| Literature DB >> 26846283 |
Gerolamo Bianchi1, Roberto Caporali2, Monica Todoerti2, Paolo Mattana3.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Methotrexate (MTX) is still considered the drug of choice in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) management. Comparing subcutaneous (MTX SC) and oral (MTX OR) routes of administration is important to optimize the everyday therapeutic strategy in the real-life setting. This review summarizes scientific evidence currently available on this topic. As shown by pharmacokinetic studies, at the same dose level, bioavailability of MTX SC is significantly higher and less variable than that of MTX OR. This difference is even more pronounced for medium-to-high dosages (i.e., >15 mg/week). With regard to clinical response (Disease Activity Score-28, American College of Rheumatology Criteria), randomized, double-blind studies and retrospective or longitudinal analyses in real-life settings showed that MTX SC is more effective than MTX OR. This is true both in MTX-naive patients with early RA, and in patients who switch from MTX OR to MTX SC due to previous treatment failure, lack of efficacy and/or adverse events. Finally, MTX SC has a better tolerability profile than MTX OR, with fewer gastroenterological side effects. Delaying the use of more expensive biological therapies by switching from MTX OR to MTX SC in non-responders might provide cost savings, with relevant implications in the management of patients with RA. FUNDING: Alfa Wassermann.Entities:
Keywords: Methotrexate; Oral route; Rheumatoid arthritis; Rheumatology; Subcutaneous route
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26846283 PMCID: PMC4833794 DOI: 10.1007/s12325-016-0295-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Ther ISSN: 0741-238X Impact factor: 3.845
Results of literature search
| Modality of search | No. references resulting from the search | No. references included in the study | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| PubMed and Medline query | |||
| Methotrexate and subcutaneous (or parenteral) and oral and rheumatoid arthritis | 108 | 8 | [ |
| Methotrexate and subcutaneous (or parenteral) and oral and pharmacokinetic | 19 | 2 | [ |
| Methotrexate and subcutaneous (or parenteral) and oral and efficacy | 35 | 4 | [ |
| Methotrexate and subcutaneous (or parenteral) and oral and toxicity | 55 | 1 | [ |
| Other | |||
| Studies already known by authors and/or cited in other articles | – | 2 | [ |
| Reviews, guidelines, other articles already known by authors and/or cited in other articles | – | 12 | [ |
Characteristics of the literature included in the review
| Kind of study | No. | References |
|---|---|---|
| Systematic review/guideline | 5 | [ |
| Systematic review | 5 | [ |
| Randomized, controlled, double blind | 1 | [ |
| Randomized, controlled, open label | 5 | [ |
| Prospective cohort study | 1 | [ |
| Retrospective | 4 | [ |
| Cost-minimization analysis | 1 | [ |
| Expert opinion/editorial | 1 | [ |
Pharmacokinetic differences between MTX SC and MTX OR
| MTX dose range tested | Mean bioavailability | References |
|---|---|---|
| 7.5–17.5 mg/week | MTX SC: 0.97 (95% CI 0.83–1.12)a MTX OR: 0.85 (95% CI 0.77–0.93) | Jundt et al. [ |
| 25–40 mg/week | MTX SC: 1.0 MTX OR: 0.64 (range 0.21–0.96)b | Hoekstra et al. [ |
| 10–25 mg/week | Between group differences (MTX SC vs. MTX OR) MTX 10 mg: +21% MTX 15 mg: +14% MTX 20 mg: +31% MTX 25 mg: +41% | Schiff et al. [ |
CI confidence intervals, MTX methotrexate, OR oral, SC subcutaneous
a P = 0.002 vs. MTX OR
b P = 0.001 vs. MTX SC
Differences in clinical response between MTX SC and MTX OR
| Outcome | Duration of therapy, monthsa | MTX SC | MTX OR |
| References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ACR20, % | 6 | 78% | 70% | <0.05 | Braun et al. [ |
| ACR70, % | 6 | 41% | 33% | <0.05 | |
| DAS28, mean (SD) | 3 | 3.49 (1.50) | 3.92 (1.48) | 0.002 | Hazlewood et al. [ |
| DAS28, mean (SD) | 6 | 3.12 (1.46) | 3.50 (1.51) | 0.011 | |
| DAS28, mean (SD) | 9 | 2.79 (1.37) | 3.23 (1.53) | 0.005 | |
| Change of therapy, % | 12 | 49% | 77% | <0.001 | Hazlewood et al. [ |
ACR American College of Rheumatology, DAS Disease Activity Score, MTX methotrexate, OR oral, SC subcutaneous, SD standard deviation
Clinical response in patients switched from MTX OR to MTX SC because of treatment failure (inefficacy or toxicity)
| Outcome | Duration of therapy, months | MTX SC | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| ACR20, % | 2 | 30 | Braun et al. [ |
| Mean reduction in DAS28 score | 1 | 0.3 | Bakker et al. [ |
| 4 | 0.5 | ||
| DAS28 reduction of ≥1.2 points, % | 6 | 74 | Mainmann et al. [ |
| DAS28 score <3.2, % | 6 | 29 | |
| Improvement of DAS28, % | 4 | 63 | Bakker et al. [ |
| Continuation rate, % | 12 | 83 | Scott et al. [ |
| 24 | 75 | ||
| 60 | 47 | ||
| Additional biologic therapy, % | 12 | 5.2 | Scott et al. [ |
| 24 | 8.5 |
ACR American College of Rheumatology, DAS Disease Activity Score, MTX methotrexate; OR oral, SC subcutaneous