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CAR T-Cell Treatment Data Expands in Refractory Rheumatic Diseases, Demonstrating Consistent Efficacy
VIENNA — From a dozen or so studies and sessions devoted to the role of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells in rheumatic diseases at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology, the message was uniformly positive, supporting growing evidence that drugs in this class are heading toward a paradigm shift in refractory rheumatic diseases.
Of the reports, an update from a 15-patient case series with at least 1 year of follow-up provides “the first long-term evidence of safety and efficacy in multiple rheumatic diseases,” according to Georg Schett, MD, PhD, director of rheumatology and immunology, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, Germany.
The report of high rates of activity and low relative risk of serious adverse events from the same series was published earlier this year in The New England Journal of Medicine when the median follow-up was 15 months. Almost all of the patients have now completed at least 1 year of follow-up and about a third have completed more than 2 years.
SLE Is Frequently Targeted in CAR T-Cell Studies
The three rheumatic diseases represented in this series of patients, all of whom had failed multiple previous immune suppressive treatments, were systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), idiopathic inflammatory myositis (IIM), and systemic sclerosis (SSc). After the autologous T cells were harvested, they were expanded and transfected with the CD19 CAR. The proprietary investigational product, called MB-CART19.1 (Miltenyi Biotec), was administered in a single dose of one million cells per kg bodyweight.
The response rates have been, and continue to be, impressive. For the eight patients with SLE, all achieved the definition of remission in SLE criteria after one dose of treatment. Complete resolution of all major symptom types was achieved after 6 months of follow-up. So far, no patient has relapsed.
For the three patients with IIM, all reached the American College of Rheumatology–EULAR criteria for a major response. All creatine kinase levels had normalized by 3 months. In this group, there was one relapse, which occurred after 18 months of follow-up.
All four patients with SSc achieved a major response on the European Scleroderma Trials and Research (EUSTAR) group activity index. The median reduction from baseline in the EUSTAR score was 4.2 points, and this has been maintained in follow-up to date.
Remissions Have Persisted Off All Therapies
These remissions were achieved and maintained after a single dose of CAR T-cell therapy despite discontinuation of all immunosuppressive therapies. With the exception of the single relapse, all remissions have persisted through follow-up to date.
These responses were achieved with manageable side effects, according to Dr. Schett. The most serious adverse event was a grade 4 neutropenia that developed 4 months after receiving CAR T cells. It resolved with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor treatment. Cytokine release syndrome (CRS) has occurred in 10 patients, but it was grade 1 in eight patients and grade 2 in the others. There has been no neurotoxicity.
Almost all patients have experienced an infection during follow-up, but there has been no discernible pattern in relationship to the timing or types of infections. The most common have involved the upper respiratory tract and have been of mild severity, with cases disseminated similarly over early vs late follow-up. There was one case of pneumonia involving antibiotic treatment and a hospital stay, but it resolved.
Dr. Schett acknowledged that safety is a bigger concern in autoimmune diseases, which are often serious but rarely fatal, than in the hematologic malignancies for which CAR T cells were initially tested, but the low rates of serious adverse events in his and other early studies have supported the premise that the risks are not the same.
Asked specifically if CAR T cells can be considered a game changer in autoimmune rheumatic diseases, Dr. Schett was cautious. One reason is the CAR T cells are a complex therapy relative to biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs. He thinks, therefore, that much more data are needed to confirm safety and efficacy. In addition, they are expensive, so it is not yet clear how they will be integrated with other options.
Yet, he thinks the evidence so far suggests a profound effect on the fundamental drivers of autoimmune disease. Their specific mechanism of benefit is still being evaluated, but he considers the clinical responses consistent with a “reset” hypothesis.
After a response, “we are seeing drug-free remissions in some patients as long as they have been followed,” Dr. Schett said. Based on the fact that disease control is being observed off all other therapies, “this only makes sense to me if there is some sort of immunologic reset.”
CAR T-Cell Studies in Autoimmune Diseases Are Proliferating
At last count, there were about 40 studies being performed with CAR T cells in various autoimmune diseases, most of which were rheumatologic disorders, according to Dr. Schett. He noted that funding is coming from multinational drug companies, small biotech startups, and investigator-initiated studies at academic centers.
At EULAR, beyond case studies and anecdotal reports, all of the clinical studies were still at the level of phase 1 or 1/2. Consistent with the data presented by Dr. Schett, the drugs have been nearly uniformly effective, with major responses persisting in patients off other therapies. Adverse events have been manageable.
Examples include a phase 1/2 multinational study with the investigational CAR T-cell therapy YTB323 (Novartis), which demonstrated acceptable safety and a strong signal of benefit in six patients with SLE. In this report, CRS was also common, but no case of CRS was more severe than grade 2. There was no neurotoxicity. Infections did occur but were of relatively mild grades and resolved with treatment.
For efficacy in the ongoing follow-up, SLE symptoms as measured with the SLE Disease Activity Index began to abate at about 14 days after the single-infusion treatment. Improvement on the Physician Global Assessment was also observed between 14 and 28 days. C3 and C4 complement levels started to rise at about 28 days. While the responses have correlated with the observed changes in biomarkers of immune function, they have endured through a median follow-up that now exceeds 6 months.
Complete B-Cell Depletion Is Followed by Full Recovery
“Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic studies revealed peak expansion of CAR T cells approximately 13-21 days post infusion, which was accompanied by deep B-cell depletion followed by subsequent B-cell recovery,” reported Josefina Cortés-Hernández, MD, PhD, a senior lecturer at Vall d’Hebron Research Institute, Barcelona, Spain.
Dr. Schett had reported the same pattern of expansion followed by a rapid elimination of detectable CAR T cells despite the sustained clinical benefit.
Dr. Cortés-Hernández said that the signal of efficacy in the context of acceptable safety supports an expansion of clinical studies with this CAR T-cell product in SLE and perhaps other autoimmune disorders.
In another early-stage study, patients with SLE who had failed multiple prior lines of therapy have been enrolled in an ongoing study with a compound CAR (cCAR) T cell. This experimental proprietary product (iCAR Bio Therapeutics, Zhongshan, China) targets both the B-cell maturation antigen and CD19, according to Greg Deener, the chief executive officer of iCell Gene Therapeutics, New York City.
cCAR T-Cell Construct Targets Immune Reset
With this construct, the goal is to deplete long-lived plasma cells as well as B cells in order to achieve a more complete humoral reset. While preliminary data from the phase 1 trial were published earlier this year in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, Mr. Deener focused his presentation at EULAR 2024 on 12 patients with SLE and lupus nephritis, a severe form of SLE that threatens glomerular structures and can lead to end-stage liver disease.
B cells in the peripheral blood could not be detected within 10 days of the cCAR infusion, and the immunoglobulins IgM and IgA were undetectable by day 42.
However, after B-cell recovery by day 150, “flow cytometry and B-cell receptor sequencing confirmed full humoral reset was achieved,” Mr. Deener said.
The remission has been durable in 11 of the 12 patients after a mean follow-up of 458 days, Mr. Deener reported. He noted that an improvement in renal function has been observed in the majority of patients.
Like others, he reported that treatment has been relatively well tolerated. In this series of patients, there have been no cases of CRS more severe than grade 1.
Overall, the cCAR data in lupus nephritis support the hypothesis that CAR T cells are reprogramming the immune system, according to Mr. Deener.
Combined with a reasonable safety profile, the consistency of benefit from CAR T cells in autoimmune rheumatic diseases is good news, but all of the investigators who spoke at EULAR agreed that there are still many unanswered questions. Not least, it is unclear whether patients can be effectively and safely retreated when and if relapses occur. Even though Dr. Schett did report a response with retreatment following a relapse, he said that there is no conclusion to draw from a single patient.
Yet, the high rates of remissions in patients with disease refractory to other therapeutic options is highly encouraging, particularly with the manageable side effects now reported by multiple investigators using different CAR T-cell products.
“Roughly 100 patients with rheumatic diseases have been treated with CAR T-cells, and we have not seen a high-grade CRS or neurotoxicity,” he said.
Long-term efficacy is less clear. With the first clinical studies in autoimmune diseases initiated in 2021, few patients have been followed for more than 2 years. Even with the high rates of response that will certainly fuel efforts to rapidly bring these treatments forward, long-term data are now the missing piece.
Other Case Series Presented at EULAR
Several other abstracts reported on patients with SSc who were treated with CD19-targeting CAR T cells:
Three patients for whom autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation was contraindicated or unsuccessful were successfully and safely treated.
Six patients with diffuse and progressive disease achieved stable disease activity without additional immunosuppression for up to 1 year after treatment.
Dr. Schett reported no potential conflicts of interest, and the study he presented was not funded by industry. Dr. Cortés-Hernández reported a financial relationship with Novartis, which funded the study of the CAR T-cell therapy YTB323, as well as with GlaxoSmithKline, which was not involved in the study she presented. Mr. Deener is an employee of iCell Gene Therapeutics, which provided funding for the trial he presented.
August 7, 2024 — Editor's note: This article was updated with additional disclosure information for Dr. Josefina Cortés-Hernández.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
VIENNA — From a dozen or so studies and sessions devoted to the role of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells in rheumatic diseases at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology, the message was uniformly positive, supporting growing evidence that drugs in this class are heading toward a paradigm shift in refractory rheumatic diseases.
Of the reports, an update from a 15-patient case series with at least 1 year of follow-up provides “the first long-term evidence of safety and efficacy in multiple rheumatic diseases,” according to Georg Schett, MD, PhD, director of rheumatology and immunology, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, Germany.
The report of high rates of activity and low relative risk of serious adverse events from the same series was published earlier this year in The New England Journal of Medicine when the median follow-up was 15 months. Almost all of the patients have now completed at least 1 year of follow-up and about a third have completed more than 2 years.
SLE Is Frequently Targeted in CAR T-Cell Studies
The three rheumatic diseases represented in this series of patients, all of whom had failed multiple previous immune suppressive treatments, were systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), idiopathic inflammatory myositis (IIM), and systemic sclerosis (SSc). After the autologous T cells were harvested, they were expanded and transfected with the CD19 CAR. The proprietary investigational product, called MB-CART19.1 (Miltenyi Biotec), was administered in a single dose of one million cells per kg bodyweight.
The response rates have been, and continue to be, impressive. For the eight patients with SLE, all achieved the definition of remission in SLE criteria after one dose of treatment. Complete resolution of all major symptom types was achieved after 6 months of follow-up. So far, no patient has relapsed.
For the three patients with IIM, all reached the American College of Rheumatology–EULAR criteria for a major response. All creatine kinase levels had normalized by 3 months. In this group, there was one relapse, which occurred after 18 months of follow-up.
All four patients with SSc achieved a major response on the European Scleroderma Trials and Research (EUSTAR) group activity index. The median reduction from baseline in the EUSTAR score was 4.2 points, and this has been maintained in follow-up to date.
Remissions Have Persisted Off All Therapies
These remissions were achieved and maintained after a single dose of CAR T-cell therapy despite discontinuation of all immunosuppressive therapies. With the exception of the single relapse, all remissions have persisted through follow-up to date.
These responses were achieved with manageable side effects, according to Dr. Schett. The most serious adverse event was a grade 4 neutropenia that developed 4 months after receiving CAR T cells. It resolved with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor treatment. Cytokine release syndrome (CRS) has occurred in 10 patients, but it was grade 1 in eight patients and grade 2 in the others. There has been no neurotoxicity.
Almost all patients have experienced an infection during follow-up, but there has been no discernible pattern in relationship to the timing or types of infections. The most common have involved the upper respiratory tract and have been of mild severity, with cases disseminated similarly over early vs late follow-up. There was one case of pneumonia involving antibiotic treatment and a hospital stay, but it resolved.
Dr. Schett acknowledged that safety is a bigger concern in autoimmune diseases, which are often serious but rarely fatal, than in the hematologic malignancies for which CAR T cells were initially tested, but the low rates of serious adverse events in his and other early studies have supported the premise that the risks are not the same.
Asked specifically if CAR T cells can be considered a game changer in autoimmune rheumatic diseases, Dr. Schett was cautious. One reason is the CAR T cells are a complex therapy relative to biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs. He thinks, therefore, that much more data are needed to confirm safety and efficacy. In addition, they are expensive, so it is not yet clear how they will be integrated with other options.
Yet, he thinks the evidence so far suggests a profound effect on the fundamental drivers of autoimmune disease. Their specific mechanism of benefit is still being evaluated, but he considers the clinical responses consistent with a “reset” hypothesis.
After a response, “we are seeing drug-free remissions in some patients as long as they have been followed,” Dr. Schett said. Based on the fact that disease control is being observed off all other therapies, “this only makes sense to me if there is some sort of immunologic reset.”
CAR T-Cell Studies in Autoimmune Diseases Are Proliferating
At last count, there were about 40 studies being performed with CAR T cells in various autoimmune diseases, most of which were rheumatologic disorders, according to Dr. Schett. He noted that funding is coming from multinational drug companies, small biotech startups, and investigator-initiated studies at academic centers.
At EULAR, beyond case studies and anecdotal reports, all of the clinical studies were still at the level of phase 1 or 1/2. Consistent with the data presented by Dr. Schett, the drugs have been nearly uniformly effective, with major responses persisting in patients off other therapies. Adverse events have been manageable.
Examples include a phase 1/2 multinational study with the investigational CAR T-cell therapy YTB323 (Novartis), which demonstrated acceptable safety and a strong signal of benefit in six patients with SLE. In this report, CRS was also common, but no case of CRS was more severe than grade 2. There was no neurotoxicity. Infections did occur but were of relatively mild grades and resolved with treatment.
For efficacy in the ongoing follow-up, SLE symptoms as measured with the SLE Disease Activity Index began to abate at about 14 days after the single-infusion treatment. Improvement on the Physician Global Assessment was also observed between 14 and 28 days. C3 and C4 complement levels started to rise at about 28 days. While the responses have correlated with the observed changes in biomarkers of immune function, they have endured through a median follow-up that now exceeds 6 months.
Complete B-Cell Depletion Is Followed by Full Recovery
“Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic studies revealed peak expansion of CAR T cells approximately 13-21 days post infusion, which was accompanied by deep B-cell depletion followed by subsequent B-cell recovery,” reported Josefina Cortés-Hernández, MD, PhD, a senior lecturer at Vall d’Hebron Research Institute, Barcelona, Spain.
Dr. Schett had reported the same pattern of expansion followed by a rapid elimination of detectable CAR T cells despite the sustained clinical benefit.
Dr. Cortés-Hernández said that the signal of efficacy in the context of acceptable safety supports an expansion of clinical studies with this CAR T-cell product in SLE and perhaps other autoimmune disorders.
In another early-stage study, patients with SLE who had failed multiple prior lines of therapy have been enrolled in an ongoing study with a compound CAR (cCAR) T cell. This experimental proprietary product (iCAR Bio Therapeutics, Zhongshan, China) targets both the B-cell maturation antigen and CD19, according to Greg Deener, the chief executive officer of iCell Gene Therapeutics, New York City.
cCAR T-Cell Construct Targets Immune Reset
With this construct, the goal is to deplete long-lived plasma cells as well as B cells in order to achieve a more complete humoral reset. While preliminary data from the phase 1 trial were published earlier this year in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, Mr. Deener focused his presentation at EULAR 2024 on 12 patients with SLE and lupus nephritis, a severe form of SLE that threatens glomerular structures and can lead to end-stage liver disease.
B cells in the peripheral blood could not be detected within 10 days of the cCAR infusion, and the immunoglobulins IgM and IgA were undetectable by day 42.
However, after B-cell recovery by day 150, “flow cytometry and B-cell receptor sequencing confirmed full humoral reset was achieved,” Mr. Deener said.
The remission has been durable in 11 of the 12 patients after a mean follow-up of 458 days, Mr. Deener reported. He noted that an improvement in renal function has been observed in the majority of patients.
Like others, he reported that treatment has been relatively well tolerated. In this series of patients, there have been no cases of CRS more severe than grade 1.
Overall, the cCAR data in lupus nephritis support the hypothesis that CAR T cells are reprogramming the immune system, according to Mr. Deener.
Combined with a reasonable safety profile, the consistency of benefit from CAR T cells in autoimmune rheumatic diseases is good news, but all of the investigators who spoke at EULAR agreed that there are still many unanswered questions. Not least, it is unclear whether patients can be effectively and safely retreated when and if relapses occur. Even though Dr. Schett did report a response with retreatment following a relapse, he said that there is no conclusion to draw from a single patient.
Yet, the high rates of remissions in patients with disease refractory to other therapeutic options is highly encouraging, particularly with the manageable side effects now reported by multiple investigators using different CAR T-cell products.
“Roughly 100 patients with rheumatic diseases have been treated with CAR T-cells, and we have not seen a high-grade CRS or neurotoxicity,” he said.
Long-term efficacy is less clear. With the first clinical studies in autoimmune diseases initiated in 2021, few patients have been followed for more than 2 years. Even with the high rates of response that will certainly fuel efforts to rapidly bring these treatments forward, long-term data are now the missing piece.
