a similarly low number of cases reporting inefficacy, which was defined as any increase in symptoms or disease activity measure. Inefficacy was seen in one patient 12 months before the switch, two patients 6 months before the switch, and three patients after the switch. All three of the latter patients were switched back to Remicade, with one being then further switched to rituximab (Rituxan).

There were four adverse events in patients switched to the biosimilar versus three and four cases in the two 6-month periods before the switch. Adverse events after switching were widespread pain or myalgia and arthralgia after two infusions in two patients with PsA, multiple subjective symptoms such as dizziness and labile blood pressure and forgetfulness in another patient with PsA who also had these symptoms before the switch, and a case of chronic osteomyelitic foot infection in a patient with RA that also predated the switch. Biologic therapy was stopped in the RA patient, one of the PsA patients switched back to Remicade, and the other two were switched to ustekinumab (Stelara).

Dr. Parker reported that switching to the biosimilar has significantly cut the cost of treatment by £197,974 (about $291,000 USD) or 41.5% in their practice.

A team from St. George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust in London reported in a poster session similar findings after switching 31 patients to Remsima (Rheumatology [Oxford]. 2016;55[suppl 1]:i125-i126). Most switches occurred in RA patients (n = 18), followed by seven with AS and five with PsA. One patient did not switch following a consultant decision after the patient in question developed septic arthritis.

 

 

Dr. Ritu Malaiya and associates found equivalent efficacy responses in the vast majority of cases. Only one patient switched back to Remicade. Dr. Malaiya said that their experience of switching was, “on the whole, positive.” Effective planning and education of patients and staff around the switch was again considered vital and “instrumental to our early success,” the team reported. “Overall, patients were keen for others to benefit from more cost-effective drugs.”

Dr. Parker and Dr. Malaiya reported having no financial disclosures. Coauthors of the studies disclosed acting as consultants or receiving research grants from manufacturers of anti-TNF therapies.

GLASGOW – Switching patients on the anti–tumor necrosis factor drug Remicade to a biosimilar infliximab product resulted in good efficacy and tolerability with substantial cost savings in two real-world studies from the United Kingdom.

A total of 52 (88%) of 59 patients who had switched to the biosimilar infliximab CT-P13 (Inflectra) for the treatment of various indications for which Remicade is approved remained on the biosimilar after 10 months of follow-up and experienced comparable adverse events and similar levels of efficacy before and after switching, Dr. Lucy Parker of University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust reported at the British Society for Rheumatology annual conference. A second smaller study reported at the conference also showed similar results with the same infliximab biosimilar, which is also marketed as Remsima in Europe.

CT-P13 had efficacy, immunogenicity, and pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic parameters comparable to Remicade in 1-year follow-up data from the phase III randomized PLANETRAstudy (Arthritis Res Ther. 2016;18:82. doi: 10.1186/s13075-016-0981-6), but whether these study findings hold in a routine practice setting remains to be determined, Dr. Parker noted.

In Dr. Parker and colleagues’ study of data from the Southampton Biological Therapies Review Service, every patient was initially “seen in clinic and had the opportunity to speak to their consultant rheumatologist about the potential switchover from the originator drug to the new version,” she explained. Patients were then contacted directly by letter to explain the potential switch and given an information leaflet on Inflectra. They were also given access to a dedicated helpline number that could be used to re-explain the switch and discuss any concerns after switching had occurred.

In May 2015, all 59 patients being treated with Remicade were gradually switched over to the biosimilar version. Patients were reviewed after 3 months and then at 6-month intervals.

“Every single patient agreed to switch,” Dr. Parker observed. No patient used the helpline service or asked to talk with the consultant rheumatologist. One delegate noted during discussion that it was impressive that all patients agreed to switch, but Dr. Parker suggested that it was probably important that people were invited to switch rather being told that they would be switched. “If anyone had refused, then they would have been kept on Remicade,” she observed.

 

©BrianAJackson/Thinkstock.com

Dr. Parker noted that the patients were taking Remicade for various rheumatologic conditions, including 29 with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), 14 with ankylosing spondylitis (AS), 14 with psoriatic arthritis (PsA), and 2 with enteropathic arthritis. The mean age was 58.9 years, 51% of patients were female, mean disease duration was 18 years, and there was a mean of 5.7 years on Remicade before the switch. Patients had been diagnosed an average of 10 years before the first use of a biologic agent, 56% were also taking methotrexate, and 17% were on another disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD).

There was no significant difference in disease activity before or after switching, with respective mean 28-joint Disease Activity Scores of 3.4 and 3.3 and Bath Ankylosing Spondylitis Disease Activity Index scores of 3.7 and 3.6.

Dr. Parker noted that two 6-month periods before switching were compared to a 6-month period after switching and there were a similarly low number of cases reporting inefficacy, which was defined as any increase in symptoms or disease activity measure. Inefficacy was seen in one patient 12 months before the switch, two patients 6 months before the switch, and three patients after the switch. All three of the latter patients were switched back to Remicade, with one being then further switched to rituximab (Rituxan).

