BACKGROUND: Icatibant, a selective bradykinin B2 receptor antagonist for the treatment of acute hereditary angio-oedema (HAE) attacks in adults, can be administered by health care professionals (HCPs) or self-administered. This analysis compared characteristics and outcomes of acute HAE attacks treated with self-administered and HCP-administered icatibant in a real-world setting. METHODS: The Icatibant Outcome Survey (Shire, Zug, Switzerland; NCT01034969) is an international observational study monitoring the safety and effectiveness of icatibant treatment. Descriptive retrospective analyses were performed (February 2008 to December 2012). RESULTS: Icatibant was used in 652 attacks in 170 patients with HAE type I/II. Most icatibant injections were self-administered (431/652, 68.5%). The proportion of self-treated attacks increased over time (40.3% in 2009 vs. 89.7% in 2012). The median time to administration was significantly shorter in self- versus HCP-treated attacks (1.5 vs. 2.4 h; p = 0.016). Earlier treatment (<2 h after onset) was significantly associated with a shorter median time to resolution (2.5 vs. 5.0 h; p = 0.032) and attack duration (3.0 vs. 14.0 h; p < 0.0001), regardless of administration method. Patients self-administered icatibant for attacks of all severities; overall, 34.7% of severe and 30.2% of very severe attacks were HCP treated. Logistic regression analysis did not find use of long-term prophylaxis, attack location or gender to be predictive for self-administration. CONCLUSIONS: The proportion of HAE attacks treated with self-administered icatibant increased over time. Patients successfully self-administered icatibant for a wide variety of HAE attacks, demonstrating that icatibant is generally well tolerated and effective for self-administration. Self-administration of icatibant provides a complementary option to HCP administration, enabling optimization of patient care.
BACKGROUND: Icatibant, a selective bradykinin B2 receptor antagonist for the treatment of acute hereditary angio-oedema (HAE) attacks in adults, can be administered by health care professionals (HCPs) or self-administered. This analysis compared characteristics and outcomes of acute HAE attacks treated with self-administered and HCP-administered icatibant in a real-world setting. METHODS: The Icatibant Outcome Survey (Shire, Zug, Switzerland; NCT01034969) is an international observational study monitoring the safety and effectiveness of icatibant treatment. Descriptive retrospective analyses were performed (February 2008 to December 2012). RESULTS: Icatibant was used in 652 attacks in 170 patients with HAE type I/II. Most icatibant injections were self-administered (431/652, 68.5%). The proportion of self-treated attacks increased over time (40.3% in 2009 vs. 89.7% in 2012). The median time to administration was significantly shorter in self- versus HCP-treated attacks (1.5 vs. 2.4 h; p = 0.016). Earlier treatment (<2 h after onset) was significantly associated with a shorter median time to resolution (2.5 vs. 5.0 h; p = 0.032) and attack duration (3.0 vs. 14.0 h; p < 0.0001), regardless of administration method. Patients self-administered icatibant for attacks of all severities; overall, 34.7% of severe and 30.2% of very severe attacks were HCP treated. Logistic regression analysis did not find use of long-term prophylaxis, attack location or gender to be predictive for self-administration. CONCLUSIONS: The proportion of HAE attacks treated with self-administered icatibant increased over time. Patients successfully self-administered icatibant for a wide variety of HAE attacks, demonstrating that icatibant is generally well tolerated and effective for self-administration. Self-administration of icatibant provides a complementary option to HCP administration, enabling optimization of patient care.
Authors: Marcus Maurer; Markus Magerl; Stephen Betschel; Werner Aberer; Ignacio J Ansotegui; Emel Aygören-Pürsün; Aleena Banerji; Noémi-Anna Bara; Isabelle Boccon-Gibod; Konrad Bork; Laurence Bouillet; Henrik Balle Boysen; Nicholas Brodszki; Paula J Busse; Anette Bygum; Teresa Caballero; Mauro Cancian; Anthony J Castaldo; Danny M Cohn; Dorottya Csuka; Henriette Farkas; Mark Gompels; Richard Gower; Anete S Grumach; Guillermo Guidos-Fogelbach; Michihiro Hide; Hye-Ryun Kang; Allen P Kaplan; Constance H Katelaris; Sorena Kiani-Alikhan; Wei-Te Lei; Richard F Lockey; Hilary Longhurst; William Lumry; Andrew MacGinnitie; Alejandro Malbran; Inmaculada Martinez Saguer; Juan José Matta Campos; Alexander Nast; Dinh Nguyen; Sandra A Nieto-Martinez; Ruby Pawankar; Jonathan Peter; Grzegorz Porebski; Nieves Prior; Avner Reshef; Marc Riedl; Bruce Ritchie; Farrukh Rafique Sheikh; William B Smith; Peter J Spaeth; Marcin Stobiecki; Elias Toubi; Lilian Agnes Varga; Karsten Weller; Andrea Zanichelli; Yuxiang Zhi; Bruce Zuraw; Timothy Craig Journal: World Allergy Organ J Date: 2022-04-07 Impact factor: 5.516
Authors: T Caballero; W Aberer; H J Longhurst; M Maurer; A Zanichelli; A Perrin; L Bouillet; I Andresen Journal: J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol Date: 2017-06-01 Impact factor: 6.166
Authors: Anna Valerieva; Maria T Staevska; Vesna Grivcheva-Panovska; Milos Jesenak; Kinga Viktória Kőhalmi; Katarina Hrubiskova; Andrea Zanichelli; Luca Bellizzi; Anurag Relan; Roman Hakl; Henriette Farkas Journal: World Allergy Organ J Date: 2021-04-22 Impact factor: 4.084