Other Case Series Presented at EULAR
Several other abstracts reported on patients with SSc who were treated with CD19-targeting CAR T cells:
Three patients for whom autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation was contraindicated or unsuccessful were successfully and safely treated.
Six patients with diffuse and progressive disease achieved stable disease activity without additional immunosuppression for up to 1 year after treatment.
Dr. Schett reported no potential conflicts of interest, and the study he presented was not funded by industry. Dr. Cortés-Hernández reported a financial relationship with Novartis, which funded the study of the CAR T-cell therapy YTB323, as well as with GlaxoSmithKline, which was not involved in the study she presented. Mr. Deener is an employee of iCell Gene Therapeutics, which provided funding for the trial he presented.
August 7, 2024 — Editor's note: This article was updated with additional disclosure information for Dr. Josefina Cortés-Hernández.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
VIENNA — From a dozen or so studies and sessions devoted to the role of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells in rheumatic diseases at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology, the message was uniformly positive, supporting growing evidence that drugs in this class are heading toward a paradigm shift in refractory rheumatic diseases.
Of the reports, an update from a 15-patient case series with at least 1 year of follow-up provides “the first long-term evidence of safety and efficacy in multiple rheumatic diseases,” according to Georg Schett, MD, PhD, director of rheumatology and immunology, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, Germany.
The report of high rates of activity and low relative risk of serious adverse events from the same series was published earlier this year in The New England Journal of Medicine when the median follow-up was 15 months. Almost all of the patients have now completed at least 1 year of follow-up and about a third have completed more than 2 years.
SLE Is Frequently Targeted in CAR T-Cell Studies
The three rheumatic diseases represented in this series of patients, all of whom had failed multiple previous immune suppressive treatments, were systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), idiopathic inflammatory myositis (IIM), and systemic sclerosis (SSc). After the autologous T cells were harvested, they were expanded and transfected with the CD19 CAR. The proprietary investigational product, called MB-CART19.1 (Miltenyi Biotec), was administered in a single dose of one million cells per kg bodyweight.
The response rates have been, and continue to be, impressive. For the eight patients with SLE, all achieved the definition of remission in SLE criteria after one dose of treatment. Complete resolution of all major symptom types was achieved after 6 months of follow-up. So far, no patient has relapsed.
For the three patients with IIM, all reached the American College of Rheumatology–EULAR criteria for a major response. All creatine kinase levels had normalized by 3 months. In this group, there was one relapse, which occurred after 18 months of follow-up.
All four patients with SSc achieved a major response on the European Scleroderma Trials and Research (EUSTAR) group activity index. The median reduction from baseline in the EUSTAR score was 4.2 points, and this has been maintained in follow-up to date.
Remissions Have Persisted Off All Therapies
These remissions were achieved and maintained after a single dose of CAR T-cell therapy despite discontinuation of all immunosuppressive therapies. With the exception of the single relapse, all remissions have persisted through follow-up to date.
These responses were achieved with manageable side effects, according to Dr. Schett. The most serious adverse event was a grade 4 neutropenia that developed 4 months after receiving CAR T cells. It resolved with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor treatment. Cytokine release syndrome (CRS) has occurred in 10 patients, but it was grade 1 in eight patients and grade 2 in the others. There has been no neurotoxicity.
Almost all patients have experienced an infection during follow-up, but there has been no discernible pattern in relationship to the timing or types of infections. The most common have involved the upper respiratory tract and have been of mild severity, with cases disseminated similarly over early vs late follow-up. There was one case of pneumonia involving antibiotic treatment and a hospital stay, but it resolved.
Dr. Schett acknowledged that safety is a bigger concern in autoimmune diseases, which are often serious but rarely fatal, than in the hematologic malignancies for which CAR T cells were initially tested, but the low rates of serious adverse events in his and other early studies have supported the premise that the risks are not the same.
Asked specifically if CAR T cells can be considered a game changer in autoimmune rheumatic diseases, Dr. Schett was cautious. One reason is the CAR T cells are a complex therapy relative to biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs. He thinks, therefore, that much more data are needed to confirm safety and efficacy. In addition, they are expensive, so it is not yet clear how they will be integrated with other options.
Yet, he thinks the evidence so far suggests a profound effect on the fundamental drivers of autoimmune disease. Their specific mechanism of benefit is still being evaluated, but he considers the clinical responses consistent with a “reset” hypothesis.
After a response, “we are seeing drug-free remissions in some patients as long as they have been followed,” Dr. Schett said. Based on the fact that disease control is being observed off all other therapies, “this only makes sense to me if there is some sort of immunologic reset.”
CAR T-Cell Studies in Autoimmune Diseases Are Proliferating
At last count, there were about 40 studies being performed with CAR T cells in various autoimmune diseases, most of which were rheumatologic disorders, according to Dr. Schett. He noted that funding is coming from multinational drug companies, small biotech startups, and investigator-initiated studies at academic centers.
At EULAR, beyond case studies and anecdotal reports, all of the clinical studies were still at the level of phase 1 or 1/2. Consistent with the data presented by Dr. Schett, the drugs have been nearly uniformly effective, with major responses persisting in patients off other therapies. Adverse events have been manageable.
Examples include a phase 1/2 multinational study with the investigational CAR T-cell therapy YTB323 (Novartis), which demonstrated acceptable safety and a strong signal of benefit in six patients with SLE. In this report, CRS was also common, but no case of CRS was more severe than grade 2. There was no neurotoxicity. Infections did occur but were of relatively mild grades and resolved with treatment.
For efficacy in the ongoing follow-up, SLE symptoms as measured with the SLE Disease Activity Index began to abate at about 14 days after the single-infusion treatment. Improvement on the Physician Global Assessment was also observed between 14 and 28 days. C3 and C4 complement levels started to rise at about 28 days. While the responses have correlated with the observed changes in biomarkers of immune function, they have endured through a median follow-up that now exceeds 6 months.
Complete B-Cell Depletion Is Followed by Full Recovery
“Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic studies revealed peak expansion of CAR T cells approximately 13-21 days post infusion, which was accompanied by deep B-cell depletion followed by subsequent B-cell recovery,” reported Josefina Cortés-Hernández, MD, PhD, a senior lecturer at Vall d’Hebron Research Institute, Barcelona, Spain.
Dr. Schett had reported the same pattern of expansion followed by a rapid elimination of detectable CAR T cells despite the sustained clinical benefit.
Dr. Cortés-Hernández said that the signal of efficacy in the context of acceptable safety supports an expansion of clinical studies with this CAR T-cell product in SLE and perhaps other autoimmune disorders.
In another early-stage study, patients with SLE who had failed multiple prior lines of therapy have been enrolled in an ongoing study with a compound CAR (cCAR) T cell. This experimental proprietary product (iCAR Bio Therapeutics, Zhongshan, China) targets both the B-cell maturation antigen and CD19, according to Greg Deener, the chief executive officer of iCell Gene Therapeutics, New York City.
cCAR T-Cell Construct Targets Immune Reset
With this construct, the goal is to deplete long-lived plasma cells as well as B cells in order to achieve a more complete humoral reset. While preliminary data from the phase 1 trial were published earlier this year in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, Mr. Deener focused his presentation at EULAR 2024 on 12 patients with SLE and lupus nephritis, a severe form of SLE that threatens glomerular structures and can lead to end-stage liver disease.
B cells in the peripheral blood could not be detected within 10 days of the cCAR infusion, and the immunoglobulins IgM and IgA were undetectable by day 42.
However, after B-cell recovery by day 150, “flow cytometry and B-cell receptor sequencing confirmed full humoral reset was achieved,” Mr. Deener said.
The remission has been durable in 11 of the 12 patients after a mean follow-up of 458 days, Mr. Deener reported. He noted that an improvement in renal function has been observed in the majority of patients.
Like others, he reported that treatment has been relatively well tolerated. In this series of patients, there have been no cases of CRS more severe than grade 1.
Overall, the cCAR data in lupus nephritis support the hypothesis that CAR T cells are reprogramming the immune system, according to Mr. Deener.
Combined with a reasonable safety profile, the consistency of benefit from CAR T cells in autoimmune rheumatic diseases is good news, but all of the investigators who spoke at EULAR agreed that there are still many unanswered questions. Not least, it is unclear whether patients can be effectively and safely retreated when and if relapses occur. Even though Dr. Schett did report a response with retreatment following a relapse, he said that there is no conclusion to draw from a single patient.
Yet, the high rates of remissions in patients with disease refractory to other therapeutic options is highly encouraging, particularly with the manageable side effects now reported by multiple investigators using different CAR T-cell products.
“Roughly 100 patients with rheumatic diseases have been treated with CAR T-cells, and we have not seen a high-grade CRS or neurotoxicity,” he said.
Long-term efficacy is less clear. With the first clinical studies in autoimmune diseases initiated in 2021, few patients have been followed for more than 2 years. Even with the high rates of response that will certainly fuel efforts to rapidly bring these treatments forward, long-term data are now the missing piece.
Other Case Series Presented at EULAR
Several other abstracts reported on patients with SSc who were treated with CD19-targeting CAR T cells:
Three patients for whom autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation was contraindicated or unsuccessful were successfully and safely treated.
Six patients with diffuse and progressive disease achieved stable disease activity without additional immunosuppression for up to 1 year after treatment.
Dr. Schett reported no potential conflicts of interest, and the study he presented was not funded by industry. Dr. Cortés-Hernández reported a financial relationship with Novartis, which funded the study of the CAR T-cell therapy YTB323, as well as with GlaxoSmithKline, which was not involved in the study she presented. Mr. Deener is an employee of iCell Gene Therapeutics, which provided funding for the trial he presented.
August 7, 2024 — Editor's note: This article was updated with additional disclosure information for Dr. Josefina Cortés-Hernández.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM EULAR 2024
Adjuvant Avelumab Benefits Seen in High Risk, Triple Negative BC
“The 30% reduction in the risk of distant metastasis, and 34% reduction in the risk of death suggests that avelumab may have a role in early triple negative breast cancer patients at high risk of relapse after primary surgery or with invasive residual disease after neoadjuvant chemotherapy,” Pierfranco Conte, MD, from the department of surgery, oncology, and gastroenterology at the University of Padua, Italy, reported at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
A-BRAVE is the first randomized phase 3 trial patients with TNBC, treated with adjuvant avelumab, explained Dr. Conte. “Neoadjuvant chemotherapy is recommended for stage cT1c or larger, or cN+ disease. However, in case of invasive residual disease at surgery, prognosis is still very poor.”
TNBC is more immunogenic compared with other breast cancer subtypes, suggesting a role for immune checkpoint inhibitors such as avelumab in this setting, he said.
A-BRAVE Methods and Results
The trial enrolled 477 patients, median age 51 years, between June 2016 and October 2020, after their disease had progressed following initial treatment. There were two strata of patients: those who had received upfront surgery and then adjuvant chemotherapy before disease progression (stratum A, 18%); and those who received neoadjuvant chemotherapy, surgery, and then adjuvant chemo, but still had residual disease (stratum B, 82%).
Patients were randomized to either observation (n = 239) or treatment with avelumab (n = 238), at a dose of 10 mg/kg every 2 weeks for one year.
At a median follow-up of 52.1 months, avelumab did not show an advantage for the primary endpoint of 3-year disease-free survival (DFS), with 68.3% of treated patients meeting this endpoint, compared to 63.2% of observed patients (hazard ratio [HR 0.81, P = .172].
However, the treatment did show statistically significant benefits for the secondary 3-year OS endpoint (84.8% vs 76.3%, HR 0.66, P = .035).
“Trying to understand why we did observe a greater benefit with avelumab in overall survival compared to disease-free survival, we also made a post-hoc exploratory analysis on distant disease-free survival,” explained Dr. Conte.
There was a statistically significant 3-year distant disease-free survival (DDFS) benefit for treated patients compared with controls (75.4% vs 67.9%, HR 0.7, P = .0277), translating to a 30% reduction in the risk of distant metastasis, he noted.
Findings Are ‘Hypothesis-Generating’
The results are “hypothesis-generating at this point,” Alexandra Thomas, MD, a breast medical oncologist who was not involved in the research, said in an interview. “These results suggest that the story on how to best utilize checkpoint blockade as adjuvant therapy in triple negative breast cancer may not yet be fully written.”
She emphasized the study did not meet its primary endpoint, “though the results for secondary endpoints OS and the exploratory endpoint DDFS are intriguing.
“A-BRAVE is a smaller study, especially relative to Impassion030 (ALEXANDRA), which enrolled over 2,000 patients,” she explained. “It is notable that avelumab has slightly different properties than atezolizumab, which was used in Impassion030.”
“Avelumab is also a weak PD-L2 inhibitor. Could this be important? Notably, today most patients with clinical stage II-III triple negative breast cancer will receive pembrolizumab as per KEYNOTE-522, so the potential for clinical impact is greatly reduced,” added Dr. Thomas, professor and assistant director in the department of internal medicine at Duke Cancer Institute, in Durham, North Carolina.
SWOG1814, which has not been reported yet, “also looks at pembrolizumab in patients with residual disease post neoadjuvant chemotherapy and will provide further important information on in this space,” she said.
Merck KGaA funded the study.
Dr. Conte disclosed consulting or advisory roles with Daiichi Sankyo/Lilly, Gilead Sciences, Reveal Genomics; a HER2Dx patient; and providing expert testimony for AstraZeneca.
Dr. Thomas disclosed research grants from Sanofi and Merck.
“The 30% reduction in the risk of distant metastasis, and 34% reduction in the risk of death suggests that avelumab may have a role in early triple negative breast cancer patients at high risk of relapse after primary surgery or with invasive residual disease after neoadjuvant chemotherapy,” Pierfranco Conte, MD, from the department of surgery, oncology, and gastroenterology at the University of Padua, Italy, reported at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
A-BRAVE is the first randomized phase 3 trial patients with TNBC, treated with adjuvant avelumab, explained Dr. Conte. “Neoadjuvant chemotherapy is recommended for stage cT1c or larger, or cN+ disease. However, in case of invasive residual disease at surgery, prognosis is still very poor.”
TNBC is more immunogenic compared with other breast cancer subtypes, suggesting a role for immune checkpoint inhibitors such as avelumab in this setting, he said.
A-BRAVE Methods and Results
The trial enrolled 477 patients, median age 51 years, between June 2016 and October 2020, after their disease had progressed following initial treatment. There were two strata of patients: those who had received upfront surgery and then adjuvant chemotherapy before disease progression (stratum A, 18%); and those who received neoadjuvant chemotherapy, surgery, and then adjuvant chemo, but still had residual disease (stratum B, 82%).
Patients were randomized to either observation (n = 239) or treatment with avelumab (n = 238), at a dose of 10 mg/kg every 2 weeks for one year.
At a median follow-up of 52.1 months, avelumab did not show an advantage for the primary endpoint of 3-year disease-free survival (DFS), with 68.3% of treated patients meeting this endpoint, compared to 63.2% of observed patients (hazard ratio [HR 0.81, P = .172].
However, the treatment did show statistically significant benefits for the secondary 3-year OS endpoint (84.8% vs 76.3%, HR 0.66, P = .035).
“Trying to understand why we did observe a greater benefit with avelumab in overall survival compared to disease-free survival, we also made a post-hoc exploratory analysis on distant disease-free survival,” explained Dr. Conte.
There was a statistically significant 3-year distant disease-free survival (DDFS) benefit for treated patients compared with controls (75.4% vs 67.9%, HR 0.7, P = .0277), translating to a 30% reduction in the risk of distant metastasis, he noted.
Findings Are ‘Hypothesis-Generating’
The results are “hypothesis-generating at this point,” Alexandra Thomas, MD, a breast medical oncologist who was not involved in the research, said in an interview. “These results suggest that the story on how to best utilize checkpoint blockade as adjuvant therapy in triple negative breast cancer may not yet be fully written.”
She emphasized the study did not meet its primary endpoint, “though the results for secondary endpoints OS and the exploratory endpoint DDFS are intriguing.
“A-BRAVE is a smaller study, especially relative to Impassion030 (ALEXANDRA), which enrolled over 2,000 patients,” she explained. “It is notable that avelumab has slightly different properties than atezolizumab, which was used in Impassion030.”
“Avelumab is also a weak PD-L2 inhibitor. Could this be important? Notably, today most patients with clinical stage II-III triple negative breast cancer will receive pembrolizumab as per KEYNOTE-522, so the potential for clinical impact is greatly reduced,” added Dr. Thomas, professor and assistant director in the department of internal medicine at Duke Cancer Institute, in Durham, North Carolina.
SWOG1814, which has not been reported yet, “also looks at pembrolizumab in patients with residual disease post neoadjuvant chemotherapy and will provide further important information on in this space,” she said.
Merck KGaA funded the study.
Dr. Conte disclosed consulting or advisory roles with Daiichi Sankyo/Lilly, Gilead Sciences, Reveal Genomics; a HER2Dx patient; and providing expert testimony for AstraZeneca.
Dr. Thomas disclosed research grants from Sanofi and Merck.
