| Literature DB >> 24504846 |
Hirokazu Kanegane1, Kohsuke Imai, Masafumi Yamada, Hidetoshi Takada, Tadashi Ariga, Martin Bexon, Mikhail Rojavin, Wilson Hu, Midori Kobayashi, John-Philip Lawo, Shigeaki Nonoyama, Toshiro Hara, Toshio Miyawaki.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Intravenous (IVIG) and subcutaneous (SCIG) immunoglobulin infusions are widely used for the treatment of patients with primary immunodeficiency (PID) worldwide. This prospective, multicenter, open-label, single-arm Phase III study evaluated the efficacy, tolerability, and safety of IgPro20 (Hizentra®; L-proline-stabilized 20 % human SCIG) in adult and pediatric Japanese patients with PID.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24504846 PMCID: PMC3937544 DOI: 10.1007/s10875-013-9985-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Immunol ISSN: 0271-9142 Impact factor: 8.317
Fig. 1Study design. Patients received three mandatory IVIG infusions at 3- or 4-week intervals (times for 4-week intervals are shown in brackets), followed by 24 weekly SCIG infusions during the wash-in/wash-out period (Weeks 1–12) and SCIG efficacy period (Weeks 13–25). There were two follow-up visits: completion visit (Week 25) and viral safety follow-up visit 12–17 weeks after completion. The horizontal curve schematically represents the expected fluctuations of serum IgG levels before (dashed curve) and during the SCIG efficacy period (solid curve)
Fig. 2Patient disposition. All 25 screened patients were enrolled into the study and received mandatory IVIG treatment. One patient discontinued from the study during the SCIG wash-in/wash-out period, leaving 24 patients who completed the study
Demographic characteristics of patients
| Patients | ITT | PPS |
|---|---|---|
| Total number of patients | 24 | 21 |
| Gender, n (%) | ||
| Male | 15 (62.5) | 14 (66.7) |
| Female | 9 (37.5) | 7 (33.3) |
| Age [years], median (range) | 17.5 (3–58) | 19.0 (3–58) |
| Age group, n (%) | ||
| <2 years | 0 | 0 |
| ≥2 to <12 years | 7 (29.2) | 4 (19.0) |
| ≥12 to <16 years | 4 (16.7) | 4 (19.0) |
| ≥16 to <65 years | 13 (54.2) | 13 (61.9) |
| ≥65 years | 0 | 0 |
| Asian, n (%) | 24 (100) | 21 (100) |
| Body weight [kg], median (range) | 44.8 (13–105) | 48.9 (13–105) |
| BMI [kg/m2], median (range) | 18.2 (15–33) | 18.2 (15–33) |
| Type of PID, n (%) | ||
| CVID | 10 (41.7) | 9 (42.9) |
| XLA | 12 (50.0) | 11 (52.4) |
| ARAG | 1 (4.2) | 0 |
| VHyper IgM syndrome | 1 (4.2) | 1 (4.8) |
ARAG autosomal recessive agammaglobulinemia, BMI body mass index, CVID common variable immunodeficiency, ITT intention-to-treat, n number of patients, PID primary immunodeficiency, PPS per-protocol data set, XLA X-linked agammaglobulinemia
Weekly IgG doses by treatment period (ITT)
| Treatment period | IVIGa | SCIG wash-in/wash-out | SCIG efficacy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total number of infusions | 72 | 288 | 288 |
| IgG dose, mg/kg bw | |||
| Mean (SD) | 77.3 (30.5) | 82.2 (33.4) | 87.8 (35.2) |
| Median | 73.00 | 72.98 | 77.82 |
| Range, min–max | 21.5–144.3 | 26.4–177.8 | 26.7–172.7 |
aWeekly equivalent dose across both application schedules (every 3 weeks and every 4 weeks) was calculated based on individual infusions
bw body weight, ITT intention-to-treat, IVIG intravenous immunoglobulin, SCIG subcutaneous immunoglobulin, SD standard deviation
Fig. 3Mean total serum IgG trough levels (PPS). Mean total serum IgG trough levels are shown for the PPS (N = 21). The number of patients with available IgG levels differed from the original patient number in the PPS at Week 20 (N = 20; *) and Week 24 (N = 18; **). Error bars represent the standard error of the mean
Summary of secondary efficacy endpoints (PPS)
| Secondary efficacy endpoint | Number of patients (%) | Number of events/days (annualized rate) |
|---|---|---|
| Total number of patients or exposure days (diary daysa) | 21 | 1,840 (1,990) |
| SBIs | 0 | 0 |
| Infection episodes | 11 (52.4) | 15 (2.98) |
| Days with antibiotics for infection prophylaxis | 5 (23.8) | 422 (83.71) |
| Days with antibiotics for infection treatment | 13 (61.9) | 458 (90.85) |
| Days hospitalized due to infectionsa | 1 (4.8) | 3 (0.55) |
| Days missed from work/school or unable to perform normal activities due to infectionsa | 7 (33.3) | 19 (3.48) |
aAs per “diary days” based on analysis of patients’ diaries. SBI serious bacterial infection; PPS per-protocol data set
Most common related AEs during the entire SCIG treatment period (SCIG wash-in/wash-out and SCIG efficacy periods) by preferred term (AT)
| Preferred term | At least possibly related | At least possibly related and temporally associated events (72 h) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients (%) | Number of events (rate per infusion) | Number of patients (%) | Number of events (rate per infusion) | |
| Total number of patients or infusions | 25 | 584 | 25 | 584 |
| Any preferred term | 21 (84.0) | 175 (0.300) | 21 (84.0) | 170 (0.291) |
| Local reactionsa | 20 (80.0) | 160 (0.274) | 20 (80.0) | 156 (0.267) |
| Skin and subcutaneous tissue disorders | 2 (8.0) | 9 (0.015) | 2 (8.0) | 9 (0.015) |
| Gastrointestinal disorders | 1 (4.0) | 1 (0.002) | 1 (4.0) | 1 (0.002) |
| Investigations | 1 (4.0) | 1 (0.002) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.000) |
| Vascular disorders | 1 (4.0) | 1 (0.002) | 1 (4.0) | 1 (0.002) |
aBased on 16 MedDRA preferred terms
AE adverse event, AT all treated data set, SCIG subcutaneous immunoglobulin