| Literature DB >> 35149602 |
Maria Sandovici1, Niels van der Geest2, Yannick van Sleen2, Elisabeth Brouwer2.
Abstract
Despite the heterogeneity of the giant cell arteritis (GCA) at the level of clinical manifestations and the cellular and molecular players involved in its pathogenesis, GCA is still treated with standardised regimens largely based on glucocorticoids (GC). Long-term use of high dosages of GC as required in GCA are associated with many clinically relevant side effects. In the recent years, the interleukin-6 receptor blocker tocilizumab has become available as the only registered targeted immunosuppressive agent in GCA. However, immunological heterogeneity may require different pathways to be targeted in order to achieve a clinical, immunological and vascular remission in GCA. The advances in the targeted blockade of various molecular pathways involved in other inflammatory and autoimmune diseases have catalyzed the research on targeted therapy in GCA. This article gives an overview of the studies with targeted immunosuppressive treatments in GCA, with a focus on their clinical value, including their effects at the level of vascular inflammation. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: biological therapy; giant cell arteritis; glucocorticoids
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35149602 PMCID: PMC8845325 DOI: 10.1136/rmdopen-2021-001652
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RMD Open ISSN: 2056-5933
Figure 1Schematic representation of the most important cellular players in the immunopathogenesis of giant cell arteritis (GCA) (D, dendritic cell, M, monocyte/macrophage, T, T cell, B, B cell), their cytokine/soluble products and the potential targets and tools of therapeutic intervention in GCA. Created with BioRender.com. CD, cluster of differentiation; IFN, interferon; IL, interleukin; JAK, Janus kinase; GM-CSF, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor; TNF, tumour necrosis factor.
Overview of the prospective studies with targeted immunosuppressive agents in giant cell arteritis (GCA)
| Study author/ sponsor | Target | Level of evidence | Targeted immunosuppressive agent | GC start dosage | Classification criteria | Disease stage | Primary end point | Primary end point met (YES/NO) | Duration of follow-up |
| Villiger | IL-6 | RCT | Tocilizumab i.v. | 1 mg/kg/day+taper to 0.1 mg/kg/day by wk 12+taper to 0 | ACR1990 and | New-onset | Complete remission rate at a GC dose of 0.1 mg/kg/day at 12 wk | YES | 52 wk |
| Stone | IL-6 | RCT | Tocilizumab s.c. | 20–60 mg/day + | ACR1990, PMR and | New-onset Relapsing | GC-free remission rate at 52 wk in each TCZ group vs placebo 26 wk GC | YES | 52 wk |
| Christ | IL-6 | Open-label | Tocilizumab i.v. | 500 mg methyl-prednisolone i.v. | ACR1990, PMR and | New-onset (18) | Remission within 31 days | NO | 52 wk |
| Schmidt | IL-6 | RCT | Sirukumab three arms | 20–60 mg/day+standard taper | High ESR/CRP and cranial or PMR clinic and TAB/imaging+ | New-onset | Sustained remission rate at 52 wk | Unclear | 52 wk early terminated |
| Conway | IL-12/ | Open-label | Ustekinumab s.c. | Median 20 mg/day+standard taper | ACR1990 or imaging+ | Relapsing (25) | GC dose prior to ustekinumab vs GC dose at 52 wk | YES | 52 wk |
| Matza | IL-12/ | Open-label | Ustekinumab s.c. | 20–60 mg/day + | GCA or PMR-symptoms and TAB/imaging+ | New-onset | GC-free remission rate at 52 wk | NO | 52 wk early terminated |