“The 30% reduction in the risk of distant metastasis, and 34% reduction in the risk of death suggests that avelumab may have a role in early triple negative breast cancer patients at high risk of relapse after primary surgery or with invasive residual disease after neoadjuvant chemotherapy,” Pierfranco Conte, MD, from the department of surgery, oncology, and gastroenterology at the University of Padua, Italy, reported at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
A-BRAVE is the first randomized phase 3 trial patients with TNBC, treated with adjuvant avelumab, explained Dr. Conte. “Neoadjuvant chemotherapy is recommended for stage cT1c or larger, or cN+ disease. However, in case of invasive residual disease at surgery, prognosis is still very poor.”
TNBC is more immunogenic compared with other breast cancer subtypes, suggesting a role for immune checkpoint inhibitors such as avelumab in this setting, he said.
A-BRAVE Methods and Results
The trial enrolled 477 patients, median age 51 years, between June 2016 and October 2020, after their disease had progressed following initial treatment. There were two strata of patients: those who had received upfront surgery and then adjuvant chemotherapy before disease progression (stratum A, 18%); and those who received neoadjuvant chemotherapy, surgery, and then adjuvant chemo, but still had residual disease (stratum B, 82%).
Patients were randomized to either observation (n = 239) or treatment with avelumab (n = 238), at a dose of 10 mg/kg every 2 weeks for one year.
At a median follow-up of 52.1 months, avelumab did not show an advantage for the primary endpoint of 3-year disease-free survival (DFS), with 68.3% of treated patients meeting this endpoint, compared to 63.2% of observed patients (hazard ratio [HR 0.81, P = .172].
However, the treatment did show statistically significant benefits for the secondary 3-year OS endpoint (84.8% vs 76.3%, HR 0.66, P = .035).
“Trying to understand why we did observe a greater benefit with avelumab in overall survival compared to disease-free survival, we also made a post-hoc exploratory analysis on distant disease-free survival,” explained Dr. Conte.
There was a statistically significant 3-year distant disease-free survival (DDFS) benefit for treated patients compared with controls (75.4% vs 67.9%, HR 0.7, P = .0277), translating to a 30% reduction in the risk of distant metastasis, he noted.
Findings Are ‘Hypothesis-Generating’
The results are “hypothesis-generating at this point,” Alexandra Thomas, MD, a breast medical oncologist who was not involved in the research, said in an interview. “These results suggest that the story on how to best utilize checkpoint blockade as adjuvant therapy in triple negative breast cancer may not yet be fully written.”
She emphasized the study did not meet its primary endpoint, “though the results for secondary endpoints OS and the exploratory endpoint DDFS are intriguing.
“A-BRAVE is a smaller study, especially relative to Impassion030 (ALEXANDRA), which enrolled over 2,000 patients,” she explained. “It is notable that avelumab has slightly different properties than atezolizumab, which was used in Impassion030.”
“Avelumab is also a weak PD-L2 inhibitor. Could this be important? Notably, today most patients with clinical stage II-III triple negative breast cancer will receive pembrolizumab as per KEYNOTE-522, so the potential for clinical impact is greatly reduced,” added Dr. Thomas, professor and assistant director in the department of internal medicine at Duke Cancer Institute, in Durham, North Carolina.
SWOG1814, which has not been reported yet, “also looks at pembrolizumab in patients with residual disease post neoadjuvant chemotherapy and will provide further important information on in this space,” she said.
Merck KGaA funded the study.
Dr. Conte disclosed consulting or advisory roles with Daiichi Sankyo/Lilly, Gilead Sciences, Reveal Genomics; a HER2Dx patient; and providing expert testimony for AstraZeneca.
Dr. Thomas disclosed research grants from Sanofi and Merck.
FROM ASCO 2024
Clinical Controversy: Standard Dose or Baby TAM for Breast Cancer Prevention?
Should 5 mg of tamoxifen — known as “baby TAM” — or the usual 20 mg dose be standard of care for breast cancer prevention in high-risk women?
Research to date clearly shows that tamoxifen can reduce the risk for breast cancer in high-risk individuals by 30%-50%. Recent evidence also indicates that this chemoprevention approach can reduce the risk of dying from breast cancer by as much as 57%.
In 2019, the US Preventive Services Task Force issued updated recommendations that clinicians offer risk-reducing medications, such as tamoxifen, raloxifene, or aromatase inhibitors, to women at an increased risk for breast cancer and a low risk for adverse medication effects.
However, this prophylactic strategy remains underused.
A major roadblock: The drugs’ side effects, which include venous thromboembolic events and endometrial cancer as well as symptoms of menopause, such as hot flashes and sexual issues, have made uptake and adherence a challenge.
Offering women a lower dose of tamoxifen could allay fears about toxicities and improve uptake as well as reduce side effects and boost long-term adherence among those receiving baby TAM.
However,
The Debate
Years ago, Andrea De Censi, MD, a breast cancer researcher at the Galliera Hospital in Genova, Italy, and his colleagues reasoned that, because tamoxifen is a competitive estrogen receptor inhibitor, it may indeed have a minimal effective dose below 20 mg/d.
The fruits of that line of thought were presented to the world in the TAM-01 trial, first published in 2019, which pitted tamoxifen 5 mg/d for 3 years against placebo in 500 women with high-risk lesions, including lobular and ductal carcinoma in situ.
Dr. De Censi and colleagues found that baby TAM reduced the risk for invasive breast cancer by 52% and the risk for contralateral breast cancer by 75%.
Treatment adherence was slightly higher in the baby TAM group at 65% vs 61% in the placebo group.
A recent 10-year follow-up showed ongoing benefits associated with baby TAM vs placebo — a 42% reduction in breast cancer and a 64% drop in contralateral lesions.
The baby TAM group vs placebo experienced a slight increase in hot flashes but no significant increase in other common side effects.
Regarding serious adverse events, the baby TAM arm had one case of stage 1 endometrial cancer (0.4% of patients) and 20 cases of endometrial polyps (5%) vs 13 cases of endometrial polyps in the placebo arm. But there were no significant differences in thrombosis, cataracts, bone fractures, and other serious events.
Dr. De Censi said he’s surprised the baby TAM vs tamoxifen topic is still being debated. “Baby TAM, in my opinion, is a new standard of care for endocrine prevention of breast cancer in high-risk [women],” and baby TAM over 3 years is enough, said Dr. De Censi during a debate on the topic at the 2024 European Society for Medical Oncology Breast Cancer Congress in Berlin.
Gareth Evans, MD, a cancer genetics and prevention specialist at the University of Manchester, Manchester, England, however, isn’t convinced.
During the debate, Dr. Evans explained that his main concern was that the baby TAM trial was limited to women with high-risk lesions, not other common reasons for tamoxifen prophylaxis, such as a positive family history or BRCA mutations.
“In Manchester, we have put over a thousand women on tamoxifen who have a family history or other risk factors, not high-risk lesions,” and there simply isn’t definitive evidence for baby TAM in these women, Dr. Evans said.
The vast weight of evidence for tamoxifen prophylaxis, he added, is in trials involving tens of thousands of women, followed in some cases for 20 years, who received the 20 mg dose for 5 years.
As a result, women in Manchester are started on 20 mg and dropped down to 5 mg only for side effects. That way, Evans explained, we are not taking away the benefit among women who can tolerate 20 mg.
Meanwhile, there’s no evidence that baby TAM improves medication adherence, he noted. Trials have reported similar adherence rates to baby TAM and standard dose tamoxifen as well as no definitive evidence that the risk for cancer and thrombosis is less with baby TAM, he said.
In fact, Dr. Evans noted, “many women take tamoxifen 20 mg for 5 years with no side effects.”
Overall, “I don’t think we’ve got the evidence yet to drop” dosages, particularly in women without high-risk lesions, Dr. Evans said. A real concern, he added, is poor metabolizers for whom 5 mg won’t be enough to have a preventive effect.
Dr. De Censi noted, however, that there will likely never be a definitive answer to the question of baby TAM vs standard dosing because industry has no financial incentive to do a head-to-head trial; tamoxifen went off patent over 30 years ago.
Still, a poll of the audience favored Evans’ approach — 80% said they would start high-risk women on 20 mg for breast cancer prophylaxis and reduce for side effects as needed.
Dr. De Censi didn’t have any disclosures. Dr. Evans is a consultant/advisor for AstraZeneca, SpringWorks, Recursion, Everything Genetic, and Syantra.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Should 5 mg of tamoxifen — known as “baby TAM” — or the usual 20 mg dose be standard of care for breast cancer prevention in high-risk women?
Research to date clearly shows that tamoxifen can reduce the risk for breast cancer in high-risk individuals by 30%-50%. Recent evidence also indicates that this chemoprevention approach can reduce the risk of dying from breast cancer by as much as 57%.
In 2019, the US Preventive Services Task Force issued updated recommendations that clinicians offer risk-reducing medications, such as tamoxifen, raloxifene, or aromatase inhibitors, to women at an increased risk for breast cancer and a low risk for adverse medication effects.
However, this prophylactic strategy remains underused.
A major roadblock: The drugs’ side effects, which include venous thromboembolic events and endometrial cancer as well as symptoms of menopause, such as hot flashes and sexual issues, have made uptake and adherence a challenge.
Offering women a lower dose of tamoxifen could allay fears about toxicities and improve uptake as well as reduce side effects and boost long-term adherence among those receiving baby TAM.
However,
The Debate
Years ago, Andrea De Censi, MD, a breast cancer researcher at the Galliera Hospital in Genova, Italy, and his colleagues reasoned that, because tamoxifen is a competitive estrogen receptor inhibitor, it may indeed have a minimal effective dose below 20 mg/d.
The fruits of that line of thought were presented to the world in the TAM-01 trial, first published in 2019, which pitted tamoxifen 5 mg/d for 3 years against placebo in 500 women with high-risk lesions, including lobular and ductal carcinoma in situ.
Dr. De Censi and colleagues found that baby TAM reduced the risk for invasive breast cancer by 52% and the risk for contralateral breast cancer by 75%.
Treatment adherence was slightly higher in the baby TAM group at 65% vs 61% in the placebo group.
A recent 10-year follow-up showed ongoing benefits associated with baby TAM vs placebo — a 42% reduction in breast cancer and a 64% drop in contralateral lesions.
The baby TAM group vs placebo experienced a slight increase in hot flashes but no significant increase in other common side effects.
Regarding serious adverse events, the baby TAM arm had one case of stage 1 endometrial cancer (0.4% of patients) and 20 cases of endometrial polyps (5%) vs 13 cases of endometrial polyps in the placebo arm. But there were no significant differences in thrombosis, cataracts, bone fractures, and other serious events.
Dr. De Censi said he’s surprised the baby TAM vs tamoxifen topic is still being debated. “Baby TAM, in my opinion, is a new standard of care for endocrine prevention of breast cancer in high-risk [women],” and baby TAM over 3 years is enough, said Dr. De Censi during a debate on the topic at the 2024 European Society for Medical Oncology Breast Cancer Congress in Berlin.
Gareth Evans, MD, a cancer genetics and prevention specialist at the University of Manchester, Manchester, England, however, isn’t convinced.
During the debate, Dr. Evans explained that his main concern was that the baby TAM trial was limited to women with high-risk lesions, not other common reasons for tamoxifen prophylaxis, such as a positive family history or BRCA mutations.
“In Manchester, we have put over a thousand women on tamoxifen who have a family history or other risk factors, not high-risk lesions,” and there simply isn’t definitive evidence for baby TAM in these women, Dr. Evans said.
The vast weight of evidence for tamoxifen prophylaxis, he added, is in trials involving tens of thousands of women, followed in some cases for 20 years, who received the 20 mg dose for 5 years.
As a result, women in Manchester are started on 20 mg and dropped down to 5 mg only for side effects. That way, Evans explained, we are not taking away the benefit among women who can tolerate 20 mg.
Meanwhile, there’s no evidence that baby TAM improves medication adherence, he noted. Trials have reported similar adherence rates to baby TAM and standard dose tamoxifen as well as no definitive evidence that the risk for cancer and thrombosis is less with baby TAM, he said.
In fact, Dr. Evans noted, “many women take tamoxifen 20 mg for 5 years with no side effects.”
Overall, “I don’t think we’ve got the evidence yet to drop” dosages, particularly in women without high-risk lesions, Dr. Evans said. A real concern, he added, is poor metabolizers for whom 5 mg won’t be enough to have a preventive effect.
Dr. De Censi noted, however, that there will likely never be a definitive answer to the question of baby TAM vs standard dosing because industry has no financial incentive to do a head-to-head trial; tamoxifen went off patent over 30 years ago.
Still, a poll of the audience favored Evans’ approach — 80% said they would start high-risk women on 20 mg for breast cancer prophylaxis and reduce for side effects as needed.
Dr. De Censi didn’t have any disclosures. Dr. Evans is a consultant/advisor for AstraZeneca, SpringWorks, Recursion, Everything Genetic, and Syantra.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Should 5 mg of tamoxifen — known as “baby TAM” — or the usual 20 mg dose be standard of care for breast cancer prevention in high-risk women?
Research to date clearly shows that tamoxifen can reduce the risk for breast cancer in high-risk individuals by 30%-50%. Recent evidence also indicates that this chemoprevention approach can reduce the risk of dying from breast cancer by as much as 57%.
In 2019, the US Preventive Services Task Force issued updated recommendations that clinicians offer risk-reducing medications, such as tamoxifen, raloxifene, or aromatase inhibitors, to women at an increased risk for breast cancer and a low risk for adverse medication effects.
However, this prophylactic strategy remains underused.
A major roadblock: The drugs’ side effects, which include venous thromboembolic events and endometrial cancer as well as symptoms of menopause, such as hot flashes and sexual issues, have made uptake and adherence a challenge.
Offering women a lower dose of tamoxifen could allay fears about toxicities and improve uptake as well as reduce side effects and boost long-term adherence among those receiving baby TAM.
However,
The Debate
Years ago, Andrea De Censi, MD, a breast cancer researcher at the Galliera Hospital in Genova, Italy, and his colleagues reasoned that, because tamoxifen is a competitive estrogen receptor inhibitor, it may indeed have a minimal effective dose below 20 mg/d.
The fruits of that line of thought were presented to the world in the TAM-01 trial, first published in 2019, which pitted tamoxifen 5 mg/d for 3 years against placebo in 500 women with high-risk lesions, including lobular and ductal carcinoma in situ.
Dr. De Censi and colleagues found that baby TAM reduced the risk for invasive breast cancer by 52% and the risk for contralateral breast cancer by 75%.
Treatment adherence was slightly higher in the baby TAM group at 65% vs 61% in the placebo group.
A recent 10-year follow-up showed ongoing benefits associated with baby TAM vs placebo — a 42% reduction in breast cancer and a 64% drop in contralateral lesions.
The baby TAM group vs placebo experienced a slight increase in hot flashes but no significant increase in other common side effects.
Regarding serious adverse events, the baby TAM arm had one case of stage 1 endometrial cancer (0.4% of patients) and 20 cases of endometrial polyps (5%) vs 13 cases of endometrial polyps in the placebo arm. But there were no significant differences in thrombosis, cataracts, bone fractures, and other serious events.
Dr. De Censi said he’s surprised the baby TAM vs tamoxifen topic is still being debated. “Baby TAM, in my opinion, is a new standard of care for endocrine prevention of breast cancer in high-risk [women],” and baby TAM over 3 years is enough, said Dr. De Censi during a debate on the topic at the 2024 European Society for Medical Oncology Breast Cancer Congress in Berlin.
Gareth Evans, MD, a cancer genetics and prevention specialist at the University of Manchester, Manchester, England, however, isn’t convinced.
During the debate, Dr. Evans explained that his main concern was that the baby TAM trial was limited to women with high-risk lesions, not other common reasons for tamoxifen prophylaxis, such as a positive family history or BRCA mutations.
“In Manchester, we have put over a thousand women on tamoxifen who have a family history or other risk factors, not high-risk lesions,” and there simply isn’t definitive evidence for baby TAM in these women, Dr. Evans said.
The vast weight of evidence for tamoxifen prophylaxis, he added, is in trials involving tens of thousands of women, followed in some cases for 20 years, who received the 20 mg dose for 5 years.
As a result, women in Manchester are started on 20 mg and dropped down to 5 mg only for side effects. That way, Evans explained, we are not taking away the benefit among women who can tolerate 20 mg.
Meanwhile, there’s no evidence that baby TAM improves medication adherence, he noted. Trials have reported similar adherence rates to baby TAM and standard dose tamoxifen as well as no definitive evidence that the risk for cancer and thrombosis is less with baby TAM, he said.
In fact, Dr. Evans noted, “many women take tamoxifen 20 mg for 5 years with no side effects.”
Overall, “I don’t think we’ve got the evidence yet to drop” dosages, particularly in women without high-risk lesions, Dr. Evans said. A real concern, he added, is poor metabolizers for whom 5 mg won’t be enough to have a preventive effect.
Dr. De Censi noted, however, that there will likely never be a definitive answer to the question of baby TAM vs standard dosing because industry has no financial incentive to do a head-to-head trial; tamoxifen went off patent over 30 years ago.
Still, a poll of the audience favored Evans’ approach — 80% said they would start high-risk women on 20 mg for breast cancer prophylaxis and reduce for side effects as needed.
