| Literature DB >> 22193916 |
Elie Haddad1, Melvin Berger, Edward C Y Wang, Christopher A Jones, Martin Bexon, Jeffrey S Baggish.
Abstract
The recommended dose of IgG in primary immunodeficiency (PID) has been increasing since its first use. This study aimed to determine if higher subcutaneous IgG doses resulted in improved patient outcomes by comparing results from two parallel clinical studies with similar design. One patient cohort received subcutaneous IgG doses that were 1.5 times higher than their previous intravenous doses (mean 213 mg/kg/week), whereas the other cohort received doses identical to previous subcutaneous or intravenous doses (mean 120 mg/kg/week). While neither cohort had any serious infections, the cohort maintained on higher mean IgG dose had significantly lower rates of non-serious infections (2.76 vs. 5.18 episodes/year, P < 0.0001), hospitalization (0.20 vs. 3.48 days/year, P < 0.0001), antibiotic use (48.50 vs. 72.75 days/year, P < 0.001), and missed work/school activity (2.10 vs. 8.00 days/year, P < 0.001). The higher-dose cohort had lower health care utilization and improved indices of well being compared to the cohort treated with traditional IgG doses.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 22193916 PMCID: PMC3305876 DOI: 10.1007/s10875-011-9631-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Immunol ISSN: 0271-9142 Impact factor: 8.317
Comparison of the Hizentra® US and EU clinical registration trials
| Hizentra® trial enrolling patients primarily from the EU | Hizentra® trial enrolling patients from the USA | |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-trial requirements | • 6 months of stable outcomes | • 6 months of stable outcomes |
| • Stable | • Stable | |
| • 3 trough levels ≥500 mg/dL | • 3 trough levels ≥500 mg/dL | |
| Inclusion/exclusion criteria | Same [ | Same [ |
| Wash-in/wash-out period | 12 weeks | 12 weeks |
| Hizentra® dose during wash-in/wash-out period | Equivalent to pre-trial IgG dose | 1.3 times the pre-trial IgG dose |
| Efficacy period |
|
|
| Hizentra® dose during efficacy period | Equivalent to pre-trial IgG dose | 1.5 times the pre-trial IgG dosea
|
| Outcomes measured | Same (IgG trough levels, rate of infections, hospitalization days, days of antibiotic use, and missed work/school days) | Same (IgG trough levels, rate of infections, hospitalization days, days of antibiotic use, and missed work/school days) |
aBased on a US FDA-mandated dose adjustment coefficient determined in pharmacokinetic sub-study [27] to maintain area under the concentration-time curve following switch from IVIG
EU European Union, IV intravenous, SC subcutaneous, US United States
Summary of baseline and dosing characteristics of the patients in each trial
| Parameter | 1:1 dose cohort (EU) ( | 1.5:1 dose cohort (US) ( |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender (%) | |||
| Female | 33 | 55 | 0.0368a |
| Male | 67 | 45 | |
| Age (years) | |||
| Mean (SD) | 21.5 (15.6) | 36.3 (19.5) | 0.0003b |
| Age group (%) | |||
| 2–11 years | 37 | 8 | 0.0134a |
| 2–16 years | 50 | 24 | |
| >16 years | 50 | 76 | |
| Weight (kg) | |||
| Mean (SD) | 52.1 (24.7) | 70.0 (21.3) | 0.0006b |
| PID diagnosis (%) | |||
| CVID | 61 | 95 | 0.0014a |
| XLA | 37 | 5 | |
| ARAG | 2 | 0 | |
| Mean weekly doses before study start (mg/kg) | 122 | 144 | N/A |
| Median IgG levels before study start (mg/dL) | N/A | ||
| Meanc (SD) | 749 (157) | 1,010 (257) | |
| Weekly dose of Hizentra® during the efficacy period (mg/kg) | |||
| Meanc (range) [SD] | 120 (59–243) [34] | 213 (72–379) [78] | <0.0001b |
| Mean trough level during the efficacy period (mg/dL) | |||
| Meanc (SD) | 810 (144) | 1,254 (322) | <0.0001b |
ARAG autosomal recessive agammaglobulinemia, CVID common variable immunodeficiency, EU European Union, N/A not applicable, SD standard deviation, US United States, XLA X-linked agammaglobulinemia
aChi-square test
bStudent's t-test
cMean of individual patient median values
Comparison of health outcomes in the two cohorts of PID patients treated with different doses of subcutaneous Hizentra®
| 1:1 dose cohort (EU) ( | 1.5:1 dose cohort (US) ( | Analysis of differences between cohorts | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Univariate comparisons | Multi-factorial comparisons adjusting for covariables | |||
| Rate of serious infections (events/patient/year) | 0 | 0 | ||
| Rate of infections (events/patient/year) | 5.18 | 2.76 | <0.0001b | <0.0001b |
| Sensitivity analysisa | 5.16 | <0.0001b | <0.0001b | |
| Rate of days of hospitalization due to infection (days/patient/year) | 3.48 | 0.20 | <0.0001b | <0.0001b, d |
| Sensitivity analysisa | 0.95 | 0.0003b | N/Ae | |
| Percent of patients hospitalized due to infection | 8.7 | 2.6 | 0.2423c | N/A |
| Sensitivity analysisa | 6.67 | 0.3925c | ||
