Literature DB >> 31749092

Safety of Ixekizumab Treatment for up to 5 Years in Adult Patients with Moderate-to-Severe Psoriasis: Results from Greater Than 17,000 Patient-Years of Exposure.

April Armstrong1, Carle Paul2, Luis Puig3, Wolf Henning Boehncke4,5, Michael Freeman6, Hideshi Torii7, Kim Papp8, Christopher E M Griffiths9, Andrew Blauvelt10, Kristian Reich11,12, Melinda Gooderham13, Tadashi Terui14, Lisa Renda15, Noah Agada15, Wen Xu15, Gaia Gallo15, Mark G Lebwohl16.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Long-term safety data are critical for evaluating therapies for psoriasis. Ixekizumab has demonstrated efficacy and is well tolerated for the treatment of moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis. We examined the safety and tolerability of up to 5 years of ixekizumab therapy in patients with psoriasis.
METHODS: Integrated safety data were analyzed from 13 ixekizumab clinical studies. Rates of treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs), serious AEs (SAEs) and AEs of special interest were analyzed for the 12-week induction period in the combined pivotal studies, and for all pooled studies by year(s) of therapy and overall, reported as exposure-adjusted incidence rates (IRs) per 100 patient-years (p-y) and/or frequencies.
RESULTS: Total ixekizumab exposure was 17,003.4 p-y (N = 5898); 2749 patients had ≥ 4 years of exposure. When compared across years of exposure, rates for AEs remained largely stable or declined, including TEAEs leading to discontinuation (3.8/100 p-y in year 1, declining to 2.0/100 p-y in year 5); SAEs (range 6.2-7.0/100 p-y); serious infections (range 1.3-1.7/100 p-y); nonmelanoma skin cancer (ranging from 0.5/100 p-y in year 1 to 0.2/100 p-y in years 4-5); other malignancies (range 0.4-0.6/100 p-y); inflammatory bowel disease including ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease (IR 0.2/100 p-y); and major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) (range 0.3-0.7/100 p-y). Candidiasis was reported in 327 patients (IR 1.9/100 p-y), with the majority identified as mucocutaneous. The rate of injection site reactions was 15.5/100 p-y during year 1 and 2.0-2.3/100 p-y by years 3-5.
CONCLUSIONS: The decrease in rates of TEAEs and the stable rates of SAEs, other malignancies and MACE during up to 5 years of ixekizumab dosing are consistent with previous reports describing a favorable safety profile of ixekizumab following shorter durations of exposure. FUNDING: Eli Lilly and Company.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Adverse events; Etanercept; IL-17; Integrated analysis; Ixekizumab; Psoriasis; Safety

Year:  2019        PMID: 31749092      PMCID: PMC6994584          DOI: 10.1007/s13555-019-00340-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dermatol Ther (Heidelb)


Key Summary Points

Introduction

Moderate-to-severe psoriasis is a chronic immune-mediated inflammatory disease associated with substantial comorbidities [1, 2]. At present, psoriasis requires long-term management; thus, long-term data on the safety and tolerability of treatments are essential to inform patient management decisions. Ixekizumab is a high-affinity monoclonal antibody that selectively targets interleukin (IL)-17A [3] and is approved for the treatment of moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis based on the efficacy and consistent safety profile shown in the UNCOVER program. IL-17 plays a role in host mucocutaneous defense, and therefore IL-17 inhibition is linked to adverse events (AEs) in patients with candidiasis [4-7]. Furthermore, while the role of IL-17 in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and cardiovascular disease is unclear, IL-17 inhibitors are of special interest in treating these events [8-14]. Overall, the safety profile of ixekizumab has demonstrated comparability to biologic therapies with different mechanisms of action that are approved for plaque psoriasis, namely etanercept (UNCOVER-2 and -3 studies) [15] and ustekinumab (IXORA-S study) [16]. Two previous safety updates have addressed cumulative data from the ixekizumab development program. Strober et al. reported safety data from seven clinical trials (9 April 2015 data lock) [17]. Langley et al. provided an update of safety data from 11 clinical trials (15 September 2016 data lock) [18]. Here we report our results from an examination of the long-term safety and tolerability of ixekizumab based on 17,003.4 patient-years (p-y) of ixekizumab exposure from 13 clinical trials (20 September 2018 data lock) in patients with psoriasis.

Methods

The present analysis included the cumulative safety data covering up to 319 weeks of ixekizumab exposure integrated from 13 controlled and uncontrolled ixekizumab clinical studies on psoriasis, including three phase 3, randomized, double-blind, controlled pivotal clinical studies (UNCOVER-1, -2 and -3; Fig. 1) [15, 19]. All patients were ≥ 18 years of age with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis (≥ 10% body surface area [BSA] involvement, with the exception of the IXORA-Q study, in which the cutoff was ≥ 1% BSA involvement, as the study assessed genital psoriasis for which a lower threshold is considered) and had a Static Physician’s Global Assessment of  ≥ 3 and a Psoriasis Area and Severity Index ≥ 12 at baseline (excepting those in IXORA-Q). The UNCOVER-1, -2 and -3 and IXORA-Q [15, 19, 20] studies had 12-week, randomized, placebo-controlled periods, with the UNCOVER-2 and -3 studies having an additional etanercept arm up to week 12. The IXORA-S study also had an ustekinumab treatment arm; however, the ustekinumab data are not analyzed herein due to limited patient numbers (N = 166) and duration of therapy (52 weeks) [16].
Fig. 1