Dr. De Censi didn’t have any disclosures. Dr. Evans is a consultant/advisor for AstraZeneca, SpringWorks, Recursion, Everything Genetic, and Syantra.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
New Tools for Monitoring Multiple Myeloma
Advances in drugs and combinations have revolutionized the landscape in multiple myeloma, thus allowing patients to live much longer, according to Bruno Paiva, PhD, director of flow cytometry and the myeloma laboratory at the University of Navarra Clinic in Pamplona, Spain.
“Much better treatment responses are achieved, with long-term remission, so tools are needed for long-term monitoring. The starting point for monitoring is the monoclonal protein secreted by the myeloma tumor cell, which can be measured in serum and urine. Complete remission is defined when that monoclonal component is not detected with routine laboratory techniques, such as immunofixation,” said Dr. Paiva.
Even if the patient may be in complete remission, minimal residual disease is sometimes detected as myeloma can infiltrate the bone marrow. Techniques for identifying minimal residual disease, like cytometry or next-generation sequencing, can detect bone marrow blood aspirate. “The detection of this minimal residual disease corresponds with a significant reduction in survival,” Dr. Paiva warned.
In addition to these techniques, PET-CT is also used. This imaging tool is “very useful for seeing disease both inside and outside the marrow,” said Dr. Paiva.
“As for the future, the FDA [Food and Drug Administration] has just approved the use of minimal residual disease as one of the trial objectives. This may allow drugs to reach patients much sooner, instead of waiting for survival data, which takes much longer to obtain,” he said.
Researchers are also learning how to use minimal residual disease and these imaging techniques to individualize the treatment of patients with myeloma. “Furthermore, since some of these techniques are invasive, such as bone marrow ones, we are trying to focus on peripheral blood. This way, monitoring is minimally invasive, much more comfortable for the patient, and more informative because it can be done many times,” said Dr. Paiva.
Dr. Paiva is extending these imaging techniques “to different scenarios, such as the precursor stages of the disease. Our laboratory is especially known for flow cytometry, and we are launching the NoMoreMGUS project, the largest ever conducted in Spain (and perhaps in Europe) on monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance. This is a condition that precedes myeloma. We are looking to study 5000 patients in Spain once a year for 5 years, which means analyzing 25,000 samples.
“On the other hand,” he continued, “we are taking some of these developments to other neoplasms, such as acute lymphoblastic leukemia. And we are interested in using all the potential of cytometry not only to measure tumor cells but also to characterize the immune system as another important biomarker in the pathogenesis of the disease. And, for example, to predict infections, which is very important in patients with myeloma.”
This story was translated from El Médico Interactivo, which is part of the Medscape Professional Network, using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Advances in drugs and combinations have revolutionized the landscape in multiple myeloma, thus allowing patients to live much longer, according to Bruno Paiva, PhD, director of flow cytometry and the myeloma laboratory at the University of Navarra Clinic in Pamplona, Spain.
“Much better treatment responses are achieved, with long-term remission, so tools are needed for long-term monitoring. The starting point for monitoring is the monoclonal protein secreted by the myeloma tumor cell, which can be measured in serum and urine. Complete remission is defined when that monoclonal component is not detected with routine laboratory techniques, such as immunofixation,” said Dr. Paiva.
Even if the patient may be in complete remission, minimal residual disease is sometimes detected as myeloma can infiltrate the bone marrow. Techniques for identifying minimal residual disease, like cytometry or next-generation sequencing, can detect bone marrow blood aspirate. “The detection of this minimal residual disease corresponds with a significant reduction in survival,” Dr. Paiva warned.
In addition to these techniques, PET-CT is also used. This imaging tool is “very useful for seeing disease both inside and outside the marrow,” said Dr. Paiva.
“As for the future, the FDA [Food and Drug Administration] has just approved the use of minimal residual disease as one of the trial objectives. This may allow drugs to reach patients much sooner, instead of waiting for survival data, which takes much longer to obtain,” he said.
Researchers are also learning how to use minimal residual disease and these imaging techniques to individualize the treatment of patients with myeloma. “Furthermore, since some of these techniques are invasive, such as bone marrow ones, we are trying to focus on peripheral blood. This way, monitoring is minimally invasive, much more comfortable for the patient, and more informative because it can be done many times,” said Dr. Paiva.
Dr. Paiva is extending these imaging techniques “to different scenarios, such as the precursor stages of the disease. Our laboratory is especially known for flow cytometry, and we are launching the NoMoreMGUS project, the largest ever conducted in Spain (and perhaps in Europe) on monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance. This is a condition that precedes myeloma. We are looking to study 5000 patients in Spain once a year for 5 years, which means analyzing 25,000 samples.
“On the other hand,” he continued, “we are taking some of these developments to other neoplasms, such as acute lymphoblastic leukemia. And we are interested in using all the potential of cytometry not only to measure tumor cells but also to characterize the immune system as another important biomarker in the pathogenesis of the disease. And, for example, to predict infections, which is very important in patients with myeloma.”
This story was translated from El Médico Interactivo, which is part of the Medscape Professional Network, using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Advances in drugs and combinations have revolutionized the landscape in multiple myeloma, thus allowing patients to live much longer, according to Bruno Paiva, PhD, director of flow cytometry and the myeloma laboratory at the University of Navarra Clinic in Pamplona, Spain.
“Much better treatment responses are achieved, with long-term remission, so tools are needed for long-term monitoring. The starting point for monitoring is the monoclonal protein secreted by the myeloma tumor cell, which can be measured in serum and urine. Complete remission is defined when that monoclonal component is not detected with routine laboratory techniques, such as immunofixation,” said Dr. Paiva.
Even if the patient may be in complete remission, minimal residual disease is sometimes detected as myeloma can infiltrate the bone marrow. Techniques for identifying minimal residual disease, like cytometry or next-generation sequencing, can detect bone marrow blood aspirate. “The detection of this minimal residual disease corresponds with a significant reduction in survival,” Dr. Paiva warned.
In addition to these techniques, PET-CT is also used. This imaging tool is “very useful for seeing disease both inside and outside the marrow,” said Dr. Paiva.
“As for the future, the FDA [Food and Drug Administration] has just approved the use of minimal residual disease as one of the trial objectives. This may allow drugs to reach patients much sooner, instead of waiting for survival data, which takes much longer to obtain,” he said.
Researchers are also learning how to use minimal residual disease and these imaging techniques to individualize the treatment of patients with myeloma. “Furthermore, since some of these techniques are invasive, such as bone marrow ones, we are trying to focus on peripheral blood. This way, monitoring is minimally invasive, much more comfortable for the patient, and more informative because it can be done many times,” said Dr. Paiva.
Dr. Paiva is extending these imaging techniques “to different scenarios, such as the precursor stages of the disease. Our laboratory is especially known for flow cytometry, and we are launching the NoMoreMGUS project, the largest ever conducted in Spain (and perhaps in Europe) on monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance. This is a condition that precedes myeloma. We are looking to study 5000 patients in Spain once a year for 5 years, which means analyzing 25,000 samples.
“On the other hand,” he continued, “we are taking some of these developments to other neoplasms, such as acute lymphoblastic leukemia. And we are interested in using all the potential of cytometry not only to measure tumor cells but also to characterize the immune system as another important biomarker in the pathogenesis of the disease. And, for example, to predict infections, which is very important in patients with myeloma.”
This story was translated from El Médico Interactivo, which is part of the Medscape Professional Network, using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Survey Highlights Real-World Use of Upadacitinib in Adults With Atopic Dermatitis
, while 7.8% rated their itch as minimally improved.
Also, 27.5% reported itch improvement within one day of taking upadacitinib (Rinvoq), an oral Janus kinase inhibitor that was approved to treat moderate to severe AD in adults and children aged ≥ 12 years in January 2022.
“We have a lot of data about upadacitinib from clinical trials, but sometimes there’s a concern that when you start using a medication in the real world, the effectiveness doesn’t match up with the efficacy observed in clinical trials,” the study’s first author, Jonathan I. Silverberg, MD, PhD, professor of dermatology at George Washington University, Washington, said in an interview after the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis conference, where the study was presented during a late-breaking abstract session. “We always want to confirm or reaffirm clinical trial results with real-world data.”
In SCALE-UP, 6191 adults with moderate to severe AD participating in the patient support program for upadacitinib in the United States were invited to complete a one-time online survey about their experience with upadacitinib, including the degree of and time to itch improvement and skin clearance. The researchers reported on 204 patients who completed the survey questions, for a response rate of 3.3%. The mean age of respondents was 45.3 years, their mean age when diagnosed with AD was 30.3 years; 70.1% were women, and 37% were using topical corticosteroids. In addition, 68.6% were White individuals, 12.3% were Black individuals, 8.8% were Asian individuals or Pacific Islanders, and 0.5% were Native Americans/Alaska Natives.
Duration of upadacitinib treatment was 2-6 months for 50.5% of the patients and 7-12 months for the remaining patients. Starting upadacitinib dose was 15 mg for about 95% of patients and 30 mg for nearly 4% of patients. At the time of the survey, 79.4% of patients were receiving upadacitinib 15 mg once a day, and 19.6% were receiving upadacitinib 30 mg once a day.
Improvements in Itch, Skin Clearance
Nearly all experienced improvements in itch, with 86.8% reporting “very much” or “much” improved itch. Relief was rapid, with 87% noticing improvement in itch within 7 days and 27.5% noticing improvement within 1 day. “This is something I have clinically seen,” Dr. Silverberg said.
After receiving upadacitinib, 87% and 86% of patients indicated they were “extremely” or “very” satisfied with the degree and speed of itch improvement, respectively.
In findings related to skin clearance, 90.7% of respondents reported clearer skin after initiating upadacitinib, with 81.4% reporting “very much” or “much” clearer skin. Skin clearance occurred rapidly, with 30.8% of patients noticing clearer skin within 3 days of starting upadacitinib and 89.2% of patients noticing clearer skin within 14 days. The proportions of patients who were “extremely” or “very” satisfied with the degree and speed of skin clearance were 83.8% and 83.2%, respectively.
“What we’re seeing is that the real-world effectiveness [of upadacitinib] aligns with the clinical trial efficacy,” Dr. Silverberg told this news organization. “This study adds even more data to help inform shared decision-making discussion with our patients in trying to decide what medication is best for them.”
He acknowledged certain limitations of the survey, including the lack of a control group of other treatments for comparison, a low response rate, and the potential for response bias. “That said, I think the results remain important, but we value having even more real-world data in the future from prospective registries,” he said. “Those kinds of studies are ongoing, and we look forward to getting more real-world data readouts.”
AbbVie, the manufacturer of upadacitinib, funded the study. Dr. Silverberg reported having served as an advisor, consultant, speaker, and/or investigator for several pharmaceutical companies, including AbbVie. Two authors are AbbVie employees.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
, while 7.8% rated their itch as minimally improved.
Also, 27.5% reported itch improvement within one day of taking upadacitinib (Rinvoq), an oral Janus kinase inhibitor that was approved to treat moderate to severe AD in adults and children aged ≥ 12 years in January 2022.
“We have a lot of data about upadacitinib from clinical trials, but sometimes there’s a concern that when you start using a medication in the real world, the effectiveness doesn’t match up with the efficacy observed in clinical trials,” the study’s first author, Jonathan I. Silverberg, MD, PhD, professor of dermatology at George Washington University, Washington, said in an interview after the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis conference, where the study was presented during a late-breaking abstract session. “We always want to confirm or reaffirm clinical trial results with real-world data.”
In SCALE-UP, 6191 adults with moderate to severe AD participating in the patient support program for upadacitinib in the United States were invited to complete a one-time online survey about their experience with upadacitinib, including the degree of and time to itch improvement and skin clearance. The researchers reported on 204 patients who completed the survey questions, for a response rate of 3.3%. The mean age of respondents was 45.3 years, their mean age when diagnosed with AD was 30.3 years; 70.1% were women, and 37% were using topical corticosteroids. In addition, 68.6% were White individuals, 12.3% were Black individuals, 8.8% were Asian individuals or Pacific Islanders, and 0.5% were Native Americans/Alaska Natives.
Duration of upadacitinib treatment was 2-6 months for 50.5% of the patients and 7-12 months for the remaining patients. Starting upadacitinib dose was 15 mg for about 95% of patients and 30 mg for nearly 4% of patients. At the time of the survey, 79.4% of patients were receiving upadacitinib 15 mg once a day, and 19.6% were receiving upadacitinib 30 mg once a day.
Improvements in Itch, Skin Clearance
Nearly all experienced improvements in itch, with 86.8% reporting “very much” or “much” improved itch. Relief was rapid, with 87% noticing improvement in itch within 7 days and 27.5% noticing improvement within 1 day. “This is something I have clinically seen,” Dr. Silverberg said.
After receiving upadacitinib, 87% and 86% of patients indicated they were “extremely” or “very” satisfied with the degree and speed of itch improvement, respectively.
In findings related to skin clearance, 90.7% of respondents reported clearer skin after initiating upadacitinib, with 81.4% reporting “very much” or “much” clearer skin. Skin clearance occurred rapidly, with 30.8% of patients noticing clearer skin within 3 days of starting upadacitinib and 89.2% of patients noticing clearer skin within 14 days. The proportions of patients who were “extremely” or “very” satisfied with the degree and speed of skin clearance were 83.8% and 83.2%, respectively.
“What we’re seeing is that the real-world effectiveness [of upadacitinib] aligns with the clinical trial efficacy,” Dr. Silverberg told this news organization. “This study adds even more data to help inform shared decision-making discussion with our patients in trying to decide what medication is best for them.”
He acknowledged certain limitations of the survey, including the lack of a control group of other treatments for comparison, a low response rate, and the potential for response bias. “That said, I think the results remain important, but we value having even more real-world data in the future from prospective registries,” he said. “Those kinds of studies are ongoing, and we look forward to getting more real-world data readouts.”
AbbVie, the manufacturer of upadacitinib, funded the study. Dr. Silverberg reported having served as an advisor, consultant, speaker, and/or investigator for several pharmaceutical companies, including AbbVie. Two authors are AbbVie employees.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
, while 7.8% rated their itch as minimally improved.
Also, 27.5% reported itch improvement within one day of taking upadacitinib (Rinvoq), an oral Janus kinase inhibitor that was approved to treat moderate to severe AD in adults and children aged ≥ 12 years in January 2022.
“We have a lot of data about upadacitinib from clinical trials, but sometimes there’s a concern that when you start using a medication in the real world, the effectiveness doesn’t match up with the efficacy observed in clinical trials,” the study’s first author, Jonathan I. Silverberg, MD, PhD, professor of dermatology at George Washington University, Washington, said in an interview after the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis conference, where the study was presented during a late-breaking abstract session. “We always want to confirm or reaffirm clinical trial results with real-world data.”
In SCALE-UP, 6191 adults with moderate to severe AD participating in the patient support program for upadacitinib in the United States were invited to complete a one-time online survey about their experience with upadacitinib, including the degree of and time to itch improvement and skin clearance. The researchers reported on 204 patients who completed the survey questions, for a response rate of 3.3%. The mean age of respondents was 45.3 years, their mean age when diagnosed with AD was 30.3 years; 70.1% were women, and 37% were using topical corticosteroids. In addition, 68.6% were White individuals, 12.3% were Black individuals, 8.8% were Asian individuals or Pacific Islanders, and 0.5% were Native Americans/Alaska Natives.
Duration of upadacitinib treatment was 2-6 months for 50.5% of the patients and 7-12 months for the remaining patients. Starting upadacitinib dose was 15 mg for about 95% of patients and 30 mg for nearly 4% of patients. At the time of the survey, 79.4% of patients were receiving upadacitinib 15 mg once a day, and 19.6% were receiving upadacitinib 30 mg once a day.
Improvements in Itch, Skin Clearance
Nearly all experienced improvements in itch, with 86.8% reporting “very much” or “much” improved itch. Relief was rapid, with 87% noticing improvement in itch within 7 days and 27.5% noticing improvement within 1 day. “This is something I have clinically seen,” Dr. Silverberg said.
After receiving upadacitinib, 87% and 86% of patients indicated they were “extremely” or “very” satisfied with the degree and speed of itch improvement, respectively.
In findings related to skin clearance, 90.7% of respondents reported clearer skin after initiating upadacitinib, with 81.4% reporting “very much” or “much” clearer skin. Skin clearance occurred rapidly, with 30.8% of patients noticing clearer skin within 3 days of starting upadacitinib and 89.2% of patients noticing clearer skin within 14 days. The proportions of patients who were “extremely” or “very” satisfied with the degree and speed of skin clearance were 83.8% and 83.2%, respectively.
“What we’re seeing is that the real-world effectiveness [of upadacitinib] aligns with the clinical trial efficacy,” Dr. Silverberg told this news organization. “This study adds even more data to help inform shared decision-making discussion with our patients in trying to decide what medication is best for them.”
He acknowledged certain limitations of the survey, including the lack of a control group of other treatments for comparison, a low response rate, and the potential for response bias. “That said, I think the results remain important, but we value having even more real-world data in the future from prospective registries,” he said. “Those kinds of studies are ongoing, and we look forward to getting more real-world data readouts.”
