| Literature DB >> 25243173 |
Maria Lucia Specchia1, Chiara de Waure1, Maria Rosaria Gualano2, Andrea Doria3, Giuseppe Turchetti4, Lara Pippo5, Francesco Di Nardo1, Silvio Capizzi1, Chiara Cadeddu1, Flavia Kheiraoui1, Luca Iaccarino3, Francesca Pierotti4, Ilaria Palla4, Maria Assunta Veneziano1, Daniela Gliubizzi1, Antonella Sferrazza1, Nicola Nicolotti1, Rolando Porcasi5, Giuseppe La Torre6, Maria Luisa Di Pietro1, Walter Ricciardi1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is treated with anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive drugs and off-label biologics. Belimumab is the first biologic approved after 50 years as an add-on therapy for active disease. This paper summarizes a health technology assessment performed in Italy.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25243173 PMCID: PMC4150460 DOI: 10.1155/2014/704207
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Model features.
| Patients | 50,000 |
|
| |
| Maximum treatment period with belimumab | 10 years |
|
| |
| Maximum effect related to belimumab | Lifetime |
|
| |
| Subgroup | Patient with low complement and anti-dsDNA |
|
| |
| Responder rule | Reduction SELENA-SLEDAI ≥ 4 at 24th week |
|
| |
| Natural history model | JH-AMS∗ forced in, involvement removed |
|
| |
| Long term disease activity model | Adjusted natural history models (NHM) |
|
| |
| One-year steroid model | NHM |
∗Johns Hopkins University (JH) Adjusted Mean SLEDAI (AMS).
Main parameters used in the base case scenario.
| Age (years)—mean | 34.7 |
|
| |
| Gender (% female) | 93.9% |
|
| |
| Length of disease (years)—mean | 6.6 |
|
| |
| Age at the moment of the diagnosis (years)—mean | 28.1 |
|
| |
| % Afro-Caribbean | 7.3% |
|
| |
| SLICC (Systemic Lupus International Collaborating Clinics Damage—mean Index) | 0.61 |
|
| |
| SLEDAI—mean | 10.9 |
|
| |
| Daily steroid dose (mg/day)—mean | 11.6 |
The characteristics are determined by pooling the patient-level data from BLISS-52 and BLISS-76 for placebo and belimumab 10 mg/kg.
Figure 1Pathways followed by patients entering the two different treatments.
Main characteristics and results of the randomized controlled trials on belimumab.
| Study name (phase) | Study design | Study population | Main results |
|---|---|---|---|
| LBSL02 (Phase II) [ | Randomized, double blinded, controlled (belimumab 10 mg/kg + SoC versus belimumab 4 mg/kg + SoC versus belimumab 1 mg/kg + SoC versus placebo + SoC) | 449 adult subjects with positive antibodies or positive antibodies history and SELENA SLEDAI flare index ≥ 4 from Canada and US | No significant differences in improvement of the SELENA SLEDAI flare index by week 24 and no significant differences in the occurrence of flares by week 52. Evidence of a greater benefit from belimumab in patients currently positive for autoantibodies |
|
| |||
| C1056/BLISS-76 (Phase III) [ | Randomized, double blinded, controlled (belimumab 10 mg/kg + SoC versus belimumab 1 mg/kg + SoC versus placebo + SoC) | 819 adult subjects with positive antibodies and SELENA SLEDAI flare index ≥ 6 from 19 countries (Europe and North America) | Response at week 52: 43% in the 10 mg/kg belimumab group versus 34% in placebo group, |
|
| |||
| C1057 BLISS-52 (Phase III) [ | Randomized, double blinded, controlled (belimumab 10 mg/kg + SoC versus belimumab 1 mg/kg + SoC versus placebo + SoC) | 865 adult subjects with positive antibodies and SELENA SLEDAI flare index ≥ 6 from 13 countries (East Europe, Asia, and South America) | Response at week 52: 58% in the 10 mg/kg belimumab group versus 44% in placebo group, |
Adverse effects more commonly reported in LBSL02, C1056, and C1057 studies-combined analysis [12].
| Symptom | Placebo | Belimumab 1 mg/kg | Belimumab 10 mg/kg |
|---|---|---|---|
| Headache | 140 (20.7%) | 138 (20.5%) | 142 (21.1%) |
| Upper airways infection | 130 (19.3%) | 128 (19.0%) | 118 (17.5%) |
| Arthralgia | 112 (16.6%) | 100 (14.9%) | 109 (16.2%) |
| Nausea | 82 (12.1%) | 88 (13.1%) | 99 (14.7%) |
| Urinary tract infection | 82 (12.1%) | 92 (13.7%) | 87 (12.9%) |
| Diarrhea | 62 (9.2%) | 81 (12.0%) | 80 (11.9%) |
| Asthenia | 70 (10.4%) | 71 (10.5%) | 66 (9.8%) |
| Pyrexia | 52 (7.7%) | 52 (7.7%) | 65 (9.6%) |
Base case results (NHS perspective).
| SoC | Belimumab | Difference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Life years | 18.99 | 19.76 | 0.77 |
| QALYs | 10.78 | 11.31 | 0.538 |
| Costs | €125,234 | €142,921 | €17,688 |
| ICUR | €32,859 | ||
| ICER | €22,990 |
SoC: standard of care; QALY: quality adjusted life year; ICUR: incremental cost-utility ratio; ICER: incremental cost-effectiveness ratio.
Figure 2Probability of cost-effectiveness of belimumab according to the cost-effectiveness acceptability curve.