| Literature DB >> 27083437 |
Lorenzo Mantovani1, Massimo Medaglia2, Patrizio Piacentini3, Marcella Tricca4, Gino Antonio Vena5, Antonietta Vozza6, Gabriella Castellino7, Alessandro Roccia7.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Psoriasis is a chronic immune-mediated inflammatory skin disease commonly categorized as mild, moderate, or severe. Moderate-to-severe psoriasis is associated with significant comorbidity and has been shown to severely impair quality of life. Moreover, psoriasis is associated with high costs, including those associated with treatment, which have increased recently with the inclusion of biological systemic agents (most recently secukinumab) as available treatment options. However, despite clear evidence of their value in the treatment of moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis, in Italy access to the biological agents remains limited to dermatological centers originally involved in the Psocare network. The impact of secukinumab entry into the market in Italy is still to be determined, but we believe that it will be associated with significant changes in the way in which biological treatments for psoriasis are accessed and prescribed in Italy. It is noteworthy that in January 2015, the European Medicines Agency approved secukinumab as first-line systemic therapy in this indication. FUNDING: Novartis, Italy.Entities:
Keywords: Moderate-to-severe; Psoriasis; Secukinumab
Year: 2016 PMID: 27083437 PMCID: PMC4906108 DOI: 10.1007/s13555-016-0114-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dermatol Ther (Heidelb)
Summary of biologic agents approved in Europe for use in moderate-to-severe psoriasis [84]
| Agent | Approved indication |
|---|---|
| Adalimumab | Treatment of moderate to severe chronic plaque psoriasis in adult patients who failed to respond to or who have a contraindication to, or are intolerant to other systemic therapy including cyclosporine, methotrexate or psoralen ultraviolet A Also for the treatment of severe chronic plaque psoriasis in children and adolescents from 4 years of age who have had an inadequate response to or are inappropriate candidates for topical therapy and phototherapies |
| Efalizumab | Withdrawn |
| Etanercept | Treatment of adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis who failed to respond to, or who have a contraindication to, or are intolerant to other systemic therapy, including cyclosporine, methotrexate or psoralen and ultraviolet-A light Also for the treatment of chronic severe plaque psoriasis in children and adolescents from the age of 6 years who are inadequately controlled by, or are intolerant to, other systemic therapies or phototherapies |
| Infliximab | Treatment of moderate to severe plaque psoriasis in adult patients who failed to respond to, or who have a contraindication to, or are intolerant to other systemic therapy including cyclosporine, methotrexate or psoralen ultraviolet A |
| Secukinumab | Treatment of moderate to severe plaque psoriasis in adults who are candidates for systemic therapy |
| Ustekinumab | Treatment of moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis in adults who failed to respond to, or who have a contraindication to, or are intolerant to other systemic therapies including cyclosporine, methotrexate and psoralen ultraviolet A |
Summary of key phase III clinical trial data for secukinumab
| Study | Outcome measure (week 12) | Secukinumab 300 mg | Secukinumab 150 mg | Placebo | Etanercept 50 mg | Ustekinumab |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ERASURE [ | PASI 75 | 200/245 (81.6%) | 174/243 (71.6%) | 11/246 (4.5%) | ||
| Response of 0 or 1 on modified IGA | 160/245 (65.3%) | 125/244 (51.2%) | 6/246 (2.4%) | |||
| FIXTURE [ | PASI 75 | 249/323 (77.1%)* | 219/327 (67.0%) | 16/324 (4.9%) | 142/323 (44.0%) | |
| Response of 0 or 1 on modified IGA | 202/323 (62.5%) | 167/327 (51.1%) | 9/324 (2.8%) | 88/323 (27.2%) | ||
| FEATURE [ | PASI 75 | 44/59 (75%) | 41/59 (69%) | 0/59 (0%) | ||
| Clear or almost clear on modified IGA | 40/59 (68%) | 31/59 (53%) | 0/59 (0%) | |||
| JUNCTURE [ | PASI 75 | 52/60 (87%) | 43/61 (70%) | 2/61 (3%) | ||
| Clear or almost clear on modified IGA | 44/60 (73%) | 32/61 (52%) | 0/61 (0%) | |||
| CLEAR [ | PASI 90 (week 16) | 264/334 (79.0%)** | 193/335 (57.6%) |
IGA Investigators Global Assessment, PASI Psoriasis Area and Severity Index
* P < 0.001 vs. etanercept and placebo; ** P < 0.0001 vs. ustekinumab
Summary of cost-effectiveness analyses of biological agents for psoriasis based on US pricing [75]
Copyright © Cheng J, Feldman SR. Reproduced with permission from Drugs in Context. DOI:10.7573/dic.212266
| Study | Number of trials | Cost methodology | Efficacy methodology | Most cost-effective biologic |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hankin et al. [ | 16 studies (1966–2004) | Annual cost (AWP, treatment administration, adverse-event monitoring and treatment, reimbursement rate from Medicare) | PASI% between 6 and 14 weeks | Infliximab 5 mg/kg at weeks 0, 2, and 6 |
| Menter et al. [ | 3 RCTs | 18 months of treatment (AWP, office fees, injection fees, costs due to adverse events, laboratory monitoring) | PASI-75 at 18 months | Etanercept 50 mg twice weekly × 12 weeks, then 50 mg weekly |
| Miller et al. [ | 16 studies | Annual cost (treatment administration, adverse-event monitoring and treatment) | PASI% (treatment period not specified) | Infliximab 5 mg/kg |
| Pearce et al. [ | 13 RCTs (1998–2004) | 12 weeks of treatment (AWP, physician visits, laboratory tests, Medicare fee for schedule of infusions) | PASI-75 after 12 weeks | Infliximab 5 mg/kg |
| Nelson et al. [ | 11 RCTs (2003–2007) | 12 weeks of treatment (AWP, physician visits, laboratory testing, Medicare fee for schedule of infusions) | PASI-75, DLQI after 12 weeks | Etanercept 25 mg once weekly (DLQI MID) Infliximab 3 mg/kg (PASI 75) |
| Hankin et al. [ | 22 RCTs (1966–2008) | Annual cost (WAC, adverse event monitoring and treatment, Medicare fee for schedule of infusions) | PASI-75, PGA 0/1 after 6–14 weeks of treatment | Infliximab 5 mg/kg at weeks 0, 2, 6, then every 8 weeks |
| Staidle et al. [ | 22 RCTs (2001–2011) | Annual cost (AWP, office visits, laboratory tests, monitoring procedures) | PASI-75, DLQI MID after 12 weeks of treatment | Infliximab 5 mg/kg every 8 weeks (PASI and DLQI) |
| Anis et al. [ | 22 RCTs | 10–16 weeks of treatment (AWP, treatment administration, monitoring, laboratory tests) | PASI between 10–16 weeks | Adalimumab 40 mg every other week (QALY) |
| Martin et al. [ | ACCEPT trial (ustekinumab, etanercept) | 16 weeks of treatment (WAC) | PASI-75 after 12 weeks | Ustekinumab (45 mg or 90 mg depending on weight) |
| Villacorta et al. [ | ACCEPT trial (ustekinumab, etanercept) | 3 years of treatment (Medicare Part B average sales price, treatment of adverse events, physician visits) | PASI after 12 weeks | Ustekinumab 45 mg ($150,000 threshold per QALY) |
| Ahn et al. [ | 27 RCTs (1995–2012) | 12 weeks of treatment (AWP, physician visits, laboratory tests, Medicare fee for schedules of IV procedures) | PASI-75, DLQI after 12 weeks | Infliximab 3 mg/kg (PASI 75 and DLQI) |
| Chi et al. [ | 13 RCTs (2005–2012) | 6 months of treatment (AWP) | PASI-75 and PGA 0/1 after 6 months | Adalimumab 80 mg loading dose, then 40 mg every other week (PASI 75 and PGA 0/1) |
ACCEPT Active Comparator (CNTO1275/Enbrel) Psoriasis Trial, AWP Average wholesale price, DLQI Dermatology Life Quality Index, MID Minimally important difference, PASI Psoriasis Area and Severity Index, PGA 0/1 Physician Global Assessment clear/minimal, QALY Quality-adjusted life year, RCT randomized controlled trial, WAC wholesale acquisition cost
aStudy included non-biologic agents (i.e., phototherapy, cyclosporine, methotrexate, acitretin)