AbbVie, the manufacturer of upadacitinib, funded the study. Dr. Silverberg reported having served as an advisor, consultant, speaker, and/or investigator for several pharmaceutical companies, including AbbVie. Two authors are AbbVie employees.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Debate Over Axial Involvement in Psoriatic Arthritis Still Unresolved Despite New Studies
VIENNA — While there is no doubt that some people with psoriatic arthritis (PsA) have axial symptoms, data presented at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology do not appear to add much to what is already known about axial PsA or to further the cause of differentiating it from axial spondyloarthritis (axSpA).
In both the AXIS study and Reuma.pt, around one in three patients with PsA were found to have axial involvement. Notably, the percentage of people with axial PsA was found to vary according to how imaging information was interpreted in the AXIS study. Both studies were discussed during the Axial Involvement in PsA and SpA session at EULAR 2024.
The One-Million-Dollar Question
“So, the one-million-dollar question: What is it, really?” Philippe Carron, MD, PhD, Ghent University Hospital, Ghent, Belgium, said in the presentation that started the session. Despite PsA being described more than 60 years ago, “we still have no internationally accepted definition or a consensus on how we should define these patients and how we should screen them,” he said.
“There are some believers that it is just a form of axial SpA with concomitant psoriasis, but also some people that think that the axial PsA is a typical disease, with typical characteristics which are different from axial disease,” Dr. Carron said.
The lack of consensus makes it difficult to estimate just how many people have axial PsA. Reported prevalences range from 5% to 70%, “all caused by which criteria that you’re using to define axial involvement,” Dr. Carron added.
There are, however, two things that can be agreed upon, according to Dr. Carron. First, the prevalence of axial involvement in people with early PsA is “much, much lower” than that of more established disease. Second, exclusive axial involvement is seen in “just a minority of PsA patients.” Most people with axial disease also have peripheral disease, he added.
Imaging findings in axial PsA “are quite similar to those seen in axial SpA,” although Dr. Carron also said that there were some distinct differences. Radiographic sacroiliitis occurs in around 25%-50% of people with axial PsA, and atypical syndesmophytes are more often found in people with axial PsA than in those with axSpA.
Shared Characteristics
But are axial PsA and axSpA separate diseases or part of the same disease continuum? That’s a question that is still very much open for debate, said Sofia Ramiro, MD, PhD, a senior researcher at Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, the Netherlands, and rheumatology consultant at Zuyderland Medical Center in Heerlen, the Netherlands.
While many studies have looked to answer this question, there is a big methodological problem — the studies largely cannot be compared as they have used different definitions of axSpA.
Take a patient with inflammatory back pain, psoriasis, and oligoarthritis, Dr. Ramiro said. If the patient goes to one rheumatologist, they may get a diagnosis of axSpA, but if they go to a different rheumatologist, they may get a diagnosis of axial PsA.
“This is influenced by training, expertise, by beliefs, and by belonging to ASAS [Assessment of Spondyloarthritis International Society] or to GRAPPA [Group for Research and Assessment of Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis],” Dr. Ramiro suggested. It’s “a diagnostic bias” that is very difficult to overcome and makes direct comparisons between patient populations recruited into clinical studies “extremely challenging.”
To confuse matters more, axial PsA and axSpA share common characteristics: Inflammatory back pain, HLA-B27 positivity, elevated levels of C-reactive protein (CRP) or a higher erythrocyte sedimentation rate, and structural lesions in the sacroiliac joints and spine.
AXIS Study ‘Gives Answers’
More research into factors associated with axial PsA need to be performed to try to help define the condition and enable classification and ultimately treatment guidelines. This is where the AXIS study comes in.
The AXIS study is a joint project of ASAS and GRAPPA that was started in January 2019 with the aim of defining a homogeneous subgroup of patients who could be studied.
“The objectives of the AXIS study are to determine the frequency of axial involvement in patients with PsA; to identify the frequency of active inflammatory and structural changes on imaging; and to identify factors associated with the presence of axial involvement in PsA,” Murat Torgutalp, MD, of Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany, said at EULAR 2024.
The study population consisted of 409 consecutively recruited patients diagnosed with PsA according to CASPAR (Classification for Psoriatic Arthritis) criteria; all have had PsA for up to 10 years and were untreated with biologic or targeted synthetic disease modifying drugs at the time of inclusion.
Dr. Torgutalp, who is the study’s primary research coordinator, reported that a diagnosis of PsA was made in 37% of the population when local investigators considered available clinical, laboratory, and imaging data. However, patients’ imaging data were also centrally assessed, and when the local investigators were party to the expert imaging interpretations, the percentage of people diagnosed with PsA dropped to 27%.
“When we looked at the clinical characteristics, the presence of the back pain, particularly inflammatory back pain, HLA-B27 positivity, elevated CRP, and presence of active, inflammatory and structural changes in the sacroiliac joints and spine were associated with the final conclusion on the presence of axial involvement,” Dr. Torgutalp said.
Despite the title of his presentation being “The Axis Study Gives Answers,” Dr. Torgutalp presented lots of data without giving much insight into how they might be used. He concluded that “overall, there was a trend toward overestimation of the presence of imaging changes indicative of axial involvement across all imaging modalities” by the local investigators.
Dennis McGonagle, MB, MCH, BAO, PhD, of the University of Leeds, Leeds, England,said in an interview that the AXIS study “is a noble, international effort across multiple countries to try and better understand axial PsA.”
Dr. McGonagle, who was not involved in the study, added: “A lot of data are being generated, and a lot of analysis needs to be done to drill down to get a clear message that could influence practice.”
Axial PsA in the Portuguese Population
Separately, Catarina Abreu, a rheumatology intern at Hospital Garcia de Orta, Almada, Portugal, presented some real-world data on axial PsA from Reuma.pt.
Of 2304 patients, 854 (37.1%) reportedly had axial PsA, which had been defined as physician-reported spondylitis or the presence of imaging findings suggestive of axial involvement. This included radiographic- or MRI-detected sacroiliitis or syndesmophytes seen on axial x-rays.
The majority (78.2%) of those with an axial PsA diagnosis had concomitant peripheral involvement, with 8.1% having exclusive axial disease.
About 70% of the axial PsA diagnoses had been made using clinical or laboratory findings alone, and 30% of diagnoses was based on imaging results. Of the latter, Ms. Abreu noted that patients who had imaging data available were more likely to be HLA-B27 positive and less likely to have dactylitis, with respective odds ratios (ORs) of 3.10 and 2.42.
Individuals with axial PsA were more likely to have enthesitis (OR, 1.92), although no data were available on whether this was axial or peripheral enthesitis. Tobacco exposure was also linked to an increased chance of having axial PsA (OR, 1.66).
Ms. Abreu noted that the “scarce number of available imaging exams” and other missing data in Reuma.pt may have led to an underdiagnosis of axial PsA.
“The difference that we found between axial and peripheral [PsA] are similar to the differences found in other studies that compared axial psoriatic arthritis with axial spondyloarthritis,” Ms. Abreu said.
“So, we leave with the question that was already left before here: If these are different diseases or just different phenotypes of the same disease, and what implications will this have in the future?” Ms. Abreu concluded.
Dr. Carron received educational grants, speaker fees, or honoraria for other consultancy work from AbbVie, UCB, Pfizer, Eli Lilly, Novartis, Janssen, and Galapagos/Alfasigma. Dr. Ramiro is an ASAS executive committee member and received research grants or consulting/speaker fees from AbbVie, Eli Lilly, Galapagos, Janssen, Merck Sharp and Dohme, Novartis, Pfizer, Sanofi, and UCB. AXIS is supported by unrestricted research grants from AbbVie, Galapagos, Janssen, Eli Lilly, Novartis, Pfizer, and UCB. Dr. Torgutalp is the primary research coordinator for the study; he reported no financial conflicts of interest. The Reuma.pt registry was developed with the financial support of the pharmaceutical industry and is currently supported by AbbVie, Amgen, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Eli Lilly, Merck Sharp and Dohme, Novartis, Pfizer, and Sobi. Ms. Abreu reported no financial conflicts of interest.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
VIENNA — While there is no doubt that some people with psoriatic arthritis (PsA) have axial symptoms, data presented at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology do not appear to add much to what is already known about axial PsA or to further the cause of differentiating it from axial spondyloarthritis (axSpA).
In both the AXIS study and Reuma.pt, around one in three patients with PsA were found to have axial involvement. Notably, the percentage of people with axial PsA was found to vary according to how imaging information was interpreted in the AXIS study. Both studies were discussed during the Axial Involvement in PsA and SpA session at EULAR 2024.
The One-Million-Dollar Question
“So, the one-million-dollar question: What is it, really?” Philippe Carron, MD, PhD, Ghent University Hospital, Ghent, Belgium, said in the presentation that started the session. Despite PsA being described more than 60 years ago, “we still have no internationally accepted definition or a consensus on how we should define these patients and how we should screen them,” he said.
“There are some believers that it is just a form of axial SpA with concomitant psoriasis, but also some people that think that the axial PsA is a typical disease, with typical characteristics which are different from axial disease,” Dr. Carron said.
The lack of consensus makes it difficult to estimate just how many people have axial PsA. Reported prevalences range from 5% to 70%, “all caused by which criteria that you’re using to define axial involvement,” Dr. Carron added.
There are, however, two things that can be agreed upon, according to Dr. Carron. First, the prevalence of axial involvement in people with early PsA is “much, much lower” than that of more established disease. Second, exclusive axial involvement is seen in “just a minority of PsA patients.” Most people with axial disease also have peripheral disease, he added.
Imaging findings in axial PsA “are quite similar to those seen in axial SpA,” although Dr. Carron also said that there were some distinct differences. Radiographic sacroiliitis occurs in around 25%-50% of people with axial PsA, and atypical syndesmophytes are more often found in people with axial PsA than in those with axSpA.
Shared Characteristics
But are axial PsA and axSpA separate diseases or part of the same disease continuum? That’s a question that is still very much open for debate, said Sofia Ramiro, MD, PhD, a senior researcher at Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, the Netherlands, and rheumatology consultant at Zuyderland Medical Center in Heerlen, the Netherlands.
While many studies have looked to answer this question, there is a big methodological problem — the studies largely cannot be compared as they have used different definitions of axSpA.
Take a patient with inflammatory back pain, psoriasis, and oligoarthritis, Dr. Ramiro said. If the patient goes to one rheumatologist, they may get a diagnosis of axSpA, but if they go to a different rheumatologist, they may get a diagnosis of axial PsA.
“This is influenced by training, expertise, by beliefs, and by belonging to ASAS [Assessment of Spondyloarthritis International Society] or to GRAPPA [Group for Research and Assessment of Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis],” Dr. Ramiro suggested. It’s “a diagnostic bias” that is very difficult to overcome and makes direct comparisons between patient populations recruited into clinical studies “extremely challenging.”
To confuse matters more, axial PsA and axSpA share common characteristics: Inflammatory back pain, HLA-B27 positivity, elevated levels of C-reactive protein (CRP) or a higher erythrocyte sedimentation rate, and structural lesions in the sacroiliac joints and spine.
AXIS Study ‘Gives Answers’
More research into factors associated with axial PsA need to be performed to try to help define the condition and enable classification and ultimately treatment guidelines. This is where the AXIS study comes in.
The AXIS study is a joint project of ASAS and GRAPPA that was started in January 2019 with the aim of defining a homogeneous subgroup of patients who could be studied.
“The objectives of the AXIS study are to determine the frequency of axial involvement in patients with PsA; to identify the frequency of active inflammatory and structural changes on imaging; and to identify factors associated with the presence of axial involvement in PsA,” Murat Torgutalp, MD, of Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany, said at EULAR 2024.
The study population consisted of 409 consecutively recruited patients diagnosed with PsA according to CASPAR (Classification for Psoriatic Arthritis) criteria; all have had PsA for up to 10 years and were untreated with biologic or targeted synthetic disease modifying drugs at the time of inclusion.
Dr. Torgutalp, who is the study’s primary research coordinator, reported that a diagnosis of PsA was made in 37% of the population when local investigators considered available clinical, laboratory, and imaging data. However, patients’ imaging data were also centrally assessed, and when the local investigators were party to the expert imaging interpretations, the percentage of people diagnosed with PsA dropped to 27%.
“When we looked at the clinical characteristics, the presence of the back pain, particularly inflammatory back pain, HLA-B27 positivity, elevated CRP, and presence of active, inflammatory and structural changes in the sacroiliac joints and spine were associated with the final conclusion on the presence of axial involvement,” Dr. Torgutalp said.
Despite the title of his presentation being “The Axis Study Gives Answers,” Dr. Torgutalp presented lots of data without giving much insight into how they might be used. He concluded that “overall, there was a trend toward overestimation of the presence of imaging changes indicative of axial involvement across all imaging modalities” by the local investigators.
Dennis McGonagle, MB, MCH, BAO, PhD, of the University of Leeds, Leeds, England,said in an interview that the AXIS study “is a noble, international effort across multiple countries to try and better understand axial PsA.”
Dr. McGonagle, who was not involved in the study, added: “A lot of data are being generated, and a lot of analysis needs to be done to drill down to get a clear message that could influence practice.”
Axial PsA in the Portuguese Population
Separately, Catarina Abreu, a rheumatology intern at Hospital Garcia de Orta, Almada, Portugal, presented some real-world data on axial PsA from Reuma.pt.
Of 2304 patients, 854 (37.1%) reportedly had axial PsA, which had been defined as physician-reported spondylitis or the presence of imaging findings suggestive of axial involvement. This included radiographic- or MRI-detected sacroiliitis or syndesmophytes seen on axial x-rays.
The majority (78.2%) of those with an axial PsA diagnosis had concomitant peripheral involvement, with 8.1% having exclusive axial disease.
About 70% of the axial PsA diagnoses had been made using clinical or laboratory findings alone, and 30% of diagnoses was based on imaging results. Of the latter, Ms. Abreu noted that patients who had imaging data available were more likely to be HLA-B27 positive and less likely to have dactylitis, with respective odds ratios (ORs) of 3.10 and 2.42.
Individuals with axial PsA were more likely to have enthesitis (OR, 1.92), although no data were available on whether this was axial or peripheral enthesitis. Tobacco exposure was also linked to an increased chance of having axial PsA (OR, 1.66).
Ms. Abreu noted that the “scarce number of available imaging exams” and other missing data in Reuma.pt may have led to an underdiagnosis of axial PsA.
“The difference that we found between axial and peripheral [PsA] are similar to the differences found in other studies that compared axial psoriatic arthritis with axial spondyloarthritis,” Ms. Abreu said.
“So, we leave with the question that was already left before here: If these are different diseases or just different phenotypes of the same disease, and what implications will this have in the future?” Ms. Abreu concluded.
Dr. Carron received educational grants, speaker fees, or honoraria for other consultancy work from AbbVie, UCB, Pfizer, Eli Lilly, Novartis, Janssen, and Galapagos/Alfasigma. Dr. Ramiro is an ASAS executive committee member and received research grants or consulting/speaker fees from AbbVie, Eli Lilly, Galapagos, Janssen, Merck Sharp and Dohme, Novartis, Pfizer, Sanofi, and UCB. AXIS is supported by unrestricted research grants from AbbVie, Galapagos, Janssen, Eli Lilly, Novartis, Pfizer, and UCB. Dr. Torgutalp is the primary research coordinator for the study; he reported no financial conflicts of interest. The Reuma.pt registry was developed with the financial support of the pharmaceutical industry and is currently supported by AbbVie, Amgen, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Eli Lilly, Merck Sharp and Dohme, Novartis, Pfizer, and Sobi. Ms. Abreu reported no financial conflicts of interest.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
VIENNA — While there is no doubt that some people with psoriatic arthritis (PsA) have axial symptoms, data presented at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology do not appear to add much to what is already known about axial PsA or to further the cause of differentiating it from axial spondyloarthritis (axSpA).
In both the AXIS study and Reuma.pt, around one in three patients with PsA were found to have axial involvement. Notably, the percentage of people with axial PsA was found to vary according to how imaging information was interpreted in the AXIS study. Both studies were discussed during the Axial Involvement in PsA and SpA session at EULAR 2024.
The One-Million-Dollar Question
“So, the one-million-dollar question: What is it, really?” Philippe Carron, MD, PhD, Ghent University Hospital, Ghent, Belgium, said in the presentation that started the session. Despite PsA being described more than 60 years ago, “we still have no internationally accepted definition or a consensus on how we should define these patients and how we should screen them,” he said.
“There are some believers that it is just a form of axial SpA with concomitant psoriasis, but also some people that think that the axial PsA is a typical disease, with typical characteristics which are different from axial disease,” Dr. Carron said.
The lack of consensus makes it difficult to estimate just how many people have axial PsA. Reported prevalences range from 5% to 70%, “all caused by which criteria that you’re using to define axial involvement,” Dr. Carron added.
There are, however, two things that can be agreed upon, according to Dr. Carron. First, the prevalence of axial involvement in people with early PsA is “much, much lower” than that of more established disease. Second, exclusive axial involvement is seen in “just a minority of PsA patients.” Most people with axial disease also have peripheral disease, he added.
