The paper by Adami and colleagues (an informal group of senior European rheumatologists)
published in this journal[1] should reassure regulators that specialists managing patients with rheumatic
diseases are very familiar with how to mitigate risk using approved biologic drugs in
the management of their patients; The paper highlights mitigating techniques used in the
case of antitumour necrosis factor therapies in the management of inflammatory arthritis
while even in the field of osteoporosis, rheumatic disease specialists are well aware of
risk mitigation with denosumab.Adami and coworkers highlight the case for romosozumab, outlining possible risk
mitigation approaches to avoid the potential risk of cardiovascular events which were
demonstrated in one of the two phase III trials undertaken to underpin an application
for registration. In 2013, we published in this journal a review showing the potential
value of sclerostin antibodies in the management of osteoporosis[2] and followed that 5 years later, showing how that potential had been met in three
phase III trials.[3] Two large trials with several thousand postmenopausal women demonstrated superior
efficacy on improving bone mineral density (BMD) and reducing fracture rates compared
with placebo[4] and alendronate.[5] The latter report was the first randomized controlled trial in postmenopausal
women to demonstrate superiority in fracture reduction of a drug over an active
comparator, although subsequently, teriparatide was demonstrated as superior to
risedronate in preventing new vertebral fractures.[6] The summation from these two trials give support to the view that, in those with
incident vertebral fractures and thus high risk of immediate subsequent fracture, an
anabolic agent should be considered early rather than using an antiresorptive agent
first. The 12-month Structure study comparing the value of teriparatide with romosozumab
demonstrated a trend to higher BMD changes at the spine with romosozumab, and
significantly greater increase in total hip BMD.If superiority of one agent over another has been proven, it is important to ensure that
there is no imbalance in adverse events. With romosozumab in the three phase III trials,
the adverse events were generally balanced between the arms but the exception was a
numeric imbalance in serious adverse effects affecting the cardiovascular system in the
romosozumab/alendronate trial during the first 12 months of the study in those receiving
romosozumab, an imbalance which had largely reversed after 24 months of the trial,
although, of course, patients only received romosozumab during the initial 12 months.[5] This finding, which was not found in the romosozumab/placebo trial,[4] remains unexplained.It is interesting to reflect on how regulators recognize and manage these risks.
Romosozumab has been approved by regulators for use in severe postmenopausal
osteoporosis in Australia, Canada, Japan, South Korea and the USA. The US Food and Drug
Administration approval for use of the drug in postmenopausal women at high risk of fracture[7] came with a black-box warning on the potential risk of myocardial infarction,
stroke and cardiovascular death but gave prescribers methods of mitigating risk. The
European Medicines Agency (EMA) took a different view of the same data and refused
marketing authorization in June 2019[8] indicating that the benefits of treatment did not outweigh its risks.However, following a re-examination procedure, the EMA’s Committee for Medicinal Products
for Human Use (CHMP) adopted a positive opinion for the use of romosozumab, for the
‘treatment of severe osteoporosis in postmenopausal women at high risk of fracture’.[9] Accordingly, imminent marketing authority is awaited, along with details of any
restrictions for use being highlighted in the summary of product characteristics. It
seems likely, therefore, that we can expect, as proposed by the CHMP, that treatment
will be initiated and supervised by specialist physicians experienced in the treatment
of osteoporosis. Balancing the risk and benefits of romosozumab will, thus, become
specialist responsibility, as argued by Adami and colleagues.[1]
Authors: David L Kendler; Fernando Marin; Cristiano A F Zerbini; Luis A Russo; Susan L Greenspan; Vit Zikan; Alicia Bagur; Jorge Malouf-Sierra; Péter Lakatos; Astrid Fahrleitner-Pammer; Eric Lespessailles; Salvatore Minisola; Jean Jacques Body; Piet Geusens; Rüdiger Möricke; Pedro López-Romero Journal: Lancet Date: 2017-11-09 Impact factor: 79.321
Authors: Felicia Cosman; Daria B Crittenden; Jonathan D Adachi; Neil Binkley; Edward Czerwinski; Serge Ferrari; Lorenz C Hofbauer; Edith Lau; E Michael Lewiecki; Akimitsu Miyauchi; Cristiano A F Zerbini; Cassandra E Milmont; Li Chen; Judy Maddox; Paul D Meisner; Cesar Libanati; Andreas Grauer Journal: N Engl J Med Date: 2016-09-18 Impact factor: 91.245
Authors: Kenneth G Saag; Jeffrey Petersen; Maria Luisa Brandi; Andrew C Karaplis; Mattias Lorentzon; Thierry Thomas; Judy Maddox; Michelle Fan; Paul D Meisner; Andreas Grauer Journal: N Engl J Med Date: 2017-09-11 Impact factor: 91.245