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— The interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1RA) canakinumab provided control of systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (sJIA) without the use of glucocorticoids for up to a year in most study participants after three monthly injections.

In this study of 20 patients with newly diagnosed sJIA treated off glucocorticoids, fever was controlled after a single injection in all patients, and 16 patients reached the primary outcome of remission after three injections, said Gerd Horneff, MD, PhD, Asklepios Children’s Hospital, Sankt Augustin, Germany.

Results of this open-label study, called CANAKINUMAB FIRST, were presented as late-breaking findings at the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology (EULAR) 2024 Annual Meeting.

“Steroid-free, first-line treatment with canakinumab led to sustained responses in most patients, with a considerable number achieving remission,” said Dr. Horneff, adding that the observation in this group is ongoing.
 

Building on Earlier Data

The efficacy of canakinumab was previously reported in anecdotal experiences and one small patient series published 10 years ago. Dr. Horneff noted that he has offered this drug off label to patients with challenging cases.

The objective was to evaluate canakinumab as a first-line monotherapy administered in the absence of glucocorticoids. The study was open to children aged 2-18 years with active sJIA/juvenile Still disease confirmed with published criteria. All were naive to biologic or nonbiologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs as well as steroids.

The median age of the children was 8.4 years. A total of 60% were men. The median disease duration at the time of entry was 1.2 months. Most had fever (95%) and rash (80%) with high levels of inflammatory markers at baseline. The mean number of painful joints was 3.1, and the mean number of systemic manifestations was 2.8. No patient was without any systemic involvement, but four of the patients did not have any painful joints.

At enrollment, patients were scheduled to receive three injections of canakinumab at monthly intervals during an active treatment phase, after which they entered an observation phase lasting 40 weeks. In the event of nonresponse or flares in either phase, they were transitioned to usual care.
 

Symptoms Resolve After Single Injection

After the first injection, active joint disease and all systemic manifestations resolved in 16 (80%) of the 20 patients. Joint activity and systemic manifestations also remained controlled after the second and third injections in 16 of the 20 patients.

One patient in this series achieved inactive disease after a single injection but developed what appeared to be a treatment-related allergic reaction. He received no further treatment and was excluded from the study, although he is being followed separately.

“According to sJADAS [systemic JIA Disease Activity Score] criteria at month 3, 14 had inactive disease, three had minimal disease activity, and one patient had moderate disease activity,” Dr. Horneff said.

At week 24, or 3 months after the last injection, there was still no joint activity in 16 patients. Systemic manifestations remained controlled in 13 patients, but 1 patient by this point had a flare. Another flare occurred after this point, and other patients have not yet completed the 52-week observation period.

“Of the 10 patients who remained in the study and have completed the 52-week observation period, eight have had a drug-free remission,” Dr. Horneff said.
 

 

 

MAS Event Observed in One Patient

In addition to the allergic skin reaction, which was considered probably related to the study drug, there were three flares, one of which was a macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) event. The MAS occurred 8 weeks after the last injection, but it was managed successfully.

Of 30 infections that developed during the observation period, 18 involved the upper airway. All were treated successfully. There were also two injection-site reactions and one case of cytopenia.

Among the studies planned for follow-up, investigators will examine genomic and gene activation in relation to disease activity and the effect of canakinumab.

Comoderator of the abstract session and chair of the EULAR 2024 Abstract Selection Committee, Christian Dejaco, MD, PhD, a consultant rheumatologist and associate professor at the Medical University of Graz in Graz, Austria, suggested that these are highly encouraging data for a disease that does not currently have any approved therapies. Clearly, larger studies with a longer follow-up period are needed, but he pointed out that phase 3 trials in a rare disease like sJIA are challenging.

Because of the limited number of cases, “it will be difficult to conduct a placebo-controlled trial,” he pointed out. However, he hopes this study will provide the basis for larger studies and sufficient data to lead to an indication for this therapy.

In the meantime, he also believes that these data are likely to support empirical use in a difficult disease, even in advance of formal regulatory approval.

“We heard that canakinumab is already being used off label in JIA, and these data might encourage more of that,” he said.

Dr. Horneff reported financial relationships with AbbVie, Boehringer Ingelheim, Celgene, Chugai, GlaxoSmithKline, Janssen, Merck Sharpe & Dohme, Novartis, Pfizer, Roche, Sanofi, and Sobe. Dr. Dejaco reported no potential conflicts of interest.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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— The interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1RA) canakinumab provided control of systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (sJIA) without the use of glucocorticoids for up to a year in most study participants after three monthly injections.