Designs and numbers of patients for all studies included in the analysis. aPatients receiving IXE received a 160-mg starting dose of IXE at week 0 prior to receiving 80 mg IXE (Q4W or Q2W). bGlobal studies. cPBO administered to maintain study blind. dStep-up criteria determined if dosing increased from 80 mg IXE Q4W to 80 mg IXE Q2W based on whether a patient achieved sPGA ≥ 2 at 2 consecutive visits during Wk 12 through Wk 40. eDosing increased from IXE Q4W to IXE Q2W based on investigator opinion from Wk 24 through Wk 40. fWithdrawal period (Wks 20–32); a patient was eligible for treatment with 80 mg IXE Q4W when improvement in PASI score from baseline was < 75% at any visit between Wks 20 and 32. gProtocol amendment-mandated dose regimen. Clinicaltrials.gov numbers: UNCOVER-1, -2, -3, -A and -J, NCT01474512, NCT01597245, NCT01646177, NCT01777191 and NCT01624233, respectively; IXORA-P, -S and -Q, NCT02513550, NCT02561806 and NCT02718898, respectively; RHBO, NCT02387801; RHBZ, NCT02634801; RHAJ, NCT01107457; RHBU, NCT02993471. AC active comparator, DB double-blind, EP optional extension period after Wk 24 during which patients received 80 mg IXE Q4W up to Wk 60, ETN 50 mg etanercept twice weekly, FAE fumaric acid esters 105-mg starting dose followed by 215 mg given orally 1–3 times per day, IXE ixekizumab, IXE Q2W ixekizumab every 2 weeks, IXE Q4W ixekizumab every 4 weeks, IXE Q12W ixekizumab every 12 weeks, LTE long-term extension, MTX methotrexate 7.5-mg starting dose up to 30 mg given orally once a week, N number of patients, OL open-label, PAC placebo-controlled and active comparator, PASI Psoriasis Area Severity Index, PBO placebo, R randomized, sPGA Static Physician’s Global Assessment, UST 45 mg ustekinumab given as subcutaneous injection for participants ≤ 100 kg and 90 mg subcutaneous injection for participants > 100 kg at weeks 0, 4, 16, 28 and 40, Wk week

The protocols for all studies included in this analysis were approved by the Institutional Review Board or Ethics Committee at each participating site. All studies included in this analysis were conducted in accordance with the ethical principles of the Declaration of Helsinki. All eligible patients provided written informed consent before undergoing study-related procedures. Designs and numbers of patients for all studies included in the analysis. aPatients receiving IXE received a 160-mg starting dose of IXE at week 0 prior to receiving 80 mg IXE (Q4W or Q2W). bGlobal studies. cPBO administered to maintain study blind. dStep-up criteria determined if dosing increased from 80 mg IXE Q4W to 80 mg IXE Q2W based on whether a patient achieved sPGA ≥ 2 at 2 consecutive visits during Wk 12 through Wk 40. eDosing increased from IXE Q4W to IXE Q2W based on investigator opinion from Wk 24 through Wk 40. fWithdrawal period (Wks 20–32); a patient was eligible for treatment with 80 mg IXE Q4W when improvement in PASI score from baseline was < 75% at any visit between Wks 20 and 32. gProtocol amendment-mandated dose regimen. Clinicaltrials.gov numbers: UNCOVER-1, -2, -3, -A and -J, NCT01474512, NCT01597245, NCT01646177, NCT01777191 and NCT01624233, respectively; IXORA-P, -S and -Q, NCT02513550, NCT02561806 and NCT02718898, respectively; RHBO, NCT02387801; RHBZ, NCT02634801; RHAJ, NCT01107457; RHBU, NCT02993471. AC active comparator, DB double-blind, EP optional extension period after Wk 24 during which patients received 80 mg IXE Q4W up to Wk 60, ETN 50 mg etanercept twice weekly, FAE fumaric acid esters 105-mg starting dose followed by 215 mg given orally 1–3 times per day, IXE ixekizumab, IXE Q2W ixekizumab every 2 weeks, IXE Q4W ixekizumab every 4 weeks, IXE Q12W ixekizumab every 12 weeks, LTE long-term extension, MTX methotrexate 7.5-mg starting dose up to 30 mg given orally once a week, N number of patients, OL open-label, PAC placebo-controlled and active comparator, PASI Psoriasis Area Severity Index, PBO placebo, R randomized, sPGA Static Physician’s Global Assessment, UST 45 mg ustekinumab given as subcutaneous injection for participants ≤ 100 kg and 90 mg subcutaneous injection for participants > 100 kg at weeks 0, 4, 16, 28 and 40, Wk week

Safety Assessments

The AEs for the September 2018 update were classified based on the Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities version 21.0 (https://www.meddra.org/sites/default/files/guidance/file/whatsnew_21_0_english.pdf); data for the placebo-controlled period of UNCOVER-1, -2 and -3 were based on version 17.0 (https://www.meddra.org/sites/default/files/guidance/file/whatsnew_17_0_english.pdf). A treatment-emergent AE (TEAE) was an AE that first occurred or worsened in severity after baseline and within the treatment period. The lowest level terms have been used for the TEAE computation, and preferred terms are presented. Infections with an onset date ≤ 14 days before or after neutrophil count collection were considered temporally associated with the corresponding neutropenia count. Safety topics of special interest included injection site reactions (ISRs), serious infections, candidiasis, major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE), non-melanoma skin cancer (NMSC), malignancies (excluding NMSC) and IBD (including Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis). The IBD events were adjudicated using the Registre Epidemiologique des Maladies de l’Appareil Digestif (EPIMAD) criteria [21, 22]. MACE were adjudicated by an external adjudication committee for ten of the 13 studies (n = 5697).

Statistical Analyses

Data are summarized overall from 13 clinical studies, and for the induction period (12 weeks) of three psoriasis clinical studies (UNCOVER-1, -2 and -3). All randomized patients who received ≥ 1 dose of the study drug were included in the safety analysis population. Frequencies or exposure-adjusted incidence rates (IRs) of AEs are summarized overall and for some events of interest by 1-year (365-day) intervals. The IRs are expressed as number of unique patients with a particular category of event per 100 p-y, using the entire duration of exposure during each interval. Multiple AEs that occurred in different intervals were counted multiple times. As long-term control data were not available, previously published data for the placebo and ixekizumab groups from the large phase 3 UNCOVER studies are reported as time-adjusted IRs; baseline characteristics for the same patient groups are also presented.

