| Literature DB >> 31376153 |
K Reich1, M Augustin2, D Thaçi3, A Pinter4, A Leutz5, C Henneges5, E Schneider5, A Schacht5, M Dossenbach5, U Mrowietz6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Interleukin-17 antagonists have received a first-line label for moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31376153 PMCID: PMC7187169 DOI: 10.1111/bjd.18384
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Dermatol ISSN: 0007-0963 Impact factor: 9.302
Baseline patient demographics and clinical characteristics, intention‐to‐treat (ITT) populationa
| FAEs ( | MTX ( | IXE ( | Total ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Demographics | ||||
| Age (years), mean ± SD | 43·1 ± 14·2 | 38·7 ± 12·9 | 44·3 ± 13·8 | 42·1 ± 13·8 |
| Patients aged ≥ 65 years, | 3 (6) | 2 (4) | 3 (6) | 8 (4·9) |
| Weight (kg), mean ± SD | 92·8 ± 21·6 | 90·2 ± 23·8 | 86·3 ± 17·9 | 89·8 ± 21·3 |
| Weight > 100 kg, | 18 (33) | 18 (33) | 8 (15) | 44 (27·2) |
| BMI (kg m−2), mean ± SD | 29·6 ± 6·1 | 29·3 ± 7·0 | 27·8 ± 5·2 | 28·9 ± 6·1 |
| Male, | 43 (80) | 36 (67) | 42 (78) | 121 (74·7) |
| White, | 44 (81) | 42 (78) | 43 (80) | 129 (79·6) |
| Disease characteristics | ||||
| PASI, mean ± SD | 19·8 ± 9·0 | 17·8 ± 7·1 | 18·8 ± 8·3 | 18·8 ± 8·1 |
| Baseline PASI ≥ 20, | 23 (43) | 19 (35) | 20 (37) | 62 (38·3) |
| sPGA, | ||||
| 0 or 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 2 | 1 (2) | 2 (4) | 2 (4) | 5 (3·1) |
| 3 | 23 (43) | 26 (48) | 27 (50) | 76 (46·9) |
| 4 or 5 | 30 (56) | 26 (48) | 25 (46) | 81 (50·0) |
| % BSA, mean ± SD | 23·8 ± 16·3 | 25·3 ± 15·4 | 25·1 ± 16·2 | 24·7 ± 15·9 |
| DLQI total score, mean ± SD | 16·4 ± 6·2 | 16·6 ± 5·3 | 15·1 ± 4·7 | 16·1 ± 5·4 |
| Age of onset ≥ 40 years, | 8 (15) | 9 (17) | 14 (26) | 31 (19·2) |
| Duration of psoriasis diagnosis (years), mean ± SD | 14·0 ± 14·0 | 12·9 ± 10·4 | 13·9 ± 13·4 | 13·6 ± 12·6 |
| Pretreatment for psoriasis | ||||
| Topical (prescribed), | 39 (72) | 37 (69) | 41 (76) | 117 (72·2) |
| Phototherapy, | 24 (44) | 13 (24) | 28 (52) | 65 (40·1) |
| Psoralen–ultraviolet A, | 9 (17) | 5 (9) | 8 (15) | 22 (13·6) |
| Ultraviolet B, | 15 (28) | 7 (13) | 14 (26) | 36 (22·2) |
BMI, body mass index; BSA, body surface area (affected by psoriasis); DLQI, Dermatology Life Quality Index; FAEs, fumaric acid esters; IXE, ixekizumab; MTX, methotrexate; PASI, Psoriasis Area and Severity Index; sPGA, static Physician's Global Assessment. aThe denominator for the reported proportions is based on the number of ITT patients. Patients may have missing baseline information. bRefers to whether the patient was ever exposed to prescribed topical therapy.
Figure 1Patient disposition. atient was randomized in error, and visit 2 was not performed. eason for discontinuation is missing for one patient. eason for discontinuation at visit 11 was documented in error as ‘patient decision’; however, the patient did complete the study up to week 24.
Figure 2Patients with (a) ≥ 75% improvement in Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI 75), (b) PASI 90 and (c) absolute PASI ≤ 3 responses at week 24 for the intention‐to‐treat (ITT) population with nonresponder imputation (NRI). FAE, fumaric acid ester; IXE, ixekizumab; MTX, methotrexate; Nx, number of patients with nonmissing data at week 24; OC, observed cases; Q2W, every 2 weeks; Q4W, every 4 weeks. *P < 0·05 IXE vs. FAEs, ¶ P < 0·05 IXE vs. MTX, ‡ddagger; P < 0·05 MTX vs. FAEs. Prespecified P‐values at 12 and 24 weeks are presented (Hochberg adjusted for PASI 75 and PASI 90).
