| Literature DB >> 33245555 |
Jose María Álvaro-Gracia1, Jose Francisco García-Llorente2, Mónica Valderrama3, Susana Gomez3, Maria Montoro4.
Abstract
Tofacitinib is approved for the treatment of moderate to severe active rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in adult patients who do not respond adequately or are intolerant to one or more disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs. The tofacitinib RA clinical development program included randomized controlled trials of 6-24-month duration and long-term extension studies with > 7061 patients and 22,875 patient-years of exposure. To date, there are no data from other randomized studies in patients with cardiovascular risk factors comparing the long-term safety of a JAK inhibitor versus an anti-TNF. Real-world studies are necessary to complete the body of evidence supporting the effectiveness and safety of a therapeutic agent. In the case of tofacitinib, real-world data derive from health insurance claims databases, registries (US Corrona Registry, Swiss Registry, and others), national pharmacovigilance programs, and hospital databases (case series). The present article provides complete and up-to-date information on the safety profile of tofacitinib in RA, from clinical trials to real-world studies. Tofacitinib has demonstrated a consistent safety profile during up to 9.5 years of experience in randomized controlled trials and long-term extension studies. Real-world evidence has not added new safety issues with respect to those found in the clinical program. In general, the safety profile of tofacitinib is consistent with that of biologic disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs, with an increased risk of herpes zoster that seems to be a class effect of Janus kinase inhibitors. The continuous follow-up of therapeutic agents to treat rheumatoid arthritis is needed to adequately establish the safety profile for new mechanisms of action and potential risks associated with their longer term use.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical trial; Real-world; Rheumatoid arthritis; Safety; Tofacitinib
Year: 2020 PMID: 33245555 PMCID: PMC7991042 DOI: 10.1007/s40744-020-00258-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rheumatol Ther ISSN: 2198-6576
Summary of safety results from studies in the tofacitinib clinical development program
| References | Type of publication | Type of analysis/study | Total patients | Main findings by tofacitinib | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall safety profile | Kivitz et al. [ | Manuscript | Pool of phase III trials | 3881 | Lower IR with tofacitinib monotherapy than in combination: for SAEs (6.2–6.7 versus 10.2–13.5), discontinuation due to AEs (5.5–6.2 versus 10.8–11.0) and severe infections (1.6–1.7 versus 3.4–3.6) |
| Curtis et al. [ | Abstract | Pool of LTE studies | 4934 | Characteristics of patients who discontinued tofacitinib: longer disease duration at baseline, higher use of GCC, smokers/ex-smokers, and from the USA/Canada | |
| Wollenhaupt et al. [ | Manuscript | LTE study (up to 9.5 years) | 4481 | Treatment discontinuation = 52% of patients: (24% due to AEs and 4% due to inadequate response); IR for AEs leading to discontinuation = 6.8 | |
| Cohen et al. [ | Manuscript | ISS data (up to 9.5 years) | 7061 | Treatment discontinuation due to AEs = 23.1% of patients (IR = 7.1) | |
| EMA [ | SmPC | Phase IV study: ORAL surveillance Special population ≥ 50 years + ≥ 1 CVRF | 4362 | IR were: pulmonary embolism 0.27 (0.12–0.52), deep vein thrombosis 0.30 (0.14–0.55), mortality 0.57 (0.34–0.89), and non-fatal serious infections 3.35 (2.78–4.01)a | |
| Infections | Bechman et al. [ | Manuscript | Systematic review and meta-analysis: phase II and III trials | 5888 | IR for serious infections = 1.97 |
| Strand et al. [ | Abstract | Meta-analysis; RCTs and LTE studies | NA | IR for serious infections = 1.70 (5 mg BID) and 1.79 (10 mg BID) with tofacitinib monotherapy and were 3.44 and 3.42, respectively, when combined with methotrexate | |
| van Vollenhoven et al. [ | Manuscript | Pool of phase I, II, III trials and LTE studies | 7061 | Tofacitinib led to an initial elevation of ALC but decreased (stabilized) in 48 months; ALC < 500 cells/mm3 was associated with serious infections | |
| Winthrop et al. [ | Letter | Pool of phase II, III, and IIIb/IV with a TNFi control/comparator arm (< 65 vs. ≥ 65 years) | 2180 | IR for serious infections Aged < 65 years: tofa 5 mg BID 2.35 (1.42, 3.67); tofa 10 mg BID 2.00 (0.55, 5.13); ADA 1.48 (0.60, 3.06) Aged ≥ 65 years: tofa 5 mg BID 4.55 (1.67, 9.91); tofa 10 mg BID 11.31 (3.08, 28.95); ADA 2.44 (0.3, 8.81) | |
| Herpes zoster | Winthrop et al. [ | Manuscript | Pool of phase I, II, III trials and LTE studies | 6192 | IRs for herpes zoster = 0.56 (5 mg BID tofacitinib monotherapy) versus 5.44 (10 mg BID, csDMARD and GCC) |
| Opportunistic infections and tuberculosis | Souto et al. [ | Manuscript | Systematic review and meta-analysis: RCTs and LTE studies | 75,000 in RCTs | 119 cases of active tuberculosis in LTE studies; IR of tuberculosis > 40/100,000 |
| Winthrop et al. [ | Manuscript | Pool of phase II, III trials and LTE studies | 5671 | 60 opportunistic infections; IR for tuberculosis = 0.21; concurrent treatment of isoniazid and tofacitinib was associated with no tuberculosis infection | |
| Chen et al. [ | Manuscript | Basic research | – | Tofacitinib increased susceptibility to | |
| Malignancies | Curtis et al. [ | Manuscript | ISS data | 5671 | Malignancies in 107 patients; mainly lung cancer, breast cancer, lymphoma, and gastric cancer |
| Mariette et al. [ | Manuscript | ISS data | 6194 | Lymphoma occurred in 19 patients (IR = 0.10) | |
| Maneiro et al. [ | Manuscript | Systematic review, meta-analysis, and network meta-analysis | – | Odds ratio for overall malignancies = 1.15; treatment with tofacitinib is not associated with an increased risk for malignancies | |
| Interstitial lung disease | Citera et al. [ | Abstract | ISS data | 7061 | Interstitial lung disease in 42 patients (0.6%); characteristics of patients associated with the event: aged ≥ 65 and from Asia |
| Cardiovascular AEs | Xie et al. [ | Manuscript | Systematic review and meta-analysis: RCTs | 11,799 | Odds ratio for cardiovascular AEs = 0.63; tofacitinib is not associated with risk for cardiovascular AEs, MACEs, or VTEs |
| McInnes et al. [ | Manuscript | Phase II trial | 111 | Atorvastatin reduces significantly the elevated levels of total and LDL-cholesterol and triglycerides increased by tofacitinib | |
| Souto et al. [ | Manuscript | Systematic review and meta-analysis: RCTs | NA | Tofacitinib is significantly associated with hypercholesterolemia (odds ratio 4.64), increased levels of HDL (2.25), and LDL (4.80) cholesterol | |
| Charles-Schoeman et al. [ | Manuscript | Pool of phase III and LTE studies | 4827 from LTE | IR for MACEs was 0.4 per 100 PYs). Increased HDL cholesterol level after 24 weeks of treatment | |
| Mease et al. [ | Manuscript | Pool of phase I, II, and III RCTs and LTE studies | 7964 | IRs of venous thromboembolism and arterial thromboembolism are generally higher in patients with cardiovascular or VTE risk factors | |
| EMA [ | SmPC | Phase IV study: ORAL Surveillance Special population ≥ 50 years + ≥ 1 CVRF | 4362 | IR for CV mortality within 28 days of the last treatment were 0.5 per 100 PYs (95% CI 0.2–0.8) for tofacitinib 10 mg, 0.2 per 100 PYs (95% CI 0.1–0.5) for tofacitinib 5 mg, and 0.2 per 100 PYs (95% CI 0.1–0.4) for TNF inhibitors | |
| Mortality | Cohen et al. [ | Manuscript | Pool of phase II, III trials and LTE studies | 4789 | All-cause mortality rate = 0.3 per 100 patients-years |
SLE long-term extension, ISS integrated safety summary, EMA European Medicines Agency, SmPC summary of product characteristics, cDMARDs conventional disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs, IR incidence rates, SAEs serious adverse events, AEs adverse events, RCT randomized controlled trials, NA not available, ALC absolute lymphocyte counts, MACEs major adverse cardiovascular events, VTEs venous thromboembolism events, LDL low-density lipoprotein, HDL high-density lipoprotein, GCC glucocorticoids
aFor tofacitinib 5 mg
Summary of safety results from studies in real-world settings using tofacitinib for rheumatoid arthritis
| References | Type of publication | Type of study | Total patientsa | Main findings by tofacitinib | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall safety profile | Kremer et al. [ | Abstract | Corrona Registry (5 years) | 1544 | Similar rates of MACE and serious infection events between initiating with tofacitinib and bDMARD; IR for herpes zoster higher for tofacitinib |
| Cohen et al. [ | Brief report | Post-marketing surveillance experience (3 years) | 34,223 PYs | 25,417 AEs, 4352 SAEs, and 102 fatal cases Of AEs, 83% were considered non-serious | |
| Mueller et al. [ | Abstract | Case series: St. Gallen and-Aarau RA cohorts | 144 | Main reasons for discontinuation: inadequate response, gastrointestinal symptoms, and infection | |
| Hsieh et al. [ | Abstract | Retrospective case series: drug-based registry | 211 | Incidence rate of all-cause AEs higher in tofacitinib initiators (44.9 events/100 patient-years) versus TNFi (33.1 events/100 patient-years) | |
| Winthrop et al. [ | Letter | Corrona Registry | 10,357 | Age-/gender-standardized SIE IRs were higher in older versus younger patients, and similar between tofacitinib and bDMARD initiators for both age groups | |
| Herpes zoster | Tamura et al. [ | Abstract | Post-marketing surveillance experience (3 years) | 3929 | Herpes zoster was the most frequently reported AE by preferred term (3.7%); tuberculosis in 3 patients; IR for herpes zoster = 6.81 and for serious infection events = 5.38 |
| Curtis et al. [ | Manuscript | Healthcare insurance data (5 years) | 2526 | Crude incidence of herpes zoster = 3.87/100 patient-years. Characteristics associated with infection: age (older), sex (female), prednisone (> 7.5 mg/day), prior infection, and higher number of hospitalizations | |
| Curtis et al. [ | Manuscript | Healthcare insurance data (6 years) | 8030 | Incidence of herpes zoster lowest without GCC (3.4/100 patient-years with methotrexate versus 3.7 without). An increased risk associated with age (older), and sex (female) | |
| Hepatitis | Chen et al. [ | Letter | Retrospective case Series | 32 | Tofacitinib does not interfere with hepatitis C viral replication |
| Chen et al. [ | Letter | Retrospective case series | 116 | 6 patients with previous hepatitis B infection were considered carriers and the remaining 75 had resolved the infections (normal levels of alanine aminotransferase) | |
| Serling et al. [ | Letter | Retrospective case series | 20 | No hepatitis B virus reactivation in patients with resolved infection receiving tofacitinib over 3 years | |
| Malignancies | Tamura et al. [ | Abstract | Post-marketing surveillance experience (3 years) | 3929 | 25 cases of malignancies within first 6 months of treatment (12 associated with the treatment); IR for malignancy = 1.25 |
| Gastrointestinal perforation | Xie et al. [ | Manuscript | Healthcare insurance data | 4755 | Incidence of lower tract gastrointestinal perforation = 1.29; predictors of risk were: age (older), diverticulitis/other gastrointestinal conditions, and prednisone (> 7.5 mg/day) |
| Interstitial lung disease | Xie et al. [ | Abstract | Healthcare insurance data | 1310 and 1540 PYs | IR for interstitial lung disease = 3.05 |
| Cardiovascular AEs | Kume et al. [ | Manuscript | Prospective case series | 46 | Improvement of the atherosclerosis, reduction of the disease activity, and limitation of the vascular damage |
| Yun et al. [ | Abstract | Healthcare insurance data (6 years) | 2155 | 20 venous thrombotic events occurred in patients. IR for venous thrombotic events = 1.31 | |
| Desai et al. [ | Manuscript | Healthcare insurance data | 2905 | IR for venous thromboembolism = 0.60 and 0.34; infrequent incidence of deep vein thrombosis | |
| DVT and PE | Verden et al. [ | Manuscript | FDA’s Adverse Event Reporting System | 317 | No raised rates for DVT and PE with tofacitinib |
| Mortality | Pope et al. [ | Abstract | 3-Year Canadian experience | 4276 | 27 patients (out of 1226 of those who discontinued tofacitinib) died during tofacitinib treatment |
PYs patient-years, MACEs major adverse cardiovascular events, bDMARDs biologic disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs, IR incidence rates, AEs adverse events, SAEs serious adverse events, TNFi tumor necrosis factor inhibitors, NA not available, GCC glucocorticoids, DVT deep venous thrombosis, PE pulmonary thromboembolism
aUnless indicated otherwise, values are total number of patients
| Although randomized controlled trials provide reliable evidence of the efficacy and safety of therapeutic agents, real-world studies are necessary to complete the body of evidence |
| To provide the available information on the safety profile of tofacitinib during its clinical development program (including phase I, II, IIIB/IV, long-term extension studies and the integrated safety analyses) and to contextualize it with that found in real-world settings |
| Tofacitinib has demonstrated a consistent safety profile during up to 9.5 years of experience in randomized controlled trials and long-term extension studies |
| Real-world evidence has not added new safety issues with respect to those found in the clinical development program |