Results

A total of 5898 patients received at least one dose of ixekizumab across the 13 studies (Fig. 1). Approximately two-thirds of patients were in the large UNCOVER -1, -2 and -3 studies, which were ongoing as of the data cutoff for these analyses. Total patient exposure in the pooled analysis population was 17,003.4 p-y; 3009 patients had at least 3 years exposure and 2749 had at least 4 years of exposure (Fig. 2). Median duration of exposure was 1176 days, and maximum duration of exposure was 2236 days. For the overall ixekizumab population at baseline, mean age was 45.8 years, and 67.8% of patients were male (Table 1). Median duration of psoriasis symptoms at baseline was 16.7 years.
Fig. 2

Number of patients by treatment duration. N (total number of patients) = 5898; total exposure = 17,003.4 patient-years

Table 1

Baseline characteristics for the overall patient population

CharacteristicsPlacebo (UNCOVER-1, -2 and -3)Etanercept (UNCOVER-2 and -3)Ixekizumab (UNCOVER-1, -2 and -3)Ixekizumab All
Patients, N79173923285898
Age, mean (SD) years46.2 (12.8)45.5 (13.3)45.2 (13.0)45.8 (13.1)
Male, % (n/N)70.7 (559/791)68.2 (504/739)66.7 (1553/2328)67.8 (4000/5898)
Race, % (n/N)
 Asian4.3 (34/791)2.6 (19/735)3.7 (86/2323)6.9 (408/5892)
 African American3.3 (26/791)3.1 (23/735)2.1 (48/2323)2.9 (168/5892)
 White91.7 (725/791)92.7 (681/735)92.9 (2159/2323)87.8 (5174/5892)
 Others0.8 (6/791)1.6 (12/735)1.3 (30/2323)2.4 (142/5892)
Geographic region, % (n/N)
 Asia1.6 (13/791)00.9 (20/2328)3.9 (232/5898)
 North America50.9 (403/791)51.8 (383/739)51.4 (1197/2328)52.6 (3100/5898)
 Europe42.4 (335/791)42.4 (313/739)42.9 (999/2328)37.4 (2205/5898)
 Central/South America1.8 (14/791)4.1 (30/739)2.5 (58/2328)3.0 (174/5898)
 Australia3.3 (26/791)1.8 (13/739)2.3 (54/2328)2.8 (165/5898)
BMI, mean kg/m2 (SD)30.5 (7.2)31.0 (7.4)30.5 (7.1)30.6 (7.3)
Prior systemic therapy, % (n/N)
 Never35.8 (283/791)39.6 (293/739)34.7 (808/2328)35.7 (2104/5898)
 Nonbiologic only31.7 (251/791)42.1 (311/739)38.4 (894/2328)33.7 (1986/5898)
 Biologic only11.6 (92/791)8.0 (59/739)9.3 (216/2328)12.4 (729/5898)
 Biologic and nonbiologic20.9 (165/791)10.3 (76/739)17.6 (410/2328)18.3 (1079/5898)
Prior biologic therapy, % (n/N)
 Never67.5 (534/791)81.7 (604/739)73.1 (1702/2328)69.3 (4090/5898)
 119.6 (155/791)13.7 (101/739)16.3 (379/2328)19.4 (1146/5898)
 27.1 (56/791)3.0 (22/739)6.2 (144/2328)6.5 (384/5898)
 ≥ 35.8 (46/791)1.6 (12/739)4.4 (103/2328)4.7 (278/5898)
Duration of psoriasis symptoms, mean years (SD) [median]19.1 (12.1) [16.7]18.5 (12.1) [16.4]18.8 (12.2) [16.9]18.7 (12.2) [16.7]
Tobacco use, yes, % (n/N)39.5 (310/784)37.1 (274/739)37.6 (872/2322)14.8 (874/5898)

BMI Body mass index, N total patients evaluated, n number of patients in category, SD standard deviation

Number of patients by treatment duration. N (total number of patients) = 5898; total exposure = 17,003.4 patient-years Baseline characteristics for the overall patient population BMI Body mass index, N total patients evaluated, n number of patients in category, SD standard deviation

Placebo-Controlled Period

Results for the combined placebo-controlled periods of the UNCOVER-1, -2 and -3 studies have been presented previously [19]. When adjusted for patient exposure (N = 3119), the IR of any TEAE was higher with ixekizumab (255.2/100 p-y) than with placebo (205.5/100 p-y) (Table 2). The most common TEAE reported was nasopharyngitis for both placebo- (IR 38.3/100 p-y) and ixekizumab- (IR 40.2/100 p-y) treated patients; the next most common TEAE was ISR (38.5/100 p-y) among ixekizumab-treated patients and upper respiratory tract infection (15.6/100 p-y) for the placebo group. For the induction period of the combined UNCOVER-2 and -3 studies (N = 2562), which included etanercept as an active control, the rate of any TEAE for ixekizumab (250.5/100 p-y) was similar to that for etanercept (235.8/100 p-y), and the rates of nasopharyngitis and ISRs for etanercept were 32.5 and 47.3 per 100 p-y, respectively, versus 35.4 and 41.0 per 100 p-y, respectively, for the combined ixekizumab arms. Across the UNCOVER studies, for common TEAEs, IRs through 12 weeks were significantly higher among patients receiving ixekizumab than among those receiving placebo for ISR and injection site erythema. The IR of AEs leading to study drug discontinuation was 5.0/100 p-y for placebo and 9.2/100 p-y for patients receiving ixekizumab; for discontinuations due to ISRs, there were no AEs among placebo patients and an IR of 1.1 per 100 p-y (n = 6; 0.3%) for patients receiving ixekizumab. The IR of serious AEs (SAEs) was 6.7 per 100 p-y for patients receiving placebo and 8.6 per 100 p-y for patients receiving ixekizumab during the induction period. During the induction period of the combined UNCOVER -2 and -3 studies, ISRs and injection site erythema were both significantly higher for etanercept than for placebo, while the IR of AEs leading to etanercept discontinuation was 5.3 per 100 p-y, with three patients discontinuing due to ISRs (IR 1.8/100 p-y; 0.4%). Similarly, the incidence of SAEs for etanercept was 8.3 per 100 p-y during the induction period.
Table 2

Summary of the most commonly reported adverse events

Follow-upPlacebo-controlled periodaCombined Ixe therapy period (N = 5898)
Placebo (N = 791)Ixekizumab (N = 2328)Etanercept (N = 739)
Mean follow-up (weeks)11.912.011.9150.4
Total follow-up (p-y)180.0534.5169.217,003.4