There were four adverse events in patients switched to the biosimilar versus three and four cases in the two 6-month periods before the switch. Adverse events after switching were widespread pain or myalgia and arthralgia after two infusions in two patients with PsA, multiple subjective symptoms such as dizziness and labile blood pressure and forgetfulness in another patient with PsA who also had these symptoms before the switch, and a case of chronic osteomyelitic foot infection in a patient with RA that also predated the switch. Biologic therapy was stopped in the RA patient, one of the PsA patients switched back to Remicade, and the other two were switched to ustekinumab (Stelara).

Dr. Parker reported that switching to the biosimilar has significantly cut the cost of treatment by £197,974 (about $291,000 USD) or 41.5% in their practice.

A team from St. George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust in London reported in a poster session similar findings after switching 31 patients to Remsima (Rheumatology [Oxford]. 2016;55[suppl 1]:i125-i126). Most switches occurred in RA patients (n = 18), followed by seven with AS and five with PsA. One patient did not switch following a consultant decision after the patient in question developed septic arthritis.

 

 

Dr. Ritu Malaiya and associates found equivalent efficacy responses in the vast majority of cases. Only one patient switched back to Remicade. Dr. Malaiya said that their experience of switching was, “on the whole, positive.” Effective planning and education of patients and staff around the switch was again considered vital and “instrumental to our early success,” the team reported. “Overall, patients were keen for others to benefit from more cost-effective drugs.”

Dr. Parker and Dr. Malaiya reported having no financial disclosures. Coauthors of the studies disclosed acting as consultants or receiving research grants from manufacturers of anti-TNF therapies.

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Key clinical point: Both biosimilar versions of infliximab available in Europe appear to be as effective and tolerated as Remicade after switching from it.

Major finding: Of 59 patients who had switched to Inflectra, 88% remained on the biosimilar after 10 months of follow-up.

Data source: Two real-world studies of switching to biosimilar infliximab in the United Kingdom.

Disclosures: Dr. Parker and Dr. Malaiya reported having no financial disclosures. Coauthors of the studies disclosed acting as consultants or receiving research grants from manufacturers of anti-TNF therapies.

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Effective psoriasis therapy may reduce coronary plaque burden

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CHICAGO – Improvement in psoriasis was associated with a significant reduction in coronary plaque burden within 1 year in a pilot study conducted at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Joseph B. Lerman reported at the annual meeting of the American College of Cardiology.

“If you look at psoriatic plaque on the skin, it’s spewing out cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor–alpha and interleukin-17 which are highly linked to atherosclerosis. What we’ve found is that if you treat those plaques and reduce the severity of psoriasis, we’ve noticed small but statistically significant regression in the early noncalcified plaque. It’s a very exciting observation,” said Mr. Lerman, a medical student at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York.

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Joseph B. Lerman

He presented an observational study involving 50 consecutive patients with mild to moderate psoriasis of roughly 20 years duration and a median baseline Framingham Risk Score of 4. They underwent measurement of coronary plaque burden by coronary CT angiography at baseline and 1 year later.

During the study year, 33 patients showed significant improvement in their psoriasis as reflected in a decline in their mean Psoriasis Area and Severity Index score from 5.6 to 3.1. Those patients also showed significant improvement in their total and noncalcified plaque burden, with total plaque burden adjusted for luminal attenuation declining from 126 mm2 to 117 mm2. The association remained significant even after adjustment for traditional cardiovascular risk factors, the use of statin therapy, body mass index, and the use of systemic psoriasis therapies, including biologic agents.

Importantly, the reduction in plaque burden appeared to be largely concentrated in the subgroup of 31 patients on methotrexate or a biologic. And while this was a naturalistic observational study, the investigators have followed up with a prospective study of psoriasis patients placed on tumor necrosis factor inhibitors and confirmed that they, too, experienced a reduction in coronary plaque as measured by coronary CT angiography.

The investigators plan to expand the size of the study in order to confirm the findings. Mr. Lerman said the next question they would like to address is, how early does a measurable reduction in coronary plaque burden occur in response to clinical improvement in psoriasis? In order to explore this, the investigators will have to obtain institutional approval of a new investigative protocol which permits more frequent use of coronary CT angiography. At present the imaging study can be conducted only once per year due to the radiation exposure.

Mr. Lerman was involved in the psoriasis study while participating in the National Institutes of Health Medical Research Scholars Program. Senior investigator in the pilot study was Dr. Nehal Mehta, chief of the Section of Inflammation and Metabolic Disease at NHLBI in Bethesda, Md.

Mr. Lerman reported having no financial conflicts of interest.

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CHICAGO – Improvement in psoriasis was associated with a significant reduction in coronary plaque burden within 1 year in a pilot study conducted at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Joseph B. Lerman reported at the annual meeting of the American College of Cardiology.