In this study of 20 patients with newly diagnosed sJIA treated off glucocorticoids, fever was controlled after a single injection in all patients, and 16 patients reached the primary outcome of remission after three injections, said Gerd Horneff, MD, PhD, Asklepios Children’s Hospital, Sankt Augustin, Germany.

Results of this open-label study, called CANAKINUMAB FIRST, were presented as late-breaking findings at the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology (EULAR) 2024 Annual Meeting.

“Steroid-free, first-line treatment with canakinumab led to sustained responses in most patients, with a considerable number achieving remission,” said Dr. Horneff, adding that the observation in this group is ongoing.
 

Building on Earlier Data

The efficacy of canakinumab was previously reported in anecdotal experiences and one small patient series published 10 years ago. Dr. Horneff noted that he has offered this drug off label to patients with challenging cases.

The objective was to evaluate canakinumab as a first-line monotherapy administered in the absence of glucocorticoids. The study was open to children aged 2-18 years with active sJIA/juvenile Still disease confirmed with published criteria. All were naive to biologic or nonbiologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs as well as steroids.

The median age of the children was 8.4 years. A total of 60% were men. The median disease duration at the time of entry was 1.2 months. Most had fever (95%) and rash (80%) with high levels of inflammatory markers at baseline. The mean number of painful joints was 3.1, and the mean number of systemic manifestations was 2.8. No patient was without any systemic involvement, but four of the patients did not have any painful joints.

At enrollment, patients were scheduled to receive three injections of canakinumab at monthly intervals during an active treatment phase, after which they entered an observation phase lasting 40 weeks. In the event of nonresponse or flares in either phase, they were transitioned to usual care.
 

Symptoms Resolve After Single Injection

After the first injection, active joint disease and all systemic manifestations resolved in 16 (80%) of the 20 patients. Joint activity and systemic manifestations also remained controlled after the second and third injections in 16 of the 20 patients.

One patient in this series achieved inactive disease after a single injection but developed what appeared to be a treatment-related allergic reaction. He received no further treatment and was excluded from the study, although he is being followed separately.

“According to sJADAS [systemic JIA Disease Activity Score] criteria at month 3, 14 had inactive disease, three had minimal disease activity, and one patient had moderate disease activity,” Dr. Horneff said.

At week 24, or 3 months after the last injection, there was still no joint activity in 16 patients. Systemic manifestations remained controlled in 13 patients, but 1 patient by this point had a flare. Another flare occurred after this point, and other patients have not yet completed the 52-week observation period.

“Of the 10 patients who remained in the study and have completed the 52-week observation period, eight have had a drug-free remission,” Dr. Horneff said.
 

 

 

MAS Event Observed in One Patient

In addition to the allergic skin reaction, which was considered probably related to the study drug, there were three flares, one of which was a macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) event. The MAS occurred 8 weeks after the last injection, but it was managed successfully.

Of 30 infections that developed during the observation period, 18 involved the upper airway. All were treated successfully. There were also two injection-site reactions and one case of cytopenia.

Among the studies planned for follow-up, investigators will examine genomic and gene activation in relation to disease activity and the effect of canakinumab.

Comoderator of the abstract session and chair of the EULAR 2024 Abstract Selection Committee, Christian Dejaco, MD, PhD, a consultant rheumatologist and associate professor at the Medical University of Graz in Graz, Austria, suggested that these are highly encouraging data for a disease that does not currently have any approved therapies. Clearly, larger studies with a longer follow-up period are needed, but he pointed out that phase 3 trials in a rare disease like sJIA are challenging.

Because of the limited number of cases, “it will be difficult to conduct a placebo-controlled trial,” he pointed out. However, he hopes this study will provide the basis for larger studies and sufficient data to lead to an indication for this therapy.

In the meantime, he also believes that these data are likely to support empirical use in a difficult disease, even in advance of formal regulatory approval.

“We heard that canakinumab is already being used off label in JIA, and these data might encourage more of that,” he said.

Dr. Horneff reported financial relationships with AbbVie, Boehringer Ingelheim, Celgene, Chugai, GlaxoSmithKline, Janssen, Merck Sharpe & Dohme, Novartis, Pfizer, Roche, Sanofi, and Sobe. Dr. Dejaco reported no potential conflicts of interest.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

— The interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1RA) canakinumab provided control of systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (sJIA) without the use of glucocorticoids for up to a year in most study participants after three monthly injections.