Summary of primary and key secondary end points (ITT population; NRI)a
| Hypothesis | PASI 75 | PASI 90 | PASI 100 | sPGA (0,1) response | DLQI (0,1) response |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FAEs ( | 12 (22) | 5 (9) | 2 (4) | 7 (13) [ | 8 (15) |
| MTX ( | 38 (70) | 21 (39) | 7 (13) | 27 (52) [ | 20 (37) |
| IXE ( | 49 (91) | 43 (80) | 22 (41) | 45 (87) [ | 34 (63) |
| IXE vs. FAE, OR (95% CI) | 34·3 (11·2–105) | 38·3 (12·3–119·0) | 17·9 (3·94–81·2) | 42·2 (13·7–131) | 9·78 (3·85–24·8) |
| Hochberg adjusted | < 0·001 | < 0·001 | < 0·001 | < 0·001 | < 0·001 |
| IXE vs. MTX, OR (95% CI) | 4·13 (1·39–12·3) | 6·14 (2·60–14·5) | 4·62 (1·76–12·1) | 5·95 (2·27–15·6) | 2·89 (1·32–6·31) |
| Hochberg adjusted | 0·014 | < 0·001 | 0·0041 | < 0·001 | 0·012 |
| MTX vs. FAE, OR (95% CI) | 8·31 (3·49–19·8) | 6·24 (2·14–18·2) | 3·87 (0·77–19·6) | 7·10 (2·71–18·6) | 3·38 (1·33–8·59) |
| Unadjusted | < 0·001 | < 0·001 | 0·16 | < 0·001 | 0·015 |
CI, confidence interval; DLQI, Dermatology Life Quality Index; FAEs, fumaric acid esters; ITT, intention to treat; IXE, ixekizumab; MTX, methotrexate; NRI, nonresponder imputation; OR, odds ratio; PASI, Psoriasis Area and Severity Index; PASI 75, ≥ 75% improvement in PASI; sPGA, static Physician's Global Assessment. Coprimary PASI 75 comparisons for IXE vs. FAEs and IXE vs. MTX were adjusted via a primary Hochberg procedure at 24 weeks. Key secondary PASI 90, PASI 100, sPGA (0,1) and DLQI (0,1) comparisons for IXE vs. FAEs and IXE vs. MTX were adjusted by a second, separate Hochberg procedure at 24 weeks that was applied when all primary comparisons were statistically significant. aPercentages are based on the ITT population using NRI. bsPGA (0,1) response and ≥ 2‐point improvement from baseline; includes only patients with sPGA ≥ 3 at baseline.
Figure 3(a) Static Physician's Global Assessment (sPGA) 0 or 1 responses at week 24 for the intention‐to‐treat (ITT) population with baseline sPGA ≥ 3, and (b) Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI) 0 or 1 responses at week 24 for the ITT population with nonresponder imputation (NRI). FAE, fumaric acid ester; IXE, ixekizumab; MTX, methotrexate; Q2W, every 2 weeks; Q4W, every 4 weeks. *P < 0·05 IXE vs. FAEs, ¶ P < 0·05 IXE vs. MTX, ‡ddagger; P < 0·05 MTX vs. FAEs. Prespecified P‐values at 12 and 24 weeks are presented (Hochberg adjusted).
Treatment‐emergent adverse events (TEAEs) by system organ class in ≥ 2% of the safety population
| System organ class | FAEs ( | MTX ( | IXE ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patients with at least one TEAE | 46 (88) | 43 (83) | 46 (85) |
| Infections and infestations | 14 (27) | 25 (48) | 30 (56) |
| Gastrointestinal disorders | 35 (67) | 17 (33) | 7 (13) |
| General disorders and administration‐site conditions | 5 (10) | 9 (17) | 16 (30) |
| Nervous system disorders | 7 (13) | 11 (21) | 11 (20) |
| Musculoskeletal and connective tissue disorders | 4 (8) | 12 (23) | 9 (17) |
| Skin and subcutaneous tissue disorders | 6 (12) | 6 (12) | 7 (13) |
| Vascular disorders | 14 (27) | 1 (2) | 2 (4) |
| Investigations | 7 (13) | 3 (6) | 6 (11) |
| Respiratory, thoracic and mediastinal disorders | 3 (6) | 3 (6) | 6 (11) |
| Injury, poisoning and procedural complications | 1 (2) | 6 (12) | 5 (9) |
| Ear and labyrinth disorders | 3 (6) | 3 (6) | 2 (4) |
| Blood and lymphatic system disorders | 5 (10) | 3 (6) | 0 |
| Metabolism and nutrition disorders | 1 (2) | 0 | 3 (6) |
| Neoplasms benign, malignant and unspecified (including cysts and polyps) | 0 | 1 (2) | 2 (4) |
| Renal and urinary disorders | 0 | 0 | 2 (4) |
| Eye disorders | 0 | 2 (4) | 0 |
The data are presented as n (%). FAEs, fumaric acid esters; IXE, ixekizumab; MTX, methotrexate. aDue to the high discontinuation rates observed in the FAE group, post hoc analyses for safety events (exposure‐adjusted incidence rates and rate ratios from Poisson regression models with a term for treatment and using an offset) were deemed necessary.