“If you look at psoriatic plaque on the skin, it’s spewing out cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor–alpha and interleukin-17 which are highly linked to atherosclerosis. What we’ve found is that if you treat those plaques and reduce the severity of psoriasis, we’ve noticed small but statistically significant regression in the early noncalcified plaque. It’s a very exciting observation,” said Mr. Lerman, a medical student at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York.

Bruce Jancin/Frontline Medical News
Joseph B. Lerman

He presented an observational study involving 50 consecutive patients with mild to moderate psoriasis of roughly 20 years duration and a median baseline Framingham Risk Score of 4. They underwent measurement of coronary plaque burden by coronary CT angiography at baseline and 1 year later.

During the study year, 33 patients showed significant improvement in their psoriasis as reflected in a decline in their mean Psoriasis Area and Severity Index score from 5.6 to 3.1. Those patients also showed significant improvement in their total and noncalcified plaque burden, with total plaque burden adjusted for luminal attenuation declining from 126 mm2 to 117 mm2. The association remained significant even after adjustment for traditional cardiovascular risk factors, the use of statin therapy, body mass index, and the use of systemic psoriasis therapies, including biologic agents.

Importantly, the reduction in plaque burden appeared to be largely concentrated in the subgroup of 31 patients on methotrexate or a biologic. And while this was a naturalistic observational study, the investigators have followed up with a prospective study of psoriasis patients placed on tumor necrosis factor inhibitors and confirmed that they, too, experienced a reduction in coronary plaque as measured by coronary CT angiography.

The investigators plan to expand the size of the study in order to confirm the findings. Mr. Lerman said the next question they would like to address is, how early does a measurable reduction in coronary plaque burden occur in response to clinical improvement in psoriasis? In order to explore this, the investigators will have to obtain institutional approval of a new investigative protocol which permits more frequent use of coronary CT angiography. At present the imaging study can be conducted only once per year due to the radiation exposure.

Mr. Lerman was involved in the psoriasis study while participating in the National Institutes of Health Medical Research Scholars Program. Senior investigator in the pilot study was Dr. Nehal Mehta, chief of the Section of Inflammation and Metabolic Disease at NHLBI in Bethesda, Md.

Mr. Lerman reported having no financial conflicts of interest.

[email protected]

CHICAGO – Improvement in psoriasis was associated with a significant reduction in coronary plaque burden within 1 year in a pilot study conducted at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Joseph B. Lerman reported at the annual meeting of the American College of Cardiology.

“If you look at psoriatic plaque on the skin, it’s spewing out cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor–alpha and interleukin-17 which are highly linked to atherosclerosis. What we’ve found is that if you treat those plaques and reduce the severity of psoriasis, we’ve noticed small but statistically significant regression in the early noncalcified plaque. It’s a very exciting observation,” said Mr. Lerman, a medical student at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York.

Bruce Jancin/Frontline Medical News
Joseph B. Lerman

He presented an observational study involving 50 consecutive patients with mild to moderate psoriasis of roughly 20 years duration and a median baseline Framingham Risk Score of 4. They underwent measurement of coronary plaque burden by coronary CT angiography at baseline and 1 year later.

During the study year, 33 patients showed significant improvement in their psoriasis as reflected in a decline in their mean Psoriasis Area and Severity Index score from 5.6 to 3.1. Those patients also showed significant improvement in their total and noncalcified plaque burden, with total plaque burden adjusted for luminal attenuation declining from 126 mm2 to 117 mm2. The association remained significant even after adjustment for traditional cardiovascular risk factors, the use of statin therapy, body mass index, and the use of systemic psoriasis therapies, including biologic agents.

Importantly, the reduction in plaque burden appeared to be largely concentrated in the subgroup of 31 patients on methotrexate or a biologic. And while this was a naturalistic observational study, the investigators have followed up with a prospective study of psoriasis patients placed on tumor necrosis factor inhibitors and confirmed that they, too, experienced a reduction in coronary plaque as measured by coronary CT angiography.

The investigators plan to expand the size of the study in order to confirm the findings. Mr. Lerman said the next question they would like to address is, how early does a measurable reduction in coronary plaque burden occur in response to clinical improvement in psoriasis? In order to explore this, the investigators will have to obtain institutional approval of a new investigative protocol which permits more frequent use of coronary CT angiography. At present the imaging study can be conducted only once per year due to the radiation exposure.

Mr. Lerman was involved in the psoriasis study while participating in the National Institutes of Health Medical Research Scholars Program. Senior investigator in the pilot study was Dr. Nehal Mehta, chief of the Section of Inflammation and Metabolic Disease at NHLBI in Bethesda, Md.

Mr. Lerman reported having no financial conflicts of interest.

[email protected]

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Effective psoriasis therapy may reduce coronary plaque burden
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Key clinical point: Improved PASI scores were linked to regression of early noncalcified coronary plaque.

Major finding: Reduction in skin inflammation in psoriasis patients may cause regression of coronary plaque.

Data source: This prospective study of 50 patients with mild to moderate psoriasis featured precise measurements of coronary plaque burden at baseline and 1 year later.

Disclosures: The study was sponsored by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. The presenter reported having no financial conflicts of interest.