In this study of 20 patients with newly diagnosed sJIA treated off glucocorticoids, fever was controlled after a single injection in all patients, and 16 patients reached the primary outcome of remission after three injections, said Gerd Horneff, MD, PhD, Asklepios Children’s Hospital, Sankt Augustin, Germany.

Results of this open-label study, called CANAKINUMAB FIRST, were presented as late-breaking findings at the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology (EULAR) 2024 Annual Meeting.

“Steroid-free, first-line treatment with canakinumab led to sustained responses in most patients, with a considerable number achieving remission,” said Dr. Horneff, adding that the observation in this group is ongoing.
 

Building on Earlier Data

The efficacy of canakinumab was previously reported in anecdotal experiences and one small patient series published 10 years ago. Dr. Horneff noted that he has offered this drug off label to patients with challenging cases.

The objective was to evaluate canakinumab as a first-line monotherapy administered in the absence of glucocorticoids. The study was open to children aged 2-18 years with active sJIA/juvenile Still disease confirmed with published criteria. All were naive to biologic or nonbiologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs as well as steroids.

The median age of the children was 8.4 years. A total of 60% were men. The median disease duration at the time of entry was 1.2 months. Most had fever (95%) and rash (80%) with high levels of inflammatory markers at baseline. The mean number of painful joints was 3.1, and the mean number of systemic manifestations was 2.8. No patient was without any systemic involvement, but four of the patients did not have any painful joints.

At enrollment, patients were scheduled to receive three injections of canakinumab at monthly intervals during an active treatment phase, after which they entered an observation phase lasting 40 weeks. In the event of nonresponse or flares in either phase, they were transitioned to usual care.
 

Symptoms Resolve After Single Injection

After the first injection, active joint disease and all systemic manifestations resolved in 16 (80%) of the 20 patients. Joint activity and systemic manifestations also remained controlled after the second and third injections in 16 of the 20 patients.

One patient in this series achieved inactive disease after a single injection but developed what appeared to be a treatment-related allergic reaction. He received no further treatment and was excluded from the study, although he is being followed separately.

“According to sJADAS [systemic JIA Disease Activity Score] criteria at month 3, 14 had inactive disease, three had minimal disease activity, and one patient had moderate disease activity,” Dr. Horneff said.

At week 24, or 3 months after the last injection, there was still no joint activity in 16 patients. Systemic manifestations remained controlled in 13 patients, but 1 patient by this point had a flare. Another flare occurred after this point, and other patients have not yet completed the 52-week observation period.

“Of the 10 patients who remained in the study and have completed the 52-week observation period, eight have had a drug-free remission,” Dr. Horneff said.
 

 

 

MAS Event Observed in One Patient

In addition to the allergic skin reaction, which was considered probably related to the study drug, there were three flares, one of which was a macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) event. The MAS occurred 8 weeks after the last injection, but it was managed successfully.

Of 30 infections that developed during the observation period, 18 involved the upper airway. All were treated successfully. There were also two injection-site reactions and one case of cytopenia.

Among the studies planned for follow-up, investigators will examine genomic and gene activation in relation to disease activity and the effect of canakinumab.

Comoderator of the abstract session and chair of the EULAR 2024 Abstract Selection Committee, Christian Dejaco, MD, PhD, a consultant rheumatologist and associate professor at the Medical University of Graz in Graz, Austria, suggested that these are highly encouraging data for a disease that does not currently have any approved therapies. Clearly, larger studies with a longer follow-up period are needed, but he pointed out that phase 3 trials in a rare disease like sJIA are challenging.

Because of the limited number of cases, “it will be difficult to conduct a placebo-controlled trial,” he pointed out. However, he hopes this study will provide the basis for larger studies and sufficient data to lead to an indication for this therapy.

In the meantime, he also believes that these data are likely to support empirical use in a difficult disease, even in advance of formal regulatory approval.

“We heard that canakinumab is already being used off label in JIA, and these data might encourage more of that,” he said.

Dr. Horneff reported financial relationships with AbbVie, Boehringer Ingelheim, Celgene, Chugai, GlaxoSmithKline, Janssen, Merck Sharpe & Dohme, Novartis, Pfizer, Roche, Sanofi, and Sobe. Dr. Dejaco reported no potential conflicts of interest.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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