Imaging findings in axial PsA “are quite similar to those seen in axial SpA,” although Dr. Carron also said that there were some distinct differences. Radiographic sacroiliitis occurs in around 25%-50% of people with axial PsA, and atypical syndesmophytes are more often found in people with axial PsA than in those with axSpA.
Shared Characteristics
But are axial PsA and axSpA separate diseases or part of the same disease continuum? That’s a question that is still very much open for debate, said Sofia Ramiro, MD, PhD, a senior researcher at Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, the Netherlands, and rheumatology consultant at Zuyderland Medical Center in Heerlen, the Netherlands.
While many studies have looked to answer this question, there is a big methodological problem — the studies largely cannot be compared as they have used different definitions of axSpA.
Take a patient with inflammatory back pain, psoriasis, and oligoarthritis, Dr. Ramiro said. If the patient goes to one rheumatologist, they may get a diagnosis of axSpA, but if they go to a different rheumatologist, they may get a diagnosis of axial PsA.
“This is influenced by training, expertise, by beliefs, and by belonging to ASAS [Assessment of Spondyloarthritis International Society] or to GRAPPA [Group for Research and Assessment of Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis],” Dr. Ramiro suggested. It’s “a diagnostic bias” that is very difficult to overcome and makes direct comparisons between patient populations recruited into clinical studies “extremely challenging.”
To confuse matters more, axial PsA and axSpA share common characteristics: Inflammatory back pain, HLA-B27 positivity, elevated levels of C-reactive protein (CRP) or a higher erythrocyte sedimentation rate, and structural lesions in the sacroiliac joints and spine.
AXIS Study ‘Gives Answers’
More research into factors associated with axial PsA need to be performed to try to help define the condition and enable classification and ultimately treatment guidelines. This is where the AXIS study comes in.
The AXIS study is a joint project of ASAS and GRAPPA that was started in January 2019 with the aim of defining a homogeneous subgroup of patients who could be studied.
“The objectives of the AXIS study are to determine the frequency of axial involvement in patients with PsA; to identify the frequency of active inflammatory and structural changes on imaging; and to identify factors associated with the presence of axial involvement in PsA,” Murat Torgutalp, MD, of Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany, said at EULAR 2024.
The study population consisted of 409 consecutively recruited patients diagnosed with PsA according to CASPAR (Classification for Psoriatic Arthritis) criteria; all have had PsA for up to 10 years and were untreated with biologic or targeted synthetic disease modifying drugs at the time of inclusion.
Dr. Torgutalp, who is the study’s primary research coordinator, reported that a diagnosis of PsA was made in 37% of the population when local investigators considered available clinical, laboratory, and imaging data. However, patients’ imaging data were also centrally assessed, and when the local investigators were party to the expert imaging interpretations, the percentage of people diagnosed with PsA dropped to 27%.
“When we looked at the clinical characteristics, the presence of the back pain, particularly inflammatory back pain, HLA-B27 positivity, elevated CRP, and presence of active, inflammatory and structural changes in the sacroiliac joints and spine were associated with the final conclusion on the presence of axial involvement,” Dr. Torgutalp said.
Despite the title of his presentation being “The Axis Study Gives Answers,” Dr. Torgutalp presented lots of data without giving much insight into how they might be used. He concluded that “overall, there was a trend toward overestimation of the presence of imaging changes indicative of axial involvement across all imaging modalities” by the local investigators.
Dennis McGonagle, MB, MCH, BAO, PhD, of the University of Leeds, Leeds, England,said in an interview that the AXIS study “is a noble, international effort across multiple countries to try and better understand axial PsA.”
Dr. McGonagle, who was not involved in the study, added: “A lot of data are being generated, and a lot of analysis needs to be done to drill down to get a clear message that could influence practice.”
Axial PsA in the Portuguese Population
Separately, Catarina Abreu, a rheumatology intern at Hospital Garcia de Orta, Almada, Portugal, presented some real-world data on axial PsA from Reuma.pt.
Of 2304 patients, 854 (37.1%) reportedly had axial PsA, which had been defined as physician-reported spondylitis or the presence of imaging findings suggestive of axial involvement. This included radiographic- or MRI-detected sacroiliitis or syndesmophytes seen on axial x-rays.
The majority (78.2%) of those with an axial PsA diagnosis had concomitant peripheral involvement, with 8.1% having exclusive axial disease.
About 70% of the axial PsA diagnoses had been made using clinical or laboratory findings alone, and 30% of diagnoses was based on imaging results. Of the latter, Ms. Abreu noted that patients who had imaging data available were more likely to be HLA-B27 positive and less likely to have dactylitis, with respective odds ratios (ORs) of 3.10 and 2.42.
Individuals with axial PsA were more likely to have enthesitis (OR, 1.92), although no data were available on whether this was axial or peripheral enthesitis. Tobacco exposure was also linked to an increased chance of having axial PsA (OR, 1.66).
Ms. Abreu noted that the “scarce number of available imaging exams” and other missing data in Reuma.pt may have led to an underdiagnosis of axial PsA.
“The difference that we found between axial and peripheral [PsA] are similar to the differences found in other studies that compared axial psoriatic arthritis with axial spondyloarthritis,” Ms. Abreu said.
“So, we leave with the question that was already left before here: If these are different diseases or just different phenotypes of the same disease, and what implications will this have in the future?” Ms. Abreu concluded.
Dr. Carron received educational grants, speaker fees, or honoraria for other consultancy work from AbbVie, UCB, Pfizer, Eli Lilly, Novartis, Janssen, and Galapagos/Alfasigma. Dr. Ramiro is an ASAS executive committee member and received research grants or consulting/speaker fees from AbbVie, Eli Lilly, Galapagos, Janssen, Merck Sharp and Dohme, Novartis, Pfizer, Sanofi, and UCB. AXIS is supported by unrestricted research grants from AbbVie, Galapagos, Janssen, Eli Lilly, Novartis, Pfizer, and UCB. Dr. Torgutalp is the primary research coordinator for the study; he reported no financial conflicts of interest. The Reuma.pt registry was developed with the financial support of the pharmaceutical industry and is currently supported by AbbVie, Amgen, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Eli Lilly, Merck Sharp and Dohme, Novartis, Pfizer, and Sobi. Ms. Abreu reported no financial conflicts of interest.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM EULAR 2024
EMA Greenlights Four Drugs for Bladder and Other Cancers
Balversa
The CHMP endorsed the approval of Balversa (erdafitinib, Janssen-Cilag International N.V.), intended for the treatment of urothelial carcinoma, a type of cancer affecting the bladder and urinary system.
As a monotherapy, Balversa is indicated for the treatment of adult patients with unresectable or metastatic urothelial carcinoma harboring susceptible FGFR3 genetic alterations. These patients must have previously received at least one line of therapy containing a programmed death receptor 1 (PD-1) or programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) inhibitor in the unresectable or metastatic treatment setting.
Urothelial carcinoma is the most common form of bladder cancer, the ninth most frequently diagnosed cancer worldwide. In 2022, there were approximately 614,000 new cases of bladder cancer and 220,000 deaths globally.
The highest incidence rates in both men and women are found in Southern Europe. Greece had 5800 new cases and 1537 deaths in 2018. Spain has the highest incidence rate in men globally. Since the 1990s, bladder cancer incidence trends have diverged by sex, with rates decreasing or stabilizing in men but increasing among women in certain European countries.
The CHMP recommendation is based on data from cohort 1 of the phase 3 THOR trial, which compared erdafitinib with standard-of-care chemotherapy (investigator’s choice of docetaxel or vinflunine). Cohort 1 included 266 adults with advanced urothelial cancer harboring selected FGFR3 alterations.
All patients had disease progression after one or two prior treatments, at least one of which included a PD-1 or PD-L1 inhibitor. The major efficacy endpoints were overall survival, progression free survival, and objective response rate (ORR).
Treatment with erdafitinib reduced the risk for death by 36% compared with chemotherapy (hazard ratio [HR], 0.64; P = .005). Median overall survival was 12.1 months in the erdafitinib arm vs 7.8 months in the chemotherapy arm. Median progression-free survival was 5.6 months in the erdafitinib arm vs 2.7 months in the chemotherapy arm (HR, 0.58; P = .0002). ORR was 35.3% with erdafitinib compared with 8.5% with chemotherapy.
Balversa will be available as 3-mg, 4-mg, and 5-mg film-coated tablets. Erdafitinib, the active substance in Balversa, is an antineoplastic protein kinase inhibitor that suppresses fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) tyrosine kinases. Deregulation of FGFR3 signaling is implicated in the pathogenesis of urothelial cancer, and FGFR inhibition has demonstrated antitumor activity in FGFR-expressing cells.
Ordspono
The committee adopted a positive opinion for Ordspono (odronextamab, Regeneron Ireland Designated Activity Company), indicated as a monotherapy for the treatment of adult patients with:
- Relapsed or refractory follicular lymphoma (rrFL), after two or more lines of systemic therapy.
- Relapsed or refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (rrDLBCL), after two or more lines of systemic therapy.
The approval recommendation is based on phase 2 trials (NCT02290951, NCT03888105), which demonstrated high ORRs in patients with rrFL and rrDLBCL.
In the DLBCL cohort, a 49% ORR was achieved in heavily pretreated patients who had not received chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy. A total of 31% achieved a complete response.
The FL cohort showed an 82% response rate in patients with grades I-IIIA disease, with 75% of the overall population achieving a complete response.
Ordspono will be available as a 2-mg, 80-mg, and 320-mg concentrate for solution for infusion. The active substance of Ordspono is odronextamab, a bispecific antibody that targets CD20-expressing B cells and CD3-expressing T cells. By binding to both, it induces T-cell activation and generates a polyclonal cytotoxic T-cell response, leading to the lysis of malignant B cells.
Generics
The panel also adopted positive opinions for two generic cancer medicines.
Enzalutamide Viatris (enzalutamide) is indicated for the treatment of adult men with prostate cancer in several scenarios:
- As monotherapy or with androgen-deprivation therapy for high-risk biochemical recurrent nonmetastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer in men unsuitable for salvage-radiotherapy.
- In combination with androgen-deprivation therapy for metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer.
- For high-risk nonmetastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC).
- For metastatic CRPC in men who are asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic after failure of androgen-deprivation therapy, where chemotherapy is not yet indicated.
- For metastatic CRPC in men whose disease has progressed on or after docetaxel therapy.
Enzalutamide Viatris is a generic version of Xtandi, authorized in the European Union since June 2013. Studies have confirmed the satisfactory quality and bioequivalence of Enzalutamide Viatris to Xtandi.
Enzalutamide Viatris will be available as 40-mg and 80-mg film-coated tablets. The active substance of Enzalutamide Viatris is enzalutamide, a hormone antagonist that blocks multiple steps in the androgen receptor–signaling pathway.
Nilotinib Accord (nilotinib) is indicated for the treatment of Philadelphia chromosome–positive chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML).
It is used in adult and pediatric patients with newly diagnosed CML in the chronic phase, adult patients with chronic phase and accelerated phase CML with resistance or intolerance to prior therapy including imatinib, and pediatric patients with CML with resistance or intolerance to prior therapy including imatinib.
Nilotinib Accord is a generic of Tasigna, authorized in the European Union since November 2007. Studies have demonstrated the satisfactory quality and bioequivalence of Nilotinib Accord to Tasigna.
Nilotinib Accord will be available as 50-mg, 150-mg, and 200-mg hard capsules. The active substance of Nilotinib Accord is nilotinib, an antineoplastic protein kinase inhibitor that targets BCR-ABL kinase and other oncogenic kinases.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Balversa
The CHMP endorsed the approval of Balversa (erdafitinib, Janssen-Cilag International N.V.), intended for the treatment of urothelial carcinoma, a type of cancer affecting the bladder and urinary system.
As a monotherapy, Balversa is indicated for the treatment of adult patients with unresectable or metastatic urothelial carcinoma harboring susceptible FGFR3 genetic alterations. These patients must have previously received at least one line of therapy containing a programmed death receptor 1 (PD-1) or programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) inhibitor in the unresectable or metastatic treatment setting.
Urothelial carcinoma is the most common form of bladder cancer, the ninth most frequently diagnosed cancer worldwide. In 2022, there were approximately 614,000 new cases of bladder cancer and 220,000 deaths globally.
The highest incidence rates in both men and women are found in Southern Europe. Greece had 5800 new cases and 1537 deaths in 2018. Spain has the highest incidence rate in men globally. Since the 1990s, bladder cancer incidence trends have diverged by sex, with rates decreasing or stabilizing in men but increasing among women in certain European countries.
The CHMP recommendation is based on data from cohort 1 of the phase 3 THOR trial, which compared erdafitinib with standard-of-care chemotherapy (investigator’s choice of docetaxel or vinflunine). Cohort 1 included 266 adults with advanced urothelial cancer harboring selected FGFR3 alterations.
All patients had disease progression after one or two prior treatments, at least one of which included a PD-1 or PD-L1 inhibitor. The major efficacy endpoints were overall survival, progression free survival, and objective response rate (ORR).
Treatment with erdafitinib reduced the risk for death by 36% compared with chemotherapy (hazard ratio [HR], 0.64; P = .005). Median overall survival was 12.1 months in the erdafitinib arm vs 7.8 months in the chemotherapy arm. Median progression-free survival was 5.6 months in the erdafitinib arm vs 2.7 months in the chemotherapy arm (HR, 0.58; P = .0002). ORR was 35.3% with erdafitinib compared with 8.5% with chemotherapy.
Balversa will be available as 3-mg, 4-mg, and 5-mg film-coated tablets. Erdafitinib, the active substance in Balversa, is an antineoplastic protein kinase inhibitor that suppresses fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) tyrosine kinases. Deregulation of FGFR3 signaling is implicated in the pathogenesis of urothelial cancer, and FGFR inhibition has demonstrated antitumor activity in FGFR-expressing cells.
Ordspono
The committee adopted a positive opinion for Ordspono (odronextamab, Regeneron Ireland Designated Activity Company), indicated as a monotherapy for the treatment of adult patients with:
- Relapsed or refractory follicular lymphoma (rrFL), after two or more lines of systemic therapy.
- Relapsed or refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (rrDLBCL), after two or more lines of systemic therapy.
The approval recommendation is based on phase 2 trials (NCT02290951, NCT03888105), which demonstrated high ORRs in patients with rrFL and rrDLBCL.
In the DLBCL cohort, a 49% ORR was achieved in heavily pretreated patients who had not received chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy. A total of 31% achieved a complete response.
The FL cohort showed an 82% response rate in patients with grades I-IIIA disease, with 75% of the overall population achieving a complete response.
Ordspono will be available as a 2-mg, 80-mg, and 320-mg concentrate for solution for infusion. The active substance of Ordspono is odronextamab, a bispecific antibody that targets CD20-expressing B cells and CD3-expressing T cells. By binding to both, it induces T-cell activation and generates a polyclonal cytotoxic T-cell response, leading to the lysis of malignant B cells.
Generics
The panel also adopted positive opinions for two generic cancer medicines.
Enzalutamide Viatris (enzalutamide) is indicated for the treatment of adult men with prostate cancer in several scenarios:
- As monotherapy or with androgen-deprivation therapy for high-risk biochemical recurrent nonmetastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer in men unsuitable for salvage-radiotherapy.
- In combination with androgen-deprivation therapy for metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer.
- For high-risk nonmetastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC).
- For metastatic CRPC in men who are asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic after failure of androgen-deprivation therapy, where chemotherapy is not yet indicated.
- For metastatic CRPC in men whose disease has progressed on or after docetaxel therapy.
Enzalutamide Viatris is a generic version of Xtandi, authorized in the European Union since June 2013. Studies have confirmed the satisfactory quality and bioequivalence of Enzalutamide Viatris to Xtandi.
Enzalutamide Viatris will be available as 40-mg and 80-mg film-coated tablets. The active substance of Enzalutamide Viatris is enzalutamide, a hormone antagonist that blocks multiple steps in the androgen receptor–signaling pathway.
Nilotinib Accord (nilotinib) is indicated for the treatment of Philadelphia chromosome–positive chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML).
It is used in adult and pediatric patients with newly diagnosed CML in the chronic phase, adult patients with chronic phase and accelerated phase CML with resistance or intolerance to prior therapy including imatinib, and pediatric patients with CML with resistance or intolerance to prior therapy including imatinib.
Nilotinib Accord is a generic of Tasigna, authorized in the European Union since November 2007. Studies have demonstrated the satisfactory quality and bioequivalence of Nilotinib Accord to Tasigna.
Nilotinib Accord will be available as 50-mg, 150-mg, and 200-mg hard capsules. The active substance of Nilotinib Accord is nilotinib, an antineoplastic protein kinase inhibitor that targets BCR-ABL kinase and other oncogenic kinases.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Balversa
The CHMP endorsed the approval of Balversa (erdafitinib, Janssen-Cilag International N.V.), intended for the treatment of urothelial carcinoma, a type of cancer affecting the bladder and urinary system.
As a monotherapy, Balversa is indicated for the treatment of adult patients with unresectable or metastatic urothelial carcinoma harboring susceptible FGFR3 genetic alterations. These patients must have previously received at least one line of therapy containing a programmed death receptor 1 (PD-1) or programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) inhibitor in the unresectable or metastatic treatment setting.