AE Adverse event, D/C study discontinuation, IR incidence rate, Ixe ixekizumab, N total number of patients, p-y patient-years, resp. respiratory, SAE serious AE, TEAE treatment-emergent AE

aEtanercept was an active control in two of the three UNCOVER studies included in the placebo-controlled analysis here; data for placebo and ixekizumab are shown for all three studies

bIncidence rates are per 100 patient-years

Summary of the most commonly reported adverse events AE Adverse event, D/C study discontinuation, IR incidence rate, Ixe ixekizumab, N total number of patients, p-y patient-years, resp. respiratory, SAE serious AE, TEAE treatment-emergent AE aEtanercept was an active control in two of the three UNCOVER studies included in the placebo-controlled analysis here; data for placebo and ixekizumab are shown for all three studies bIncidence rates are per 100 patient-years

Combined Periods of Ixekizumab Therapy

Incidence rates for TEAEs for the combined ixekizumab treatment period were compared with either placebo or ixekizumab treatment during the induction period. Exposure-adjusted IRs for any TEAE were lower in the combined ixekizumab treatment period (30.0/100 p-y) than in placebo-controlled period (placebo 205.5/100 p-y or ixekizumab 255.2/100 p-y; Table 2). The same was true for the most common TEAEs of nasopharyngitis/viral upper respiratory infection (8.9/100 p-y overall vs. 38.3/100 p-y for placebo or 40.2/100 p-y for ixekizumab through 12 weeks) upper respiratory tract infection (5.4/100 p-y overall vs. 15.6/100 p-y or 18.0/100 p-y); ISR (3.4/100 p-y vs. 5.0/100 p-y or 38.5/100 p-y) and headache (3.0/100 p-y vs. 12.8/100 p-y or 18.9/100 p-y), which were more common among ixekizumab-treated patients than placebo-treated patients during the induction phase. The rates of AEs leading to study discontinuation, any SAEs and SAEs by body system generally decreased or remained static when compared between the induction period and the combined ixekizumab treatment period (Table 2). To assess the impact of cumulative exposure on rates of important AEs, IRs were compared through 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 years of treatment (Fig. 3). The exposure-adjusted IR of ISRs was 15.5 per 100 p-y during the first year of treatment and declined to a range of 2.0–2.3 per 100 p-y by years 3–5 of treatment. Similarly, allergic reactions or hypersensitivities were reported at 9.9/100 p-y during the first year of treatment and declined from 5.1 to 3.8 per 100 p-y from years 2–5. The IR for AEs leading to study discontinuation declined from 3.8/100 p-y in the first year of treatment to 2.0 per 100 p-y in the fifth year, while the IR for serious infections remained essentially constant (range 1.3–1.7 per 100 p-y). IRs of overall SAEs were relatively constant for each of the 1-year periods (range 6.2–7.0 per 100 p-y). The IRs of NMSC were highest in the first year (0.5/100 p-y) and decreased or stayed the same in subsequent years (range 0.2–0.4 per 100 p-y), while IRs for other malignancies ranged from 0.4 per 100 p-y in the first year to 0.6 per 100 p-y in the fourth year. MACE occurred in 84/5697 patients, with an overall IR of 0.5 per 100 p-y (Table 3); although IRs varied across treatment years, no trend was observed for an increase over time. IRs (unadjudicated) of IBD ranged from a high of 0.5 in the first year to a low of 0.1 during the third and fourth years of treatment. The IRs of candidiasis were highest in the first year (3.2/100 p-y) and then ranged from 2.1 to 2.3 per 100 p-y in subsequent years.
Fig. 3

Treatment-emergent adverse events per 100 patient-years by years of treatment. AE Adverse event, D/C study discontinuation, IBD inflammatory bowel disease, MACE major adverse cardiovascular events, NMSC non-melanoma skin cancer, p-y patient-years, Rx reaction, SAE serious adverse event

Table 3

Summary of treatment-emergent adverse events of special interest during combined ixekizumab dosing

Treatment-emergent AEsN (%)IRa
Patients treated5898
Injection site reactions892 (15.1)5.2
Hypersensitivity/allergic reactions876 (14.9)5.2
Serious infections and infestations223 (3.8)1.3
Oral candidiasis140 (2.4)0.8
Malignancies131 (2.2)0.8
 NMSC51 (0.9)0.3
 Other malignancies (excluding NMSC)86 (1.5)0.5
Inflammatory bowel disease (narrow terms)26 (0.4)0.2
 Inflammatory bowel disease1 (0.0)< 0.05
 Crohn’s disease7 (0.1)< 0.05
 Ulcerative colitis18 (0.3)0.1
MACE, adjudicated (n = 5697)84 (1.5)0.5
 Vascular death20 (0.4)0.1
 Myocardial infarction, nonfatal45 (0.8)0.3
 Stroke, nonfatal20 (0.4)0.1

AE Adverse event; IR incidence rate; MACE major adverse cardiovascular events, N total number of patients, n number of patients in category, NMSC non-melanoma skin cancer

aIncidence rates are per 100 patient-years

Treatment-emergent adverse events per 100 patient-years by years of treatment. AE Adverse event, D/C study discontinuation, IBD inflammatory bowel disease, MACE major adverse cardiovascular events, NMSC non-melanoma skin cancer, p-y patient-years, Rx reaction, SAE serious adverse event Summary of treatment-emergent adverse events of special interest during combined ixekizumab dosing AE Adverse event; IR incidence rate; MACE major adverse cardiovascular events, N total number of patients, n number of patients in category, NMSC non-melanoma skin cancer aIncidence rates are per 100 patient-years Thirty-four deaths were reported, with 32 deaths occurring during ixekizumab treatment (IR during treatment 0.2/100 p-y; range 0.1–0.3 per 100 p-y by year). For all deaths, causes were cardiac-related (n = 14), malignancies (n = 4), unknown (n = 5), respiratory causes (n = 3), trauma/accident (n = 3), severe hemorrhagic cerebral infarction (n = 1), death concomitant with severe senile dementia (n = 1), ulcerative colitis (n = 1), cholecystolithiasis (n = 1) and septic shock (n = 1). MACE accounted for most deaths, and none of the deaths were considered related to the study drug.

