| Literature DB >> 35038128 |
Peter Foley1, Tsen-Fang Tsai2, Karl Rodins3, Issam Ribhi Hamadah4, Alfred Ammoury5, Hussein Abdel Dayem6, Mahmoud Abdallah7, Susanne Crowe8, Silvia Haas9, Effie Pournara9, Piotr Jagiello9, Yu-Huei Huang10.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Secukinumab has demonstrated sustained long-term efficacy with a favourable safety profile in various manifestations of psoriatic disease. We investigated effectiveness and safety of secukinumab, other biologics and conventional systemic therapies in patients with chronic plaque psoriasis in a real-world setting.Entities:
Keywords: Biologics; Psoriasis; Real-world; Safety; Secukinumab
Year: 2022 PMID: 35038128 PMCID: PMC8850524 DOI: 10.1007/s13555-021-00675-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dermatol Ther (Heidelb)
Fig. 1Study design
Fig. 2Patient disposition (baseline treatment cohort). Percentages are based on the number of patients in the enrolled set in the respective baseline treatment cohort
Analysis sets
| Analysis set | Conventional systemics, | Secukinumab, | Other biologics, | Total, |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Enrolled and eligible patients | 173 | 184 | 184 | 541 |
| Full analysis set (FAS) | ||||
| FAS3 | 133 | 118 | 154 | 405 |
| FAS6 | 98 | 108 | 132 | 338 |
| FAS12 | 72 | 89 | 105 | 266 |
| Exposed set (EXS) | 182 | 211 | 213 | 541 |
Enrolled and eligible patients, FAS3, FAS6 and FAS12 are summarised based on the baseline treatment cohort. EXS is based on the actual treatment cohort. The total of the EXS is the number of enrolled and eligible patients who fulfil the inclusion and exclusion criteria and receive at least one dose of any of the medications of interest. It is not the sum of the EXS of the three treatment cohorts as patients can be exposed to more than one treatment cohort. EXS, exposed set; FAS3/6/12, full analysis set at month 3, 6 or 12; n, number of patients
Baseline demographics and disease characteristics (EXS, baseline treatment cohort)
| Variable | Conventional systemics ( | Secukinumab ( | Other biologics ( | Total ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years), mean (SD) | 43.1 (14.98) | 43.3 (13.33) | 41.2 (13.34) | 42.5 (13.89) |
| Age < 65 years, | 158 (91.3) | 173 (94.0) | 175 (95.1) | 506 (93.5) |
| Male, | 119 (68.8) | 133 (72.3) | 119 (64.7) | 371 (68.6) |
| Race, | ||||
| Caucasian | 77 (44.5) | 89 (48.4) | 91 (49.5) | 257 (47.5) |
| Asian | 96 (55.5) | 89 (48.4) | 88 (47.8) | 273 (50.5) |
| Pacific Islander | 0 | 1 (0.5) | 3 (1.6) | 4 (0.7) |
| Other | 0 | 5 (2.7) | 2 (1.1) | 7 (1.3) |
| BMI (kg/m2), mean (SD) | 28.40 (5.76) ( | 28.18 (5.83) ( | 27.78 (5.92) ( | 28.11 (5.83) ( |
| Time since PsO diagnosis (years), mean (SD) | 9.78 (10.19) ( | 14.23 (10.70) ( | 12.64 (9.61) ( | 12.27 (10.32) ( |
| PsA, yes | 35 (20.2) | 56 (30.4) | 55 (29.9) | 146 (27.0) |
| PASI total score, mean (SD) | 15.45 (9.17) ( | 17.35 (11.12) ( | 15.63 (8.53) ( | 16.17 (9.71) ( |
| PASI total score category, | ||||
| < 10 | 33 (26.6) | 30 (22.9) | 27 (21.6) | 90 (23.7) |
| ≥ 10 to ≤ 20 | 67 (54.0) | 60 (45.8) | 71 (56.8) | 198 (52.1) |
| > 20 | 24 (19.4) | 41 (31.3) | 27 (21.6) | 92 (24.2) |
| BSA, mean (SD) | 29.0 (24.26) ( | 30.0 (21.28) ( | 24.5 (19.24) ( | 27.6 (21.64) ( |
| BSA category, | ||||
| Patients with data available ( | 106 | 99 | 125 | 330 |
| Mild (BSA < 10%) | 22 (20.8) | 12 (12.1) | 17 (13.6) | 51 (15.5) |
| Moderate (BSA ≤ 10% to ≤ 20%) | 31 (19.2) | 31 (31.3) | 57 (45.6) | 119 (36.1) |
| Severe (BSA > 20%) | 53 (50.0) | 56 (56.6) | 51 (40.8) | 160 (48.5) |
| Severity of psoriasis | ||||
| Patients with data available ( | 164 | 172 | 174 | 510 |
| Mild (BSA < 10% or PASI total score < 10) | 38 (23.2) | 31 (18.0) | 24 (13.8) | 93 (18.2) |
| Moderate (10% ≤ BSA ≤ 20% or 10 ≤ PASI total score ≤ 20) | 62 (37.8) | 65 (37.8) | 90 (51.7) | 217 (42.5) |
| Severe (BSA > 20% or PASI total score > 20) | 64 (39.0) | 76 (44.2) | 60 (34.5) | 200 (39.2) |
Percentages are based on the number of patients (n) or the number of patients available (m) in the EXS in the respective baseline treatment cohort
BMI body mass index, BSA body surface area, EXS exposed set, m number of patients available for assessment, N total number of patients, n number of patients, PASI Psoriasis Area and Severity Index, PsA psoriatic arthritis, PsO psoriasis, SD standard deviation
Fig. 3Proportion of patients achieving almost clear to clear skin (baseline treatment cohort). Percentages are based on the number of patients in the FAS3, FAS6 and FAS12 with data available (m) at each visit of interest in the respective baseline treatment cohort. *Secukinumab versus conventional systemics, †other biologics versus conventional systemics. FAS3/6/12, full analysis set at month 3, 6 or 12
Fig. 4Proportion of patients achieving (i) PASI 90 and (ii) PASI 100 response (baseline treatment cohort). Percentages are based on the number of patients in the FAS3, FAS6 and FAS12 with data available (m) at each visit of interest in the respective baseline treatment cohort. FAS3/6/12, full analysis set at month 3/6/12; PASI Psoriasis Area and Severity Index
Fig. 5Adjusted mean change in PASI total score from baseline (baseline treatment cohort). Error bars represent SE. Analysed using MMRM model including baseline treatment cohort, psoriatic arthritis, visit as fixed effect factors, baseline PASI total score value as covariate and the baseline treatment cohort by visit interaction, psoriatic arthritis by visit interaction, and baseline PASI total score by visit interaction. †Other biologics versus conventional systemics; *secukinumab versus conventional systemics. FAS3/6/12 full analysis set at month 3, 6 or 12; LS least squares; PASI, Psoriasis Area and Severity Index; MMRM mixed model repeated measures; SE standard error
Fig. 6Proportion of patients achieving (i) PGA/IGA 0/1 response; (ii) DLQI 0/1 score (baseline treatment cohort). Percentages are based on the number of patients in the FAS3, FAS6 and FAS12 with data available (m) at each visit of interest in the respective baseline treatment cohort. FAS3/6/12 full analysis set at month 3/6/12; DLQI Dermatology Life Quality Index; IGA Investigator’s Global Assessment; PGA Physician’s Global Assessment
Overall safety profile (EXS, actual treatment cohort)
| Conventional systemics ( | Secukinumab ( | Other biologics ( | Nonea ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AEs | 63 (34.6) | 71 (33.6) | 65 (30.5) | 20 (16.0) |
| Related to baseline treatment | 47 (25.8) | 19 (9.0) | 21 (9.9) | 11 (8.8) |
| Related to other treatment | 9 (4.9) | 3 (1.4) | 2 (0.9) | 1 (0.8) |
| SAEs | 4 (2.2) | 9 (4.3) | 6 (2.8) | 5 (4.0) |
| Related to baseline treatment | 0 | 4 (1.9) | 2 (0.9) | 3 (2.4) |
| Related to other treatment | 1 (0.5) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Fatal SAEs | 1 (0.5) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| AEs leading to discontinuation | 3 (1.6) | 0 | 1 (0.5) | 0 |
| AEs leading to dose adjustment | 13 (7.1) | 3 (1.4) | 4 (1.9) | 0 |
aPatients who were not taking medication at certain times during the study. These AEs could not be allocated to a cohort owing to technical set-up of the electronic case report form and were manually analysed; most of these AEs occurred between the loading and maintenance dose. Percentages are based on the number of patients from the EXS (N) for each respective actual treatment cohort. Actual treatment cohort may differ from baseline treatment
AE adverse event, EXS exposed set, N total number of patients, n number of patients, SAE serious adverse event
Adverse events of special interest (EXS, actual treatment cohort)
| Grouping | Conventional systemic | Secukinumab | Other biologics | Nonea |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of subjects with at least one event | 22 (12.1) | 47 (22.3) | 40 (18.8) | 9 (7.2) |
| Hypersensitivity | 2 (1.1) | 9 (4.3) | 11 (5.2) | 2 (1.6) |
| Immune/administration reactions | 0 | 1 (0.5) | 4 (1.9) | 0 |
| Infections | 10 (5.5) | 35 (16.6) | 25 (11.7) | 6 (4.8) |
| Infections (infectious pneumonia) | 0 | 1 (0.5) | 1 (0.5) | 1 (0.8) |
| Infections (fungal) | 0 | 7 (3.3) | 4 (1.9) | 2 (1.6) |
| Infections (viral herpes) | 1 (0.5) | 1 (0.5) | 1 (0.5) | 0 |
| Infections (mycobacterial) | 1 (0.5) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Infections (skin structure) | 5 (2.7) | 15 (7.1) | 12 (5.6) | 4 (3.2) |
| Infections (staphylococcal) | 0 | 1 (0.5) | 4 (1.9) | 0 |
| Major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) | 7 (3.8) | 5 (2.4) | 8 (3.8) | 0 |
| Malignant or unspecified tumours | 3 (1.6) | 1 (0.5) | 0 | 1 (0.8) |
| Malignant or unspecified tumours (except NMSC) | 3 (1.6) | 1 (0.5) | 0 | 1 (0.8) |
| Neutropenia | 0 | 1 (0.5) | 0 | 0 |
aPatients who were not taking medication at certain times during the study. Percentages are based on the number of patients from the EXS for each respective actual treatment cohort
AE adverse event, EXS exposed set, MACE major adverse cardiac events, N total number of patients, n number of patients, NMSC non-melanoma skin cancer
| Secukinumab has demonstrated sustained long-term efficacy with a favourable safety profile in various manifestations of psoriatic disease in clinical trials. |
| In the real world, secukinumab is prescribed for patients with chronic plaque psoriasis who may have clinical features that differ from those seen in controlled clinical trials; therefore, the collection of real-world data becomes essential in the characterisation of the patterns of secukinumab use in the everyday clinical practice where other treatment options are available. |
| Real-world data on the effectiveness of secukinumab in the Asia-Pacific and Middle East regions are sparse. |
| REALIA was a non-interventional, multicentre, prospective, parallel group study conducted to investigate effectiveness and safety of secukinumab, other biologics and conventional systemic therapies in patients with chronic plaque psoriasis in a real-world setting. |
| The findings from the REALIA study conducted in a large geographical region of Asia-Pacific and Middle East suggest that secukinumab is prescribed in patients with chronic plaque psoriasis with higher prevalence of psoriatic arthritis, more severe and longer duration of the disease, compared with patients treated with conventional systemics and other biologics. |
| The results confirm that secukinumab is effective and well tolerated in patients with psoriasis in a real-world setting, and these findings are in line with the clinical outcomes of secukinumab reported in clinical trials. |