| Rate of days with antibiotics for treatment or prophylaxis of infection (days/patient/year) | 72.75 | 48.5 | <0.0001b | <0.0001b |
| Sensitivity analysis a | 66.62 | <0.0001b | <0.0001b | |
| Rate of days missed off work/school due to infection (days/patient/year) | 8.0 | 2.06 | <0.0001b | <0.0001b |
| Sensitivity analysis a | 5.25 | <0.0001b | <0.0001b | |
| Percent of patients missing ≥1 day off work/school per year due to infection | 43.5 | 31.6 | 0.2637c | N/A |
| Sensitivity analysis a | 42.2 | 0.3179c | ||
EU European Union, N/A not applicable, US United States
aSensitivity analysis of health outcomes after exclusion of one patient from the 1:1 cohort (EU) who suffered from recurrent pneumonia
b P-value from Poisson regression
c P value from Chi-square test
dThe factor PID type was dropped from the multi-factorial analysis for hospitalization due to convergence problems
eAnalysis not performed due to non-convergence of the model
Analysis of infection rates in the two cohorts of PID patients
| 1:1 dose cohort (EU) ( | 1.5:1 dose cohort (US) ( | Analysis of differences between cohorts | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number (%) of patients without infections in efficacy period | 10 (21.7) | 7 (18.4) | 0.7064a |
| Number (%) of patients with 1–4 infection episodes in efficacy period | 24 (52.2) | 24 (63.2) | 0.3113a |
| Number (%) of patients with >4 infection episodes in efficacy period | 12 (26.1) | 7 (18.4) | 0.4032a |
| Annualized rate of infection in patients with >4 infection episodes in efficacy period | 12.05 | 8.38 | 0.0430b |
EU European Union, N/A not applicable, US United States
a P value from Chi-square test
b P value from Poisson regression
A summary of the dose comparison studies of IgG in PID published to date
| Publication | Route | IgG preparation | Number of patients | Study design | Outcomes monitored | Results | Dose–response relationship found | Identified upper dose with no incremental benefita |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hill, 1971 [ | Not available | Not available | 176 | Open-label | 0.05 g/kg was superior to 0.025 g/kg (reduced frequency of febrile episodes, otitis media, and pneumonia) | No | No | |
| Montanaro, 1984 [ | IV | Gamimune 10% | 11 | Randomized | No patient outcomes, time from 500 mg/kg dose to serum level under 400 mg/dL | 150 and 500 mg/kg were not differentiated | Nob | N/A |
| Ochs, 1984 [ | IV | Gamimune 10% | 35 | Two-arm randomized, 12 month | Number of infections, antibiotic use, days missed | 100 and 400 mg/kg are equally effective | No | N/A |
| Bernatowska, 1987 [ | IV | Endoglobulin | 12 | Two-arm randomized cross-over with retrospective vhistory, 12 month | Fever, infections, antibiotic use, lung function | 500 mg/kg is superior to 150 mg/kg, especially in children with more symptoms | Yes | No |
| Roifman, 1987 [ | IV | Sandoglobulin | 12 | Two-arm randomized cross-over | Infections, lung function | 600 mg/kg is superior to 200 mg/kg; >500 mg/dL is superior to <500 mg/dL | Yes | No |
| Liese, 1992 [ | IV, IM | Various | 29 | Retrospective chart review | Pneumonia, days hospitalized | 400 mg/kg q3 weeks IV is superior to 200 mg/kg q3 weeks IV or 100 mg/kg q3 weeks IM | Yes | No |
| Pruzanski, 1996 [ | IV | Iveegam | 21 | Three-arm randomized | Infections | 600 or 400 mg/kg is superior to 200 mg/kg; | Yes | Noc |
| Quartier, 1999 [ | IV | Various | 31 | Retrospective chart review | Hospitalization for infection | >800 mg/dL is superior to 500–800 mg/dL or <500 mg/dL | Yes | No |
| Eijkhout, 2001 [ | IV | Immunoglobulin IV | 43 | Two-arm randomized cross-over, 9 month | Infection rate and duration | 600/800 mg/kg is superior to 300/400 mg/kg; 940 mg/dL is superior to 630 mg/dL | Yes | No |
| Roifman, 2003 [ | IV | Gamunex, 10% | 73 | Findings based on post-hoc analysis of data | Infection rate | >900 mg/dL is superior to >700–900 mg/dL; >700–900 mg/dL is superior to <700 mg/dL | Yes | No |
| Gamimune-N 10% | 73 | |||||||
| Favre, 2005 [ | IV | Sandoglobulin | 7 | Observational, 116 patient-years | Infections | 400 mg/kg q3 weeks is superior to 200 mg/kg q3 weeks | Yes | No |
| This study | SC | Hizentra | 84 | Open-label, multi-center, single-arm | Infections, missed work/school days due to infection, hospitalization days due to infection, and days of antibiotic therapy | Mean weekly IgG dose of 120 mg/kg improved secondary efficacy outcomes compared to 213 mg/kg | Yes, for some outcomes | No |
IV intravenous, IM intramuscular, N/A not applicable
aThis pertains to the flat portion of the dose–response curve where an increase in the dose is not associated with any additional clinical response
bNo response or outcomes were monitored, only effect of dose on serum levels
cThe dose–response pattern observed was not consistent with a normal dose–response relationship, in that the highest dose had inferior outcomes to the lowest dose