Adverse Events of Special Interest

As assessed based on years of treatment, IRs were generally constant or decreasing for ISRs, allergic reactions/hypersensitivity, serious infections, candidiasis, MACE, NMSC, other malignancies and IBD across the treatment periods (Fig. 2).

Administration Site or Drug Reactions

As noted above, the IRs for ISRs, as well as for allergic reactions/hypersensitivity, decreased over time through the 5 years of the study. One or more ISRs were reported for 15.1% of patients (Table 3), with 10.0, 4.5 and 0.6% experiencing mild, moderate and severe reactions, respectively, at an overall IR of 5.2 per 100 p-y. The most commonly reported specific terms were ISR (IR 3.4/100 p-y), injection site erythema (1.1/100 p-y) and injection site pain (0.6/100 p-y). A total of 13 patients discontinued the study drug due to injection site–related TEAEs (0.1/100 p-y). The most frequently reported allergic events (IR ≥ 0.5) were contact dermatitis (IR 1.1/100 p-y), eczema (1.0/100 p-y), urticaria (0.6/100 p-y), dermatitis (0.5/100 p-y), allergic rhinitis (0.5/100 p-y) and rash (0.5/100 p-y). There was one case of worsening eczematous reaction that was considered a possible paradoxical reaction, but the patient recovered and continued in the study. Four SAEs of pustular psoriasis were reported. One event occurred after an upper respiratory tract infection; the patient recovered and continued in the clinical trial. Of three cases of pustular psoriasis events, two were considered related to the study drug by the investigator, and the third case was considered unrelated; all three patients discontinued the study drug. There were reports of potential anaphylaxis events; however, upon review, none occurred in temporal relationship to the administration of ixekizumab, and no confirmed cases of ixekizumab-related anaphylaxis have been identified in any clinical studies.

Infections

Infections overall were more common during the first year of treatment (IR 56.6; 95% confidence interval [CI] 54.6, 58.6/100 p-y) versus later years (IR range 35.8 [95% CI 33.7, 38.0] to 41.2 [95% CI 39.1, 43.4]/100 p-y). In addition to the upper respiratory tract infections described above, the most common infections overall were bronchitis (IR 2.3/100 p-y), sinusitis (IR 2.2/100 p-y) and urinary tract infection (IR 2.0/100 p-y; Table 4). Infections and infestations were largely mild to moderate in severity and seldom led to discontinuation of the study drug (IR for discontinuation due to infection 0.4/100 p-y). The most common serious infections (IR ≥ 0.1/100 p-y) were cellulitis (n = 40; IR 0.2/100 p-y); pneumonia (n = 25; IR 0.1/100 p-y); appendicitis (n = 11; IR  0.1/100 p-y) and erysipelas (n = 9; IR 0.1/100 p-y).
Table 4

Infections

CategoryCombined ixekizumab (N = 5898)
n (%)IRa
Patients with ≥ 1 infection3859 (65.4)22.7
 Nasopharyngitis1515 (25.7)8.9
 Upper respiratory tract infection921 (15.6)5.4
 Bronchitis398 (6.7)2.3
 Sinusitis369 (6.3)2.2
 Urinary tract infection333 (5.6)2.0
 Influenza307 (5.2)1.8
 Pharyngitis278 (4.7)1.6
 Gastroenteritis237 (4.0)1.4
Patients with ≥ 1 serious infection/infestation223 (3.8)1.3
 Cellulitis40 (0.7)0.2
 Pneumonia25 (0.4)0.1
 Appendicitis11 (0.2)0.1
 Erysipelas9 (0.2)0.1

IR incidence rate, N total number of patients, n number of patients in category

aIncidence rates are per 100 patient-years

Infections IR incidence rate, N total number of patients, n number of patients in category aIncidence rates are per 100 patient-years Latent tuberculosis was reported for 42 patients (IR 0.2/100 p-y), the mycobacterium complex test was positive for 43 patients (IR 0.2/100 p-y) and the tuberculin test was positive for 17 patients (IR 0.1/100 p-y); pulmonary tuberculosis or tuberculosis was determined for one patient (IR < 0.05/100 p-y) each. These findings were criteria for discontinuation for some of the studies and led to discontinuation in 20, 31, 13, 1 and 1 patients, respectively. There were no confirmed cases of tuberculosis reactivation; one de novo case of tuberculosis was reported in a country with a high tuberculosis burden.

Malignancies

The most common malignancies were NMSCs (keratinocyte cancers)—specifically basal cell carcinoma (n = 42; IR 0.2/100 p-y) and squamous cell carcinomas (n = 12; IR  0.1/100 p-y) (Table 5). The total number of other malignancies was 86 (IR 0.5/100 p-y), with prostate cancer being the most common (n = 12, IR in men only 0.1/100 p-y), followed by squamous cell carcinoma (n = 6; IR < 0.05/100 p-y for all n ≤ 6), invasive ductal breast carcinoma (n = 5), colon cancer (n = 4) and metastatic lung cancer (n = 3); no other specific malignancies were seen in more than two patients.
Table 5

Malignancies

CategoryCombined ixekizumab (N = 5898)IRa
Non-melanoma skin cancer, n (%)51 (0.9)0.3
 Basal cell carcinoma, n (%)42 (0.7)0.2
 Squamous cell carcinoma, n (%)12 (0.2)0.1
Malignancies excluding NMSC, n (%)86 (1.5)0.5
 Prostate cancer,bn (%)12 (0.3)0.1
 Squamous cell carcinoma, n (%)6 (0.1)< 0.05
 Invasive ductal breast carcinoma, n (%)5 (0.1)< 0.05
 Colon cancer, n (%)4 (0.1)< 0.05
 Lung cancer metastatic, n (%)3 (0.1)< 0.05

IR incidence rate, N total number of patients, n number of patients in category, NMSC non-melanoma skin cancer

aIncidence rates are per 100 patient-years

bCalculated in men only; N = 4000 men with 11,714.2 patient-years of exposure

Malignancies IR incidence rate, N total number of patients, n number of patients in category, NMSC non-melanoma skin cancer aIncidence rates are per 100 patient-years bCalculated in men only; N = 4000 men with 11,714.2 patient-years of exposure

Candidiasis

Candidiasis overall was reported by 327 patients (IR 1.9/100 p-y), with oral candidiasis reported by 140 patients (IR 0.8/100 p-y) (Table 3); one case of esophageal candidiasis led to study discontinuation; there were no reports of deep organ or bloodstream Candida infection.

Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Overall, TEAEs of IBD (narrow terms) were reported by a total of 26 patients (IR 0.2/100 p-y), largely as ulcerative colitis (n = 18; IR 0.1/100 p-y) and Crohn’s disease (n = 7, IR < 0.05/100 p-y; Table 3). Of the eight reports of Crohn’s disease from seven patients, four events occurred in the first year and two each were reported in the second and fifth years of treatment. As awareness of the role of IL-17 inhibition in IBD evolved after initiation of the psoriasis clinical trial program, a protocol amendment was instituted that allowed for post hoc adjudication of IBD in a retrospective manner. Per adjudication, prespecified specific and nonspecific terms for IBD were identified and evaluated as follows: 24 patients had reported IBD confirmed as ulcerative colitis (n = 16; IR 0.1/100 p-y) and Crohn’s disease (n = 8; IR < 0.05/100 p-y). As shown for unadjudicated cases (specific terms) in Fig. 3, the IR for adjudicated cases remained relatively constant over time (year 1, n = 14, IR 0.3/100 p-y; year 2, n = 6, IR 0.2/100 p-y; years 3 and 4, n = 1 each [each IR < 0.05/100 p-y]; year 5, n = 4, IR 0.2/100 p-y).

Major Adverse Cardiovascular Events

Major adverse cardiovascular events occurred in 84/5697 patients (IR 0.5/100 p-y) in studies with adjudication (total p-y 16,455.6) (Table 3). The most common category of events was nonfatal myocardial infarction (n = 45; IR 0.3/100 p-y), followed by vascular death (n = 20; IR 0.1/100 p-y) and nonfatal stroke (n = 20; IR 0.1/100 p-y).

Discussion

Many factors must be considered when selecting the optimal therapy for psoriasis; important among these are the association of therapies with AEs, such as infection or malignancy, and the impact of therapy on comorbidities [23, 24]. We assessed safety events up to 5 years of therapy with ixekizumab in 5898 patients, for > 17,000 total p-y of exposure. IRs of TEAEs generally decreased or remained stable over time, and the overall rate of TEAEs was lower with longer duration of therapy compared to the first 12-week placebo-controlled period. Most AEs were not serious, and the rate of discontinuation due to AEs was low, with a decreasing trend over time. The overall rate of SAEs was stable across the study period, with no trend toward increasing rates of AEs with longer duration of exposure. This was also true for rates of malignancies, MACE and serious infections, which remained comparable to those for placebo or ixekizumab during the 12-week placebo-controlled induction period. These results support and confirm previous reports describing a favorable safety profile following shorter durations of ixekizumab exposure, and suggest that increased duration and total exposure to ixekizumab were not associated with additional or unexpected safety concerns [15, 17, 18]. Previous reports have noted infections as the most frequent AE associated with ixekizumab therapy. In the present report, infections were found to be generally mild to moderate in severity and seldom led to study discontinuation. The IR of severe infections (1.4/100 p-y) did not increase over time and was comparable to that reported in pooled safety data for up to 5 years of treatment with the anti-IL-12 and anti-IL-23 agent ustekinumab (1.1/100 p-y) [25], in pooled safety data primarily for 3 years for the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitor adalimumab (1.8/100 p-y) [26] and in data for up to 66 months in a single study of the Janus kinase inhibitor tofacitinib (1.2/100 p-y) [27]. There were no reports of Grade 4 (< 0.5 × 109/L) neutropenia associated with infections; an infection temporally associated with Grade 3 (< 1.0–0.5 × 109/L) neutropenia was reported for three patients (0.1%; influenza [n = 1], otitis externa [n = 1] and nasopharyngitis [n = 1]) and infections associated with Grade 2 neutropenia (< 1.5–1.0 × 109/L) were reported for 27 (0.5%) patients. Consistent with the role of IL-17A in the suppression of mucocutaneous candidiasis, oral candidiasis was the most frequently reported opportunistic infection. Positive tuberculin tests led to discontinuation (which was protocol specified for a portion of the studies) for 66 patients. However, no cases of tuberculosis reactivation have been observed in the ixekizumab clinical development program, including in patients with latent or previously treated Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection. One case of de novo tuberculosis was reported in a country with a high tuberculosis burden. ISRs were also one of the most commonly reported AEs, and their IRs declined over time, as noted in a previous analysis that used most of the current dataset [28]. Allergic reactions/hypersensitivities were more frequently reported during the first year, then stabilized or decreased moderately in subsequent years. The occurrence of potential paradoxical reactions, such as pustular psoriasis, were rare. SAEs classified as allergic reactions/hypersensitivity events and discontinuation of ixekizumab due to allergic reactions/hypersensitivities were uncommon, with 27 (0.5%) and 28 (0.5%) patients reporting such events, respectively. Overall, there was no indication of an increased risk for allergic reactions/hypersensitivity events with increasing durations of exposure to ixekizumab. Findings regarding IBD in the present analysis were consistent with those of an earlier report on combined ixekizumab safety data collected over 3 years, indicating that Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis were uncommon [18]. Annual IRs of patients with TEAEs (specific and broad terms) adjudicated (retrospective and prospective) per EPIMAD criteria as probable or definite Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis did not increase and remained stable for up to 5 years of therapy. As noted in a previous report on IBD in patients receiving ixekizumab, which assessed approximately two-thirds of the patients included herein over shorter periods of exposure, such rates are comparable to those reported in psoriasis cohort studies, but are difficult to compare directly to rates reported in studies of other biologics due to differences in criteria for reporting events [22]. Patients with psoriasis are at an increased risk of cardiovascular AEs, including a 10-year risk of MACE [29-33]. While a reduction in cardiovascular risk has been suggested for methotrexate or biologics in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis [34-36], reports on cardiovascular risk reduction with psoriasis treatment have been contradictory [37, 38]. Low serum levels of IL-17 have been associated with a risk of repeat myocardial infarction; however, the role of IL-17 in atherosclerosis is complex, with conflicting results reported [14]. In the present study, the overall incidence of MACE of 0.5/100 p-y was comparable to long-term results reported for patients receiving ustekinumab (0.44/100 p-y) [25] and adalimumab (0.36/100 p-y) [39], with no apparent increase in incidence with longer ixekizumab exposure. Determining whether biologics, including specific immunomodulators, are associated with increased, decreased or comparable rates of cardiovascular disease relative to rates in untreated patients with psoriasis or in patients receiving other psoriasis treatments will require further studies, such as observational studies or studies using claims database cohorts, and meta-analyses with large numbers of patients receiving various comparator treatments. Patients with psoriasis may be at increased risk for some lymphoproliferative [40] and NMSC malignancies [41, 42], and there are concerns about the impact of long-term systemic treatment with anti-TNF therapies [43]. The IR of malignancies other than NMSC (0.5/100 p-y) for up to 5 years of therapy with ixekizumab in this study was comparable to that for long-term ustekinumab (0.6/100 p-y) [25] and the anti-TNF therapies adalimumab (0.8/100 p-y) [26] and etanercept (estimated 0.55/100 p-y) [44]. The IR of NMSC seen with ixekizumab of 0.3/100 p-y in this study was somewhat lower than that reported based on long-term safety data for ustekinumab (0.52/100 p-y) [25] or with adalimumab (0.6/100 p-y) [26] or etanercept (0.9 per 100 p-y) [44] in psoriasis. The ratio of basal cell carcinoma to squamous cell carcinoma expected in immunocompetent patients in the general population is 4:1, and is reversed in severely immunocompromised patients, such as transplant recipients [45]; thus, the ratio of 3.5:1 during long-term ixekizumab dosing was consistent with the expectation for immunocompetent patients. There were 34 total deaths reported over the 17,003.4 p-y of exposure to ixekizumab; the IR of 0.2/100 p-y is consistent with that reported for ustekinumab up to 5 years (0.22/100 p-y) [25]. Most deaths in this study were secondary to cardiovascular disorders in patients with background risk factors. The limitations of the present study include the following. First, although overall IRs of AEs decreased after the 12-week induction period, some of the decreases in AEs may be due to reporting fatigue and differences in recall due to increased time between visits at later time points. Secondly, the lack of a randomized placebo control group after the induction period limited our ability to directly compare IRs at later time points with a control population. Thirdly, the length of follow-up varied between studies, and the three largest studies, UNCOVER-1, -2 and -3, are not all completed; thus, it will be important to revisit these findings once all of the UNCOVER studies have been completed. Fourthly, certain adverse effects, such as MACE and malignancies, require longer observation periods and larger patient exposures to ascertain risk. Long-term safety studies, including post marketing studies, are ongoing to continue to evaluate the safety of ixekizumab; however, preliminary data up to 27 months from the Corrona observational database are consistent with the present results [46].

Conclusion

In conclusion, no new safety signals were identified with longer-term follow-up with ixekizumab, nor was any trend observed for an increase in IRs for any AE of special interest based on increased duration of therapy through 1–5 years. Thus, the long-term safety profile with ixekizumab up to 5 years was consistent with the favorable safety profile observed previously following shorter durations of ixekizumab exposure.
Psoriasis is a chronic disease that requires long-term management; thus, long-term data on the safety and tolerability of psoriasis treatments are essential to inform patient management decisions.
We examined the long-term safety and tolerability of ixekizumab based on dosing of up to 5 years in 13 clinical trials in patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis.
The incidence rates of treatment-emergent adverse events, serious adverse events and adverse events of special interest were either stable or decreased with increasing duration of ixekizumab therapy.
These findings are consistent with previous reports on ixekizumab and indicate that no new safety findings have emerged following longer durations of dosing.
  45 in total

Review 1.  The long-term safety of adalimumab treatment in moderate to severe psoriasis: a comprehensive analysis of all adalimumab exposure in all clinical trials.

Authors:  Craig Leonardi; Kim Papp; Bruce Strober; Kristian Reich; Akihiko Asahina; Yihua Gu; Joseph Beason; Stephen Rozzo; Stephen Tyring
Journal:  Am J Clin Dermatol       Date:  2011-10-01       Impact factor: 7.403

Review 2.  Basal-cell carcinoma.

Authors:  Adam I Rubin; Elbert H Chen; Désirée Ratner
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2005-11-24       Impact factor: 91.245

3.  Short- and long-term safety outcomes with ixekizumab from 7 clinical trials in psoriasis: Etanercept comparisons and integrated data.

Authors:  Bruce Strober; Craig Leonardi; Kim A Papp; Ulrich Mrowietz; Mamitaro Ohtsuki; Robert Bissonnette; Laura K Ferris; Carle Paul; Mark Lebwohl; Daniel K Braun; Lotus Mallbris; Stefan Wilhelm; Wen Xu; Anders Ljungberg; Nayan Acharya; Kristian Reich
Journal:  J Am Acad Dermatol       Date:  2016-11-23       Impact factor: 11.527

4.  Safety and Tolerability of Ixekizumab: Integrated Analysis of Injection-Site Reactions from 11 Clinical Trials.

Authors:  Neil H Shear; Carle Paul; Andrew Blauvelt; Melinda Gooderham; Craig Leonardi; Kristian Reich; Mamitaro Ohtsuki; Beth Pangallo; Wen Xu; Susan Ball; Terri Ridenour; Hitoe Torisu-Itakura; Noah Agada; Lotus Mallbris
Journal:  J Drugs Dermatol       Date:  2018-02-01       Impact factor: 2.114

Review 5.  Psoriasis.

Authors:  Wolf-Henning Boehncke; Michael P Schön
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2015-05-27       Impact factor: 79.321

Review 6.  Proinflammatory cytokines in the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel diseases.

Authors:  Warren Strober; Ivan J Fuss
Journal:  Gastroenterology       Date:  2011-05       Impact factor: 22.682

7.  Assessment of the long-term safety and effectiveness of etanercept for the treatment of psoriasis in an adult population.

Authors:  Kim A Papp; Yves Poulin; Robert Bissonnette; Marc Bourcier; Darryl Toth; Leslie Rosoph; Melanie Poulin-Costello; Mike Setterfield; Jerry Syrotuik
Journal:  J Am Acad Dermatol       Date:  2010-09-17       Impact factor: 11.527

Review 8.  Psoriasis: Which therapy for which patient: Psoriasis comorbidities and preferred systemic agents.

Authors:  Shivani B Kaushik; Mark G Lebwohl
Journal:  J Am Acad Dermatol       Date:  2018-07-11       Impact factor: 11.527

Review 9.  Immunity to infection in IL-17-deficient mice and humans.

Authors:  Sophie Cypowyj; Capucine Picard; László Maródi; Jean-Laurent Casanova; Anne Puel
Journal:  Eur J Immunol       Date:  2012-09       Impact factor: 5.532

10.  Generation and characterization of ixekizumab, a humanized monoclonal antibody that neutralizes interleukin-17A.

Authors:  Ling Liu; Jirong Lu; Barrett W Allan; Ying Tang; Jonathan Tetreault; Chi-Kin Chow; Barbra Barmettler; James Nelson; Holly Bina; Lihua Huang; Victor J Wroblewski; Kristine Kikly
Journal:  J Inflamm Res       Date:  2016-04-19
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  13 in total

1.  Safety of Ixekizumab in Adult Patients with Moderate-to-Severe Psoriasis: Data from 17 Clinical Trials with Over 18,000 Patient-Years of Exposure.

Authors:  Christopher E M Griffiths; Melinda Gooderham; Jean-Frederic Colombel; Tadashi Terui; Ana P Accioly; Gaia Gallo; Danting Zhu; Andrew Blauvelt
Journal:  Dermatol Ther (Heidelb)       Date:  2022-05-27

2.  Safety of Brodalumab in Plaque Psoriasis: Integrated Pooled Data from Five Clinical Trials.

Authors:  Kristian Reich; Diamant Thaçi; Georg Stingl; Jens Strodl Andersen; Line Conradsen Hiort; Michala Oron Lexner; David Winkler; Carle Paul
Journal:  Acta Derm Venereol       Date:  2022-03-28       Impact factor: 3.875

3.  Safety of ixekizumab in adult patients with plaque psoriasis, psoriatic arthritis and axial spondyloarthritis: data from 21 clinical trials.

Authors:  Mark C Genovese; Eduardo Mysler; Tetsuya Tomita; Kim A Papp; Carlo Salvarani; Sergio Schwartzman; Gaia Gallo; Himanshu Patel; Jeffrey R Lisse; Andris Kronbergs; Soyi Liu Leage; David H Adams; Wen Xu; Helena Marzo-Ortega; Mark G Lebwohl
Journal:  Rheumatology (Oxford)       Date:  2020-12-01       Impact factor: 7.580

4.  Drug survival of ixekizumab, TNF inhibitors, and other IL-17 inhibitors in real-world patients with psoriasis: The Corrona Psoriasis Registry.

Authors:  Benjamin Lockshin; Angel Cronin; Ryan W Harrison; Robert R McLean; Laura Anatale-Tardiff; Russel Burge; Baojin Zhu; William N Malatestinic; Bilal Atiya; Mwangi J Murage; Gaia Gallo; Bruce Strober; Abby Van Voorhees
Journal:  Dermatol Ther       Date:  2021-02-15       Impact factor: 2.851

Review 5.  Biologic Treatment Algorithms for Moderate-to-Severe Psoriasis with Comorbid Conditions and Special Populations: A Review.

Authors:  Akshitha Thatiparthi; Amylee Martin; Jeffrey Liu; Alexander Egeberg; Jashin J Wu
Journal:  Am J Clin Dermatol       Date:  2021-04-16       Impact factor: 7.403

6.  Tineа Corporis with Trichophyton Rubrum Mimicking a Flare-Up of Psoriasis UnderTreatment with IL17-Inhibitor Ixekizumab.

Authors:  Vladimir Emelianov; Laurence Feldmeyer; Nikhil Yawalkar; Kristine Heidemeyer
Journal:  Case Rep Dermatol       Date:  2021-07-09

7.  A head-to-head comparison of ixekizumab vs. guselkumab in patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis: 12-week efficacy, safety and speed of response from a randomized, double-blinded trial.

Authors:  A Blauvelt; K Papp; A Gottlieb; A Jarell; K Reich; C Maari; K B Gordon; L K Ferris; R G Langley; Y Tada; R G Lima; H Elmaraghy; G Gallo; L Renda; S Y Park; R Burge; J Bagel
Journal:  Br J Dermatol       Date:  2020-01-15       Impact factor: 9.302

Review 8.  Considerations for safety in the use of systemic medications for psoriasis and atopic dermatitis during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Authors:  Jose W Ricardo; Shari R Lipner
Journal:  Dermatol Ther       Date:  2020-06-19       Impact factor: 3.858

9.  Efficacy and Safety of Ixekizumab Through 5 Years in Moderate-to-Severe Psoriasis: Long-Term Results from the UNCOVER-1 and UNCOVER-2 Phase-3 Randomized Controlled Trials.

Authors:  Craig Leonardi; Kristian Reich; Peter Foley; Hideshi Torii; Sascha Gerdes; Lyn Guenther; Melinda Gooderham; Laura K Ferris; Christopher E M Griffiths; Hany ElMaraghy; Heidi Crane; Himanshu Patel; Russel Burge; Gaia Gallo; David Shrom; Ann Leung; Chen-Yen Lin; Kim Papp
Journal:  Dermatol Ther (Heidelb)       Date:  2020-03-21

10.  Treatment strategies in axial spondyloarthritis: what, when and how?

Authors:  George E Fragoulis; Stefan Siebert
Journal:  Rheumatology (Oxford)       Date:  2020-10-01       Impact factor: 7.580

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