| Literature DB >> 28852832 |
Chak Sing Lau1, Allan Gibofsky2, Nemanja Damjanov3, Sadiq Lula4, Lisa Marshall5, Heather Jones5, Paul Emery6.
Abstract
Biologic therapies have improved the management of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and the treat-to-target approach has resulted in many patients achieving remission. In the current treatment landscape, clinicians have begun considering dose reduction/tapering for their patients. Rheumatology guidelines in Asia, Europe, and the United States include down-titration of biologics but admit that the level of evidence is moderate. We conducted a systematic literature review to assess the published studies that evaluate down-titration of biologics in RA. The published literature was searched for studies that down-titrated the following biologics: abatacept, adalimumab, certolizumab, etanercept, golimumab, infliximab, rituximab, and tocilizumab. Eligible studies included randomized controlled trials (RCTs), non-RCTs, observational, and pharmacoeconomic studies. The outcomes of interest were (1) efficacy and health-related quality of life, (2) disease flares, and (3) impact on cost. Eleven full-text publications were identified; only three were RCTs. Study results suggest that dosing down may be an option in many patients who have achieved remission or low disease activity. However, some patients are likely to experience a disease flare. Across the studies, the definition of disease flare and the down-titration criteria were inconsistent, making it difficult to conclude which patients may be appropriate and when to attempt down-titration. Studies have evaluated the practice of dosing down biologic therapy in patients with RA; however, a relatively small number of RCTs have been published. Although down-titration may be an option for some patients in LDA or remission, additional RCTs are needed to provide guidance on this practice.Entities:
Keywords: Biological therapy; Dose–response relationship; Rheumatoid arthritis; Systematic review
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28852832 PMCID: PMC5645436 DOI: 10.1007/s00296-017-3780-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rheumatol Int ISSN: 0172-8172 Impact factor: 2.631
Comparison of three guidelines recommending dose-titration in rheumatoid arthritis
| Guideline | Method for reviewing and rating quality of evidence | Recommendation | Quality of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 ACR Guideline for the Treatment of Rheumatoid Arthritis [ | GRADEa methodology was used to evaluate the literature | For patients with established RA who are in remission: | Conditional recommendation |
| Taper DMARD therapy | Low | ||
| Taper TNF-I, non-TNF biologic or tofacitinib | Moderate to very low | ||
| EULAR recommendations for the management of RA: 2013 update [ | Most evidence came from three SLRs; provides levels of evidence, grades of recommendations, and strengths of recommendations | If a patient persists in remission after tapering glucocorticoids, then the clinician can consider tapering bDMARDs, especially if combined with a csDMARD | LoE:b 2b |
| APLAR RA treatment recommendations [ | The ADAPTE framework was used to identify and review international RA guidelines, and the AGREE II instrument was used to assess the quality of the guidelines | Tapering of bDMARDs can be considered for patients in extended remission (>12 months) | LoE: 2 |
ACR American College of Rheumatology, AGREE Appraisal of Guidelines, Research and Evaluation, bDMARD biologic DMARD, csDMARD conventional synthetic DMARD, EULAR European League Against Rheumatism, GoR grade of recommendation, GRADE Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation, LoE level of evidence, RA rheumatoid arthritis, SLR systematic literature review, SoR strength of recommendation (level of agreement), TNF tumor necrosis factor
aGroup consensus was used to determine whether the recommendations were strong or conditional. A strong recommendation denotes that clinicians feel certain the benefits of an intervention are greater than the harms (or vice versa). A conditional recommendation indicates that clinicians are uncertain of the balance between benefits and harms, and/or significant variability exists in patient values and preferences. Evidence was rated as low quality or moderate to very low quality because some of the evidence was indirect (studies included discontinuation rather than tapering of therapy or patients achieved low disease activity rather than remission)
bLoE and GoR are based on recommendations from the Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine
Fig. 1Study disposition
Dosing and efficacy outcomes in RA down-titration studies, full-text publications
| Study citation and type | Dose of biologic | Efficacy outcome | Comments/author conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Smolen et al. [ | OL: ETN50 + MTX qw for 36 wk, | LDA at wk 88: | Author conclusions: ETN standard or reduced dose plus MTX is more effective at maintaining LDA than MTX alone |
| Emery et al. [ | OL: ETN50 + MTX qw for 52 wk, | Sustained remission at end of DB phase: | Author conclusions: Following early, aggressive treatment, some patients in remission or LDA may be considered for reduction or withdrawal of the biologic; patients should be closely monitored |
| Mariette et al. [ | RTX 1000 mg + MTX on days 1 and 15, overall population, | Over 104 wks, the adjusted mean difference in DAS28-CRP AUC was 51.4 (95% CI −131.2 to 234). This was within the non-inferiority margin of 20% of the reference data (mean ± SD = 2218 ± 967; 20% = 444), indicating non-inferiority between the two doses | Author conclusions: For patients with a EULAR good or moderate response, decreasing the subsequent dose of RTX is non-inferior to administering the standard dose |
| Keystone et al. [ | 400 mg CZP q2w decreased to 200 mg q2w, | Improvements in ACR response rates and DAS28-ESR were maintained over 192 weeks | – |
| Borras-Blasco [ |
|
| Small number of patients in study |
| de la Torre et al. [ | ADA | Remission (DAS28 <2.6) | Efficacy was measured at 1 visit; patients had been receiving an anti-TNF for ≥12 months; dose taper was allowed for patients in remission or LDA ≥12 months |
| van den Bemt [ |
| 16/18 successfully down-titrated | Small number of patients in study; three infusions may not allow enough time to assess progression of RA activity |
| van der Maas [ |
| 23/51 (45%) successfully down-titrated: | Author conclusions: Most patients with stable LDA can decrease or discontinue INF |
ADA adalimumab, AUC area under the curve, CI confidence interval, CRP C-reactive protein, CZP certolizumab, DAS28 disease activity score calculated in 28 joints, DB double-blind, ESR erythrocyte sedimentation rate, ETN etanercept, EULAR European League Against Rheumatism, HDA high disease activity, INF infliximab, LDA low disease activity, MDA moderate disease activity, MTX methotrexate, OL open-label, PBO placebo, PP per protocol, qw once weekly, q2w every other week, RCT randomized controlled trial, RTX rituximab
Recommended elements to include when designing a dose-titration study
| 1. A homogeneous patient population with similar levels of disease activity, duration of disease, and prior use of DMARDs and biologics |
| 2. An established definition of disease flare |
| 3. A clear statement on how improvement or relapse is being measured |
| 4. Established definitions of low disease activity, remission, moderate disease activity, partial remission, high disease activity, and/or relapse |
| 5. A statistical comparison of the efficacy of the standard dose and the titrated dose |
| 6. Safety and pharmacoeconomic data |