Urothelial carcinoma is the most common form of bladder cancer, the ninth most frequently diagnosed cancer worldwide. In 2022, there were approximately 614,000 new cases of bladder cancer and 220,000 deaths globally.
The highest incidence rates in both men and women are found in Southern Europe. Greece had 5800 new cases and 1537 deaths in 2018. Spain has the highest incidence rate in men globally. Since the 1990s, bladder cancer incidence trends have diverged by sex, with rates decreasing or stabilizing in men but increasing among women in certain European countries.
The CHMP recommendation is based on data from cohort 1 of the phase 3 THOR trial, which compared erdafitinib with standard-of-care chemotherapy (investigator’s choice of docetaxel or vinflunine). Cohort 1 included 266 adults with advanced urothelial cancer harboring selected FGFR3 alterations.
All patients had disease progression after one or two prior treatments, at least one of which included a PD-1 or PD-L1 inhibitor. The major efficacy endpoints were overall survival, progression free survival, and objective response rate (ORR).
Treatment with erdafitinib reduced the risk for death by 36% compared with chemotherapy (hazard ratio [HR], 0.64; P = .005). Median overall survival was 12.1 months in the erdafitinib arm vs 7.8 months in the chemotherapy arm. Median progression-free survival was 5.6 months in the erdafitinib arm vs 2.7 months in the chemotherapy arm (HR, 0.58; P = .0002). ORR was 35.3% with erdafitinib compared with 8.5% with chemotherapy.
Balversa will be available as 3-mg, 4-mg, and 5-mg film-coated tablets. Erdafitinib, the active substance in Balversa, is an antineoplastic protein kinase inhibitor that suppresses fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) tyrosine kinases. Deregulation of FGFR3 signaling is implicated in the pathogenesis of urothelial cancer, and FGFR inhibition has demonstrated antitumor activity in FGFR-expressing cells.
Ordspono
The committee adopted a positive opinion for Ordspono (odronextamab, Regeneron Ireland Designated Activity Company), indicated as a monotherapy for the treatment of adult patients with:
- Relapsed or refractory follicular lymphoma (rrFL), after two or more lines of systemic therapy.
- Relapsed or refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (rrDLBCL), after two or more lines of systemic therapy.
The approval recommendation is based on phase 2 trials (NCT02290951, NCT03888105), which demonstrated high ORRs in patients with rrFL and rrDLBCL.
In the DLBCL cohort, a 49% ORR was achieved in heavily pretreated patients who had not received chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy. A total of 31% achieved a complete response.
The FL cohort showed an 82% response rate in patients with grades I-IIIA disease, with 75% of the overall population achieving a complete response.
Ordspono will be available as a 2-mg, 80-mg, and 320-mg concentrate for solution for infusion. The active substance of Ordspono is odronextamab, a bispecific antibody that targets CD20-expressing B cells and CD3-expressing T cells. By binding to both, it induces T-cell activation and generates a polyclonal cytotoxic T-cell response, leading to the lysis of malignant B cells.
Generics
The panel also adopted positive opinions for two generic cancer medicines.
Enzalutamide Viatris (enzalutamide) is indicated for the treatment of adult men with prostate cancer in several scenarios:
- As monotherapy or with androgen-deprivation therapy for high-risk biochemical recurrent nonmetastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer in men unsuitable for salvage-radiotherapy.
- In combination with androgen-deprivation therapy for metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer.
- For high-risk nonmetastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC).
- For metastatic CRPC in men who are asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic after failure of androgen-deprivation therapy, where chemotherapy is not yet indicated.
- For metastatic CRPC in men whose disease has progressed on or after docetaxel therapy.
Enzalutamide Viatris is a generic version of Xtandi, authorized in the European Union since June 2013. Studies have confirmed the satisfactory quality and bioequivalence of Enzalutamide Viatris to Xtandi.
Enzalutamide Viatris will be available as 40-mg and 80-mg film-coated tablets. The active substance of Enzalutamide Viatris is enzalutamide, a hormone antagonist that blocks multiple steps in the androgen receptor–signaling pathway.
Nilotinib Accord (nilotinib) is indicated for the treatment of Philadelphia chromosome–positive chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML).
It is used in adult and pediatric patients with newly diagnosed CML in the chronic phase, adult patients with chronic phase and accelerated phase CML with resistance or intolerance to prior therapy including imatinib, and pediatric patients with CML with resistance or intolerance to prior therapy including imatinib.
Nilotinib Accord is a generic of Tasigna, authorized in the European Union since November 2007. Studies have demonstrated the satisfactory quality and bioequivalence of Nilotinib Accord to Tasigna.
Nilotinib Accord will be available as 50-mg, 150-mg, and 200-mg hard capsules. The active substance of Nilotinib Accord is nilotinib, an antineoplastic protein kinase inhibitor that targets BCR-ABL kinase and other oncogenic kinases.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
AML: Shorter Venetoclax Course Shows Promise for Some
However, the azacitidine plus venetoclax therapy — the “7+7” regimen — was associated with lower platelet transfusion requirements and lower 8-week mortality, suggesting the regimen might be preferable in certain patient populations, Alexandre Bazinet, MD, of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, reported at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) annual meeting.
The composite complete remission (CRc) rate, including complete remission with or without complete count recovery, was identical at 72% among 82 patients treated with the 7+7 regimen and 166 treated with standard therapy, and the complete remission (CR) rate was 57% and 55%, respectively, Dr. Bazinet said.
The median number of cycles to first response was one in both groups, but 42% of responders in the 7+7 group required more than one cycle to achieve their first response, compared with just 1% of those in the standard therapy group, he noted, adding that the median number of cycles to achieve best response was two in the 7+7 group and one in the standard therapy group.
The mortality rate at 4 weeks was similar in the groups (2% vs 5% for 7+7 vs standard therapy), but at 8 weeks, the mortality rate was significantly higher in the standard therapy group (6% vs 16%, respectively). Median overall survival (OS) was 11.2 months versus 10.3 months, and median 2-year survival was 27.7% versus 33.6% in the groups, respectively.
Event-free survival was 6.5 versus 7.4 months, and 2-year event-free survival was 24.5% versus 27.0%, respectively.
Of note, fewer patients in the 7+7 group required platelet transfusions during cycle 1 (62% vs 77%) and the cycle 1 rates of neutropenic fever and red cell transfusion requirements were similar in the two treatment groups, Dr. Bazinet said.
Study participants were 82 adults from seven centers in France who received the 7+7 regimen, and 166 adults from MD Anderson who received standard therapy with a hypomethylating agent plus venetoclax doublets given for 21-28 days during induction. Preliminary data on the 7+7 regimen in patients from the French centers were reported previously and “suggested preserved efficacy with potentially less toxicity,” he noted.
“A hypomethylating agent plus venetoclax doublets are standard-of-care in patients with AML who are older or ineligible for chemotherapy due to comorbidities,” Dr. Bazinet explained, adding that although the venetoclax label calls for 28 days of drug per cycle, shorter courses of 14 to 21 days are commonly used.
These findings are limited by the retrospective study design and by small patient numbers in many subgroups, he said.
“In addition, the cohorts were heterogeneous, consisting of patients treated with a variety of different regimens and across multiple centers and countries. The distribution of FLT3-ITD and NRAS/KRAS mutations differed significantly between cohorts,” he explained, also noting that prophylactic azole use differed across the cohort. “Furthermore, analysis of the toxicity results was also limited by likely differing transfusion polices in different centers.”
Overall, however, the findings suggest that reducing the duration of venetoclax is safe and results in similar CRc rates, although responses may be faster with standard dosing, he said, adding that “7+7 is potentially less toxic and is attractive in patients who are more frail or at risk for complications.”
“Our data support further study of shorter venetoclax duration, within emerging triplet regimens in patients with intermediate or low predictive benefit to mitigate toxicity,” he concluded.
Dr. Bazinet reported having no disclosures.
However, the azacitidine plus venetoclax therapy — the “7+7” regimen — was associated with lower platelet transfusion requirements and lower 8-week mortality, suggesting the regimen might be preferable in certain patient populations, Alexandre Bazinet, MD, of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, reported at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) annual meeting.
The composite complete remission (CRc) rate, including complete remission with or without complete count recovery, was identical at 72% among 82 patients treated with the 7+7 regimen and 166 treated with standard therapy, and the complete remission (CR) rate was 57% and 55%, respectively, Dr. Bazinet said.
The median number of cycles to first response was one in both groups, but 42% of responders in the 7+7 group required more than one cycle to achieve their first response, compared with just 1% of those in the standard therapy group, he noted, adding that the median number of cycles to achieve best response was two in the 7+7 group and one in the standard therapy group.
The mortality rate at 4 weeks was similar in the groups (2% vs 5% for 7+7 vs standard therapy), but at 8 weeks, the mortality rate was significantly higher in the standard therapy group (6% vs 16%, respectively). Median overall survival (OS) was 11.2 months versus 10.3 months, and median 2-year survival was 27.7% versus 33.6% in the groups, respectively.
Event-free survival was 6.5 versus 7.4 months, and 2-year event-free survival was 24.5% versus 27.0%, respectively.
Of note, fewer patients in the 7+7 group required platelet transfusions during cycle 1 (62% vs 77%) and the cycle 1 rates of neutropenic fever and red cell transfusion requirements were similar in the two treatment groups, Dr. Bazinet said.
Study participants were 82 adults from seven centers in France who received the 7+7 regimen, and 166 adults from MD Anderson who received standard therapy with a hypomethylating agent plus venetoclax doublets given for 21-28 days during induction. Preliminary data on the 7+7 regimen in patients from the French centers were reported previously and “suggested preserved efficacy with potentially less toxicity,” he noted.
“A hypomethylating agent plus venetoclax doublets are standard-of-care in patients with AML who are older or ineligible for chemotherapy due to comorbidities,” Dr. Bazinet explained, adding that although the venetoclax label calls for 28 days of drug per cycle, shorter courses of 14 to 21 days are commonly used.
These findings are limited by the retrospective study design and by small patient numbers in many subgroups, he said.
“In addition, the cohorts were heterogeneous, consisting of patients treated with a variety of different regimens and across multiple centers and countries. The distribution of FLT3-ITD and NRAS/KRAS mutations differed significantly between cohorts,” he explained, also noting that prophylactic azole use differed across the cohort. “Furthermore, analysis of the toxicity results was also limited by likely differing transfusion polices in different centers.”
Overall, however, the findings suggest that reducing the duration of venetoclax is safe and results in similar CRc rates, although responses may be faster with standard dosing, he said, adding that “7+7 is potentially less toxic and is attractive in patients who are more frail or at risk for complications.”
“Our data support further study of shorter venetoclax duration, within emerging triplet regimens in patients with intermediate or low predictive benefit to mitigate toxicity,” he concluded.
Dr. Bazinet reported having no disclosures.
However, the azacitidine plus venetoclax therapy — the “7+7” regimen — was associated with lower platelet transfusion requirements and lower 8-week mortality, suggesting the regimen might be preferable in certain patient populations, Alexandre Bazinet, MD, of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, reported at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) annual meeting.
The composite complete remission (CRc) rate, including complete remission with or without complete count recovery, was identical at 72% among 82 patients treated with the 7+7 regimen and 166 treated with standard therapy, and the complete remission (CR) rate was 57% and 55%, respectively, Dr. Bazinet said.
The median number of cycles to first response was one in both groups, but 42% of responders in the 7+7 group required more than one cycle to achieve their first response, compared with just 1% of those in the standard therapy group, he noted, adding that the median number of cycles to achieve best response was two in the 7+7 group and one in the standard therapy group.
The mortality rate at 4 weeks was similar in the groups (2% vs 5% for 7+7 vs standard therapy), but at 8 weeks, the mortality rate was significantly higher in the standard therapy group (6% vs 16%, respectively). Median overall survival (OS) was 11.2 months versus 10.3 months, and median 2-year survival was 27.7% versus 33.6% in the groups, respectively.
Event-free survival was 6.5 versus 7.4 months, and 2-year event-free survival was 24.5% versus 27.0%, respectively.
Of note, fewer patients in the 7+7 group required platelet transfusions during cycle 1 (62% vs 77%) and the cycle 1 rates of neutropenic fever and red cell transfusion requirements were similar in the two treatment groups, Dr. Bazinet said.
Study participants were 82 adults from seven centers in France who received the 7+7 regimen, and 166 adults from MD Anderson who received standard therapy with a hypomethylating agent plus venetoclax doublets given for 21-28 days during induction. Preliminary data on the 7+7 regimen in patients from the French centers were reported previously and “suggested preserved efficacy with potentially less toxicity,” he noted.
“A hypomethylating agent plus venetoclax doublets are standard-of-care in patients with AML who are older or ineligible for chemotherapy due to comorbidities,” Dr. Bazinet explained, adding that although the venetoclax label calls for 28 days of drug per cycle, shorter courses of 14 to 21 days are commonly used.
These findings are limited by the retrospective study design and by small patient numbers in many subgroups, he said.
“In addition, the cohorts were heterogeneous, consisting of patients treated with a variety of different regimens and across multiple centers and countries. The distribution of FLT3-ITD and NRAS/KRAS mutations differed significantly between cohorts,” he explained, also noting that prophylactic azole use differed across the cohort. “Furthermore, analysis of the toxicity results was also limited by likely differing transfusion polices in different centers.”
Overall, however, the findings suggest that reducing the duration of venetoclax is safe and results in similar CRc rates, although responses may be faster with standard dosing, he said, adding that “7+7 is potentially less toxic and is attractive in patients who are more frail or at risk for complications.”
“Our data support further study of shorter venetoclax duration, within emerging triplet regimens in patients with intermediate or low predictive benefit to mitigate toxicity,” he concluded.
Dr. Bazinet reported having no disclosures.
FROM ASCO 2024
Eptinezumab Inhibitor Fails Cluster Headache Test
SAN DIEGO — However, the drug met secondary outcomes of reduction in weekly attacks, mean change in baseline pain, and Patient Global Impression of Change (PGIC) score.
Eptinezumab is the latest of multiple anti–calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) therapies to fail in the clinic against episodic cluster headache, all using weekly attacks as a primary endpoint, though therapies also scored positive results for secondary endpoints, according to Stewart Tepper, MD, who presented the study results at the annual meeting of the American Headache Society
Eptinezumab is already approved for migraine, and is fully bioavailable by the end of an infusion. “That was why we thought this might be a really interesting treatment for prevention of cluster headache,” said Dr. Tepper, who is VP of external research at the New England Institute for Neurology and Headache in Stamford, Connecticut.
Are We Looking at the Wrong Endpoint?
Secondary endpoints offered more encouragement. “For each week, the eptinezumab looked either numerically higher than the placebo or nominal statistical significance was achieved. By week 4, two-thirds of the patients had at least a 50% reduction in their number of weekly cluster attacks. Then the average pain intensity for the day and the patient global impression of change were all in favor of eptinezumab. That made us interested in whether we’re missing something, whether this is maybe not the correct endpoint to be looking at,” said Dr. Tepper.
He suggested that it may be time for the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to reconsider the endpoints used in clinical trials for cluster headaches.
Study criteria included cluster periods that lasted at least 6 weeks, and at least 1 year since the diagnosis of episodic cluster headache. The study enrolled patients who were out of their cluster period, who underwent a second screening of 7-14 days after they entered a new cycle. After that, they were randomized to an injection of placebo or 400 mg eptinezumab, and followed for 4 weeks. After 4 weeks, all patients received an injection of 400 mg eptinezumab and placebo patients were crossed over to eptinezumab and followed out to 24 weeks.
The study population included 231 patients (78% male; mean age, 44 years), with a mean of 2.7 cluster headache attacks per day an average duration of 62 minutes per attack. The worst pain was reported as excruciating in 59% of participants.
The mean change in number of weekly attacks in weeks 1 and 2, compared with baseline, was not statistically significant (–4.6 with eptinezumab, –4.6 with placebo; P = .5048). More patients in the eptinezumab group had a 50% or greater reduction in attack frequency in weeks 3 (50.9% vs 37.3%; P < .05), week 3 (62.5% vs 43.8%; P < .01), and week 4 (66.7% vs 50.5%; P < .01). The difference in mean change in pain from baseline became statistically significant at week 3 and 4 (P < .01). There were also statistically significant differences in PGIC score at weeks 1, 2, and 4. The frequency of any treatment-emergent adverse event was similar in the eptinezumab and placebo groups (25.0% vs 26.5%), and only one led to treatment withdrawal in the eptinezumab group (0.9%).
Thoughts on Redesigning Cluster Headache Clinical Trials
During the Q&A session, Andrea Harriott, MD, PhD, a neurologist at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and the session’s moderator, asked Dr. Tepper for his thoughts on how to design a good cluster headache trial. “I think we should go to the regulators and say we’re looking at the wrong outcome measure, and that we should use responder rate as the primary endpoint. That’s my guess. I think after four failed cluster studies for anti-CGRP therapies in terms of primary endpoint, all of which suggest some benefit, I think maybe we are looking at the wrong endpoint,” said Dr. Tepper.
Dr. Tepper was also asked about the potential for comparative efficacy trials testing anti-CGRP versus usual therapy, or usual therapy combined with antibodies against usual therapy. He noted that he had coauthored a recent commentary that responded to International Headache Society 2022 guidelines for randomized, placebo-controlled trials in cluster headache. “We actually did suggest comparative effectiveness [trials], both for recruitment and for compassion, but one of the problems is that verapamil is not even FDA approved for cluster headache in the US, and galcanezumab (Emgality, Eli Lilly) [is not approved] in the EU, so it becomes difficult from a regulatory standpoint to set that up, and you have to have buy in from regulatory authorities,” said Dr. Tepper.
Dr. Tepper has financial relationships with many pharmaceutical companies, including consulting for/advising Lundbeck, which funded the study. Dr. Harriott has served on the scientific advisory board of Theranica and has an authorship agreement with AbbVie.
SAN DIEGO — However, the drug met secondary outcomes of reduction in weekly attacks, mean change in baseline pain, and Patient Global Impression of Change (PGIC) score.
Eptinezumab is the latest of multiple anti–calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) therapies to fail in the clinic against episodic cluster headache, all using weekly attacks as a primary endpoint, though therapies also scored positive results for secondary endpoints, according to Stewart Tepper, MD, who presented the study results at the annual meeting of the American Headache Society
Eptinezumab is already approved for migraine, and is fully bioavailable by the end of an infusion. “That was why we thought this might be a really interesting treatment for prevention of cluster headache,” said Dr. Tepper, who is VP of external research at the New England Institute for Neurology and Headache in Stamford, Connecticut.
Are We Looking at the Wrong Endpoint?
Secondary endpoints offered more encouragement. “For each week, the eptinezumab looked either numerically higher than the placebo or nominal statistical significance was achieved. By week 4, two-thirds of the patients had at least a 50% reduction in their number of weekly cluster attacks. Then the average pain intensity for the day and the patient global impression of change were all in favor of eptinezumab. That made us interested in whether we’re missing something, whether this is maybe not the correct endpoint to be looking at,” said Dr. Tepper.
He suggested that it may be time for the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to reconsider the endpoints used in clinical trials for cluster headaches.
Study criteria included cluster periods that lasted at least 6 weeks, and at least 1 year since the diagnosis of episodic cluster headache. The study enrolled patients who were out of their cluster period, who underwent a second screening of 7-14 days after they entered a new cycle. After that, they were randomized to an injection of placebo or 400 mg eptinezumab, and followed for 4 weeks. After 4 weeks, all patients received an injection of 400 mg eptinezumab and placebo patients were crossed over to eptinezumab and followed out to 24 weeks.
The study population included 231 patients (78% male; mean age, 44 years), with a mean of 2.7 cluster headache attacks per day an average duration of 62 minutes per attack. The worst pain was reported as excruciating in 59% of participants.
The mean change in number of weekly attacks in weeks 1 and 2, compared with baseline, was not statistically significant (–4.6 with eptinezumab, –4.6 with placebo; P = .5048). More patients in the eptinezumab group had a 50% or greater reduction in attack frequency in weeks 3 (50.9% vs 37.3%; P < .05), week 3 (62.5% vs 43.8%; P < .01), and week 4 (66.7% vs 50.5%; P < .01). The difference in mean change in pain from baseline became statistically significant at week 3 and 4 (P < .01). There were also statistically significant differences in PGIC score at weeks 1, 2, and 4. The frequency of any treatment-emergent adverse event was similar in the eptinezumab and placebo groups (25.0% vs 26.5%), and only one led to treatment withdrawal in the eptinezumab group (0.9%).
Thoughts on Redesigning Cluster Headache Clinical Trials
During the Q&A session, Andrea Harriott, MD, PhD, a neurologist at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and the session’s moderator, asked Dr. Tepper for his thoughts on how to design a good cluster headache trial. “I think we should go to the regulators and say we’re looking at the wrong outcome measure, and that we should use responder rate as the primary endpoint. That’s my guess. I think after four failed cluster studies for anti-CGRP therapies in terms of primary endpoint, all of which suggest some benefit, I think maybe we are looking at the wrong endpoint,” said Dr. Tepper.
Dr. Tepper was also asked about the potential for comparative efficacy trials testing anti-CGRP versus usual therapy, or usual therapy combined with antibodies against usual therapy. He noted that he had coauthored a recent commentary that responded to International Headache Society 2022 guidelines for randomized, placebo-controlled trials in cluster headache. “We actually did suggest comparative effectiveness [trials], both for recruitment and for compassion, but one of the problems is that verapamil is not even FDA approved for cluster headache in the US, and galcanezumab (Emgality, Eli Lilly) [is not approved] in the EU, so it becomes difficult from a regulatory standpoint to set that up, and you have to have buy in from regulatory authorities,” said Dr. Tepper.
Dr. Tepper has financial relationships with many pharmaceutical companies, including consulting for/advising Lundbeck, which funded the study. Dr. Harriott has served on the scientific advisory board of Theranica and has an authorship agreement with AbbVie.
SAN DIEGO — However, the drug met secondary outcomes of reduction in weekly attacks, mean change in baseline pain, and Patient Global Impression of Change (PGIC) score.
Eptinezumab is the latest of multiple anti–calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) therapies to fail in the clinic against episodic cluster headache, all using weekly attacks as a primary endpoint, though therapies also scored positive results for secondary endpoints, according to Stewart Tepper, MD, who presented the study results at the annual meeting of the American Headache Society
Eptinezumab is already approved for migraine, and is fully bioavailable by the end of an infusion. “That was why we thought this might be a really interesting treatment for prevention of cluster headache,” said Dr. Tepper, who is VP of external research at the New England Institute for Neurology and Headache in Stamford, Connecticut.
Are We Looking at the Wrong Endpoint?
Secondary endpoints offered more encouragement. “For each week, the eptinezumab looked either numerically higher than the placebo or nominal statistical significance was achieved. By week 4, two-thirds of the patients had at least a 50% reduction in their number of weekly cluster attacks. Then the average pain intensity for the day and the patient global impression of change were all in favor of eptinezumab. That made us interested in whether we’re missing something, whether this is maybe not the correct endpoint to be looking at,” said Dr. Tepper.
He suggested that it may be time for the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to reconsider the endpoints used in clinical trials for cluster headaches.
Study criteria included cluster periods that lasted at least 6 weeks, and at least 1 year since the diagnosis of episodic cluster headache. The study enrolled patients who were out of their cluster period, who underwent a second screening of 7-14 days after they entered a new cycle. After that, they were randomized to an injection of placebo or 400 mg eptinezumab, and followed for 4 weeks. After 4 weeks, all patients received an injection of 400 mg eptinezumab and placebo patients were crossed over to eptinezumab and followed out to 24 weeks.
The study population included 231 patients (78% male; mean age, 44 years), with a mean of 2.7 cluster headache attacks per day an average duration of 62 minutes per attack. The worst pain was reported as excruciating in 59% of participants.
The mean change in number of weekly attacks in weeks 1 and 2, compared with baseline, was not statistically significant (–4.6 with eptinezumab, –4.6 with placebo; P = .5048). More patients in the eptinezumab group had a 50% or greater reduction in attack frequency in weeks 3 (50.9% vs 37.3%; P < .05), week 3 (62.5% vs 43.8%; P < .01), and week 4 (66.7% vs 50.5%; P < .01). The difference in mean change in pain from baseline became statistically significant at week 3 and 4 (P < .01). There were also statistically significant differences in PGIC score at weeks 1, 2, and 4. The frequency of any treatment-emergent adverse event was similar in the eptinezumab and placebo groups (25.0% vs 26.5%), and only one led to treatment withdrawal in the eptinezumab group (0.9%).
Thoughts on Redesigning Cluster Headache Clinical Trials
During the Q&A session, Andrea Harriott, MD, PhD, a neurologist at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and the session’s moderator, asked Dr. Tepper for his thoughts on how to design a good cluster headache trial. “I think we should go to the regulators and say we’re looking at the wrong outcome measure, and that we should use responder rate as the primary endpoint. That’s my guess. I think after four failed cluster studies for anti-CGRP therapies in terms of primary endpoint, all of which suggest some benefit, I think maybe we are looking at the wrong endpoint,” said Dr. Tepper.
Dr. Tepper was also asked about the potential for comparative efficacy trials testing anti-CGRP versus usual therapy, or usual therapy combined with antibodies against usual therapy. He noted that he had coauthored a recent commentary that responded to International Headache Society 2022 guidelines for randomized, placebo-controlled trials in cluster headache. “We actually did suggest comparative effectiveness [trials], both for recruitment and for compassion, but one of the problems is that verapamil is not even FDA approved for cluster headache in the US, and galcanezumab (Emgality, Eli Lilly) [is not approved] in the EU, so it becomes difficult from a regulatory standpoint to set that up, and you have to have buy in from regulatory authorities,” said Dr. Tepper.
Dr. Tepper has financial relationships with many pharmaceutical companies, including consulting for/advising Lundbeck, which funded the study. Dr. Harriott has served on the scientific advisory board of Theranica and has an authorship agreement with AbbVie.
FROM AHS 2024
Psoriatic Arthritis Symptoms Relieved with TYK2 Inhibitor in Phase 2 Trial
TOPLINE:
The tyrosine kinase 2 (TYK2) inhibitor TAK-279 demonstrated superiority to placebo in patients with active psoriatic arthritis (PsA), according to phase 2 trial results.
METHODOLOGY:
- Eligible patients were over 18 years old, had PsA for over 6 months, met the classification criteria for PsA, and had at least three swollen and tender joints despite prior nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug, disease-modifying antirheumatic drug, or biologic treatment.
- A total of 290 patients were randomized 1:1:1:1 to receive placebo, oral TAK-279 5 mg, 15 mg, or 30 mg once daily.
- The primary endpoint was a 20% improvement in the American College of Rheumatology response criteria (ACR20) at 12 weeks.
TAKEAWAY:
- More than half of patients assigned to TAK-279 15 mg (53.3%) and TAK-279 30 mg (54.2%) achieved ACR20 at 12 weeks, compared with 29.2% of those assigned to placebo.
- Psoriasis Area and Severity Index 75 response rates were also higher in patients assigned to TAK-279 30 mg (45.7%) or 15 mg (28.3%) than those in placebo (15.4%).
- Treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) of any kind were numerically higher in the 30-mg group, though serious TEAEs were similar across all treatment arms.
- The most frequent adverse events were nasal pharyngitis, upper respiratory tract infections, headache, and rash, with rash being most common in the TAK-279 30-mg group.
IN PRACTICE:
“There are few targeted oral therapies for active PSA available currently,” said lead author Alan Kivitz, MD, Altoona Center for Clinical Research, Duncansville, Pennsylvania, “and [TAK-279], which was well tolerated and demonstrated superior efficacy versus placebo, may be a promising targeted oral therapy for patients with PsA.”
SOURCE:
Dr. Kivitz presented the study findings at the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology (EULAR) 2024 Annual Meeting, held in Vienna.
LIMITATIONS:
The study was a phase 2 trial, and larger studies in active PsA are needed (and currently being planned).
DISCLOSURES:
The phase 2 trial was funded by Nimbus and Takeda. Dr. Kivitz has received payment or honoraria for lectures, presentations, speakers bureaus, manuscript writing, or educational events from AbbVie, Amgen, Eli Lilly, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, and UCB. He has stock or stock options in Pfizer, Amgen, GlaxoSmithKline, Gilead, Novartis, and Pfizer and has received consultant fees from Fresenius Kabi, Genzyme, Gilead, Grunenthal, GlaxoSmithKline, Horizon, Janssen, Pfizer, Selecta, SynAct Pharma, and Takeda. He has been part of a board or advisory board for ChemoCentryx, Horizon, Janssen, Novartis, Princeton Biopartners, and UCB. Other authors also disclosed many relationships with pharmaceutical companies.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
The tyrosine kinase 2 (TYK2) inhibitor TAK-279 demonstrated superiority to placebo in patients with active psoriatic arthritis (PsA), according to phase 2 trial results.
METHODOLOGY:
- Eligible patients were over 18 years old, had PsA for over 6 months, met the classification criteria for PsA, and had at least three swollen and tender joints despite prior nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug, disease-modifying antirheumatic drug, or biologic treatment.
- A total of 290 patients were randomized 1:1:1:1 to receive placebo, oral TAK-279 5 mg, 15 mg, or 30 mg once daily.
- The primary endpoint was a 20% improvement in the American College of Rheumatology response criteria (ACR20) at 12 weeks.
TAKEAWAY:
- More than half of patients assigned to TAK-279 15 mg (53.3%) and TAK-279 30 mg (54.2%) achieved ACR20 at 12 weeks, compared with 29.2% of those assigned to placebo.
- Psoriasis Area and Severity Index 75 response rates were also higher in patients assigned to TAK-279 30 mg (45.7%) or 15 mg (28.3%) than those in placebo (15.4%).
- Treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) of any kind were numerically higher in the 30-mg group, though serious TEAEs were similar across all treatment arms.
- The most frequent adverse events were nasal pharyngitis, upper respiratory tract infections, headache, and rash, with rash being most common in the TAK-279 30-mg group.
IN PRACTICE:
“There are few targeted oral therapies for active PSA available currently,” said lead author Alan Kivitz, MD, Altoona Center for Clinical Research, Duncansville, Pennsylvania, “and [TAK-279], which was well tolerated and demonstrated superior efficacy versus placebo, may be a promising targeted oral therapy for patients with PsA.”
SOURCE:
Dr. Kivitz presented the study findings at the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology (EULAR) 2024 Annual Meeting, held in Vienna.
LIMITATIONS:
The study was a phase 2 trial, and larger studies in active PsA are needed (and currently being planned).
DISCLOSURES:
The phase 2 trial was funded by Nimbus and Takeda. Dr. Kivitz has received payment or honoraria for lectures, presentations, speakers bureaus, manuscript writing, or educational events from AbbVie, Amgen, Eli Lilly, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, and UCB. He has stock or stock options in Pfizer, Amgen, GlaxoSmithKline, Gilead, Novartis, and Pfizer and has received consultant fees from Fresenius Kabi, Genzyme, Gilead, Grunenthal, GlaxoSmithKline, Horizon, Janssen, Pfizer, Selecta, SynAct Pharma, and Takeda. He has been part of a board or advisory board for ChemoCentryx, Horizon, Janssen, Novartis, Princeton Biopartners, and UCB. Other authors also disclosed many relationships with pharmaceutical companies.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
The tyrosine kinase 2 (TYK2) inhibitor TAK-279 demonstrated superiority to placebo in patients with active psoriatic arthritis (PsA), according to phase 2 trial results.
METHODOLOGY:
- Eligible patients were over 18 years old, had PsA for over 6 months, met the classification criteria for PsA, and had at least three swollen and tender joints despite prior nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug, disease-modifying antirheumatic drug, or biologic treatment.
- A total of 290 patients were randomized 1:1:1:1 to receive placebo, oral TAK-279 5 mg, 15 mg, or 30 mg once daily.
- The primary endpoint was a 20% improvement in the American College of Rheumatology response criteria (ACR20) at 12 weeks.
TAKEAWAY:
- More than half of patients assigned to TAK-279 15 mg (53.3%) and TAK-279 30 mg (54.2%) achieved ACR20 at 12 weeks, compared with 29.2% of those assigned to placebo.
- Psoriasis Area and Severity Index 75 response rates were also higher in patients assigned to TAK-279 30 mg (45.7%) or 15 mg (28.3%) than those in placebo (15.4%).
- Treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) of any kind were numerically higher in the 30-mg group, though serious TEAEs were similar across all treatment arms.
- The most frequent adverse events were nasal pharyngitis, upper respiratory tract infections, headache, and rash, with rash being most common in the TAK-279 30-mg group.
IN PRACTICE:
“There are few targeted oral therapies for active PSA available currently,” said lead author Alan Kivitz, MD, Altoona Center for Clinical Research, Duncansville, Pennsylvania, “and [TAK-279], which was well tolerated and demonstrated superior efficacy versus placebo, may be a promising targeted oral therapy for patients with PsA.”
SOURCE:
Dr. Kivitz presented the study findings at the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology (EULAR) 2024 Annual Meeting, held in Vienna.
LIMITATIONS:
The study was a phase 2 trial, and larger studies in active PsA are needed (and currently being planned).
DISCLOSURES:
The phase 2 trial was funded by Nimbus and Takeda. Dr. Kivitz has received payment or honoraria for lectures, presentations, speakers bureaus, manuscript writing, or educational events from AbbVie, Amgen, Eli Lilly, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, and UCB. He has stock or stock options in Pfizer, Amgen, GlaxoSmithKline, Gilead, Novartis, and Pfizer and has received consultant fees from Fresenius Kabi, Genzyme, Gilead, Grunenthal, GlaxoSmithKline, Horizon, Janssen, Pfizer, Selecta, SynAct Pharma, and Takeda. He has been part of a board or advisory board for ChemoCentryx, Horizon, Janssen, Novartis, Princeton Biopartners, and UCB. Other authors also disclosed many relationships with pharmaceutical companies.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.