| Venhoff | IL17(A) | RCT | Secukinumab s.c. 300 mg or placebo at wk 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, then1x/4 wk | 26 wk taper | ACR1990 or imaging+ | New-onset | Sustained remission rate at 28 wk | YES | 52 wk |
| Langford | T cell | RCT | Abatacept i.v. | 28 wk taper | ACR1990 | New-onset | Relapse-free survival rate at 12 mo | YES | 12 mo |
| Koster | JAK 1/2 | Open-label | Baricitinib | 10–30 mg/day+standard taper | TAB + or imaging+ | Relapsing (15) | Safety (frequency of AE and SAE) | YES | 52 wk |
| Cid | GM-CSF | RCT | Mavrilimumab s.c. | 20–60 mg/day+26 wk taper | TAB + or imaging+ | New-onset | The time to first adjudicated flare by week 26 | YES | 26 wk |
| Hoffman | TNF-α | RCT | Infliximab i.v. 5 mg/kg or placebo at week 0, 2, 6 then 1 x/8 wk | 40–60 mg/day+22 wk taper | ACR1990 | New onset | Relapse-free rate through 22 wk | NO | 22 wk early terminated |
| Seror | TNF-α | RCT | Adalimumab s.c. | 0.7 mg/kg/day+standard taper | ACR1990 | New onset | Remission rate on less than 0.1 mg/kg GC at 26 wk | NO | 26 wk |
| Martinez | TNF-α | RCT | Etanercept s.c. | Median 15 mg/day+standard taper | TAB+ | New onset Relapsing (17) | GC-free remission rate at 12 months | NO | 12 mo |
AE, adverse events; CRP, C reactive protein; ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate; GC, glucocorticoids; i.v., intravenously; mo, month; MRA, MR angiography; NE, not estimable; PET, positron emission tomography; PMR, polymyalgia rheumatica; RCT, randomised controlled trial; SAE, serious AEs; s.c., subcutaneous; TAB, temporal artery biopsy; TCZ, tocilizumab; TNF, tumour necrosis factor; wk, week.
Prospective, follow-up imaging studies monitoring the therapeutic response of tocilizumab on vascular inflammation in giant cell arteritis (GCA)
| Author | Disease subset (no of patients) | Duration of follow-up | Disease activity at follow-up | Biochemical activity | Ultrasound | MR | 18F-Fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography |
| Adler | New-onset | 12 mo on TCZ + | Remission: n=9 |
Low CRP and ESR under TCZ Normal biomarkers* | Not performed | Persisting wall enhancement of the aorta in all patients in treatment-free remission | Not performed |
| Prieto Peña | Relapsing | Mean | Remission: n=25 (83%) | Low CRP and ESR under TCZ | Not performed | Not performed |
Mean thoracic TBR decreased from 1.70±0.52 to 1.48±0.25 (p=0.005)
Normalisation TBR in n=9 (30%) |
| Quinn | New-onset | Up to 24 mo | At 18–24 months: remission in n=22 of 25 (88%) | Not specified | Not performed | Not performed | At 18–24 mo (n=12): Median PETVAS decreased from 24.0 (22.3–27.0) to |
| Schönau | New-onset (n=19) treated with TCZ +GC | Mean | Remission: n=13, 68.4% | Low CRP and ESR under TCZ | Not performed | Not performed | PETVAS decreased from 19.8 to 7.5 (p=0.0002) |
| Sebastian | Relapsing | 43 (12–52) wk | At 52 wk: n=3 of 4 in remission At <52 wk: n=15 in remision | Low CRP and ESR under TCZ |
Decreased TA HS (median 11 to 0; n=5) Stable AA HS (n=8) | Not performed | Median TVS decreased after starting TCZ (median 11.5 to 6.5; n=4). |
| Seitz | New onset (n=18) | 52 wk | Baseline: active Day 2–3: n=0 in remission 4 wk: n=3 in remission 24 wk: n=14 in remission 52 wk: unclear | Not specified |
Baseline (IMT): TA: 2.48; AA/SA: 1.36 Day 2–3: TA: 2.16; AA/SA: 1.21 4 wk: TA: 2.50; AA/SA: 1.42 24 wk: TA: 1.79; AA/SA: 1.54 52 wk: TA: 1.55; AA/SA: 1.48 | Not performed | Not performed |
*Interleukin-6, matrix metalloproteinase-3, soluble tumour necrosis factor receptor 2, soluