| Literature DB >> 33206343 |
Anja St Clair-Jones1, Francesca Prignano2, Joao Goncalves3, Muriel Paul4,5, Philipp Sewerin6.
Abstract
Injection-site pain (ISP) is a subjective side effect that is commonly reported with the subcutaneous administration of biological agents, yet it may only be a concern to some. Multiple factors related to the product formulation, such as pH, volume and excipients, and/or to the injection process have the potential to contribute to ISP, while patient-related factors, such as low body weight, gender and age, can make an individual more susceptible to experiencing ISP. While total elimination of ISP remains unlikely with any subcutaneously administered agent, it can be minimised by helping the patient to develop a confident and competent injection technique via robust and effective training. Careful management of patient expectations along with open discussion regarding the potential risk of ISP may serve to minimise treatment-related anxieties and, importantly, allow the patient to remain in control of his/her treatment. Other interventions to help minimise ISP include psychological interventions, allowing biologics to reach room temperature prior to injection, using the most suitable injection device for the individual patient and selecting an alternative drug formulation, when available. Productive patient-physician communication remains important in order to support and optimise treatment experience and adherence, while also providing the opportunity for patients to discuss any ISP-related issues.Entities:
Keywords: Biosimilar; Formulation; Injection process; Injection-site pain; Patient–physician communication; Subcutaneous; Training
Year: 2020 PMID: 33206343 PMCID: PMC7672413 DOI: 10.1007/s40744-020-00245-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rheumatol Ther ISSN: 2198-6576
Factors contributing to subcutaneous injection-site pain
| Product-related factors | Injection-related factors | Patient-related factors |
|---|---|---|
• Formulation (ingredients, pH, buffers) [ • Delivery volume [ • Needle gauge size [ • Device type [ | • Injection speed [ • Fluid viscosity [ • Injection angle/technique [ • Temperature of product [ • Allergens [ • Injection frequency [ • Injection site [ | • Low body weight [ • Injection anxiety/‘needle phobia’ [ • Pain catastrophising [ • Nocebo effect [ • Female gender [ • Fibromyalgia [ • Depression [ • Severe rheumatoid arthritis [ • Patient expectations [ • Patient movement (during injection) [ |
Variability in product-related factors contributing to injection-site pain across available references for and biosimilar formulations of a) adalimumab and b) etanercept
| a) | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Product-related factors contributing to SC ISP | Humira (concentrated) (adalimumab) | Humira (classic) (adalimumab) | Imraldi (SB5) | Amgevita (ABP 501) [ | Idacio (MSB11022) [ | Hulio (FKB327) [ | Hyrimoz (GP2017) [ |
| Citrate | No | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes |
| Needle gauge | AI: 29 PFS: 29 | AI: 27 PFS: 27 | AI: 29 PFS: 29 | AI: 27 PFS: 29 | PFS: 29 PFP: 29 | PFS: 29 PFP: 29 | PFS: 27 PFP: 27 |
| Latex | No | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | Yes |
| pH | 5.2a | 5.2 | 5.2 | 5.2 | 5.2 | 5.2 | 5.2 |
| Volume (mL) for 40 mg injection | 0.4 | 0.8 | 0.8 | 0.8 | 0.8 | 0.8 | 0.8 |
| Complete formulation | • Mannitol • Polysorbate 80 • Water for injection | • Mannitol • Polysorbate 80 • Citric acid monohydrate • Disodium phosphate dihydrate • Sodium chloride • Sodium citrate • Sodium dihydrogen phosphate dihydrate • Sodium hydroxide (for pH adjustment) • Water for injection | • Sorbitol • Polysorbate 20 • Citric acid monohydrate • Histidine • Histidine hydrochloride monohydrate • Sodium citrate • Water for injection | • Sucrose • Polysorbate 80 • Glacial acetic acid • Sodium hydroxide (for pH adjustment) • Water for injection | • Mannitol • Polysorbate 80 • Citric acid monohydrate • Disodium phosphate dihydrate • Sodium chloride • Sodium citrate • Sodium dihydrogen phosphate dihydrate • Sodium hydroxide (for pH adjustment) • Water for injection | • Sorbitol (E420) • Polysorbate 80 • Methionine • Monosodium glutamate • Hydrochloric acid (for pH adjustment) • Water for injection | • Mannitol • Polysorbate 80 • Adipic acid • Citric acid monohydrate • Sodium chloride • Hydrochloric acid (for pH adjustment) • Sodium hydroxide (for pH adjustment) • Water for injection |
AI autoinjector, ISP Injection-site pain, PFP prefilled pen, PFS prefilled syringe, SC subcutaneous, SPC Summary of Product Characteristics
aBased on US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) principal investigators’ data; the classic formulation is based on 2014 FDA Product Information
Examples of ISP variability across biologic agent disease area when administered subcutaneously
| Biologic agent | Type of agent | Indication | Study duration (weeks) | ISP, % ( | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adalimumab | Anti-TNF | Psoriasis | 12 | 6.7 (3/45) | Gordon et al. [ |
| Adalimumab | Anti-TNF | RA | 24 | 11.3 (36/318) | Furst et al. [ |
| Adalimumab | Anti-TNF | CD | 56 | 1.9 (5/261) | Colombel et al. [ |
| Galcanezumab | Humanised mAb (CGRP) | Chronic headache | 12 | 11.1 (13/117) | Dodick et al. [ |
| Glatiramer acetate | Immunomodulator | RRMS | 16 | 56.5 (61/108)b | Wolinsky et al. [ |
| Insulin | Hormone | Diabetes | 0.14 (1 day) | 16.5 (13/79) | Zijlstra et al. [ |
| Mepolizumab | Humanised mAb (IL-5) | Asthma | 8 | 64 (36/56) | Bel et al. [ |
| Adalimumaba | Anti-TNF | Psoriasis | ns | 3650/15637 | Grace et al. [ |
| Etanercepta | Anti-TNF | Psoriasis | ns | 23/141 | Grace et al. [ |
| Ixekizumaba | Humanised mAb (IL-17) | Psoriasis | ns | 350/1771 | Grace et al. [ |
| Secukinumaba | Humanised mAb (IL-17) | Psoriasis | ns | 166/654 | Grace et al. [ |
| Ustekinumaba | Humanised mAb (IL-12/IL-23) | Psoriasis | ns | 6/8 | Grace et al. [ |
CD Crohn’s disease, CGRP calcitonin gene-related peptide, IL interleukin, mAb monoclonal antibody, ns not specified, RA rheumatoid arthritis, RRMS relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis, TNF tumour necrosis factor
aSpontaneous reporting of ISP in post-marketing databases
bISP reported as part of injection-site reaction (annualised event rate of 55.3% reported for ISP)
| Injection-site pain (ISP) is a commonly reported subjective side effect with the subcutaneous (SC) administration of biological agents, yet it may only be a concern to some. |
| Multiple factors, including those related to product formulation (e.g. pH, volume, excipients, injection process) and to the patient (low body weight, gender and age) have the potential to contribute to ISP. |
| While total elimination of ISP remains unlikely, it can be minimised by helping the patient develop a competent injection technique and by lowering their treatment-related anxieties. |
| Other interventions to help minimise ISP include psychological interventions, allowing biologics to reach room temperature prior to injection, using the injection device most suitable for the individual patient and selecting an alternative drug formulation, when available. |
| Productive patient–physician communication remains important in order to support and optimise treatment experience and adherence, while also providing the opportunity for patients to discuss any ISP-related issues. |