Florenzo Iannone1, Leonardo Santo2, Maria Grazia Anelli3, Romano Bucci4, Angelo Semeraro5, Laura Quarta6, Francesca D'Onofrio7, Antonio Marsico5, Giorgio Carlino8, Oriana Casilli6, Fabio Cacciapaglia3, Carmelo Zuccaro9, Paola Chiara Falappone10, Francesco Paolo Cantatore7, Maurizio Muratore6, Giovanni Lapadula3. 1. Rheumatology Unit, Department of Emergence Medicine and Transplantation (DETO), University of Bari, Piazza G Cesare, 11, 70124 Bari, Italy. Electronic address: florenzo.iannone@uniba.it. 2. Unità Operativa di Reumatologia, ASL BT, Andria, Italy. 3. Rheumatology Unit, Department of Emergence Medicine and Transplantation (DETO), University of Bari, Piazza G Cesare, 11, 70124 Bari, Italy. 4. Rheumatology Hospital Unit, A.O.U. Foggia, Foggia, Italy. 5. Unità Operativa di Reumatologia, ASL Taranto, Taranto, Italy. 6. U.O. of Rheumatology, "V. Fazzi" Hospital, Lecce, Italy. 7. UOC Reumatologia Universitaria-University of Foggia, Foggia, Italy. 8. Rheumatology Service, ASL LE-DSS, Casarano and Gallipoli, Gallipoli, Italy. 9. Ambulatorio di Reumatologia Ospedale di Brindisi, Brindisi, Italy. 10. Internal Medicine Unit, S. Camillo de' Lellis Hospital, Mesagne, Italy.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To assess the drug survival of golimumab, and predictors thereof, in patients affected with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), spondyloarthritis (SpA), and psoriatic arthritis (PsA) in a prospective observational cohort. METHODS: This is a non-interventional, longitudinal study on RA, SpA, and PsA patients starting treatment with golimumab. Endpoints were the 2 years persistence rate of golimumab and predictors of therapy discontinuation. Drug retention was analyzed using Kaplan-Meier and Cox models. Hazard ratios (HR) of golimumab discontinuation were estimated by Cox-regression hazard models. RESULTS: Of 416 patients starting golimumab, 171 biologic-naïve and 245 inadequate responders to prior biologic drugs, 88 had RA, 147 SpA, and 181 PsA. Global 2 years drug retention was 70.2%, with no different hazard of discontinuation among diseases or line of biologic treatment. The strongest predictor of golimumab discontinuation was female gender (HR = 1.95). Golimumab monotherapy was associated with higher risk drug interruption (HR = 1.67). Within SpA, predictors of golimumab discontinuation were female sex (HR = 4.19), and absence of extra-articular manifestations (HR = 4.60). In PsA, duration of disease was negatively associated to drug interruption (HR = 0.93), whereas golimumab monotherapy was positively (HR = 2.21) associated. Interestingly, failing to achieve a good EULAR response at 3 months was the only predictor of golimumab discontinuation for RA patients (HR = 3.03). CONCLUSIONS: This study provided evidence that golimumab has high retention rate in real-life settings. SpA male patients with extra-articular manifestations, PsA patients on co-therapy with DMARDs, and RA patients attaining an early clinical response had the highest probability to continue golimumab over 2 years.
OBJECTIVES: To assess the drug survival of golimumab, and predictors thereof, in patients affected with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), spondyloarthritis (SpA), and psoriatic arthritis (PsA) in a prospective observational cohort. METHODS: This is a non-interventional, longitudinal study on RA, SpA, and PsA patients starting treatment with golimumab. Endpoints were the 2 years persistence rate of golimumab and predictors of therapy discontinuation. Drug retention was analyzed using Kaplan-Meier and Cox models. Hazard ratios (HR) of golimumab discontinuation were estimated by Cox-regression hazard models. RESULTS: Of 416 patients starting golimumab, 171 biologic-naïve and 245 inadequate responders to prior biologic drugs, 88 had RA, 147 SpA, and 181 PsA. Global 2 years drug retention was 70.2%, with no different hazard of discontinuation among diseases or line of biologic treatment. The strongest predictor of golimumab discontinuation was female gender (HR = 1.95). Golimumab monotherapy was associated with higher risk drug interruption (HR = 1.67). Within SpA, predictors of golimumab discontinuation were female sex (HR = 4.19), and absence of extra-articular manifestations (HR = 4.60). In PsA, duration of disease was negatively associated to drug interruption (HR = 0.93), whereas golimumab monotherapy was positively (HR = 2.21) associated. Interestingly, failing to achieve a good EULAR response at 3 months was the only predictor of golimumab discontinuation for RApatients (HR = 3.03). CONCLUSIONS: This study provided evidence that golimumab has high retention rate in real-life settings. SpA male patients with extra-articular manifestations, PsA patients on co-therapy with DMARDs, and RApatients attaining an early clinical response had the highest probability to continue golimumab over 2 years.
Authors: Philip J Mease; Neil A Accortt; Sabrina Rebello; Carol J Etzel; Ryan W Harrison; Girish A Aras; Mahdi M F Gharaibeh; Jeffrey D Greenberg; David H Collier Journal: Rheumatol Int Date: 2019-07-18 Impact factor: 2.631
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Authors: Manuel Pombo-Suarez; Carlos Sanchez-Piedra; Blanca Garcia-Magallón; Ana Pérez-Gómez; Sara Manrique-Arija; Raquel Martín-Doménech; María Colazo; Cristina Campos; José Campos; Javier Del Pino-Montes; Maria J Arteaga; Luis Cea-Calvo; Federico Díaz-González; Juan J Gómez-Reino Journal: Clin Rheumatol Date: 2021-04-27 Impact factor: 2.980
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Authors: Klaus Krüger; Gerd R Burmester; Siegfried Wassenberg; Martin Bohl-Bühler; Matthias H Thomas Journal: BMJ Open Date: 2018-06-14 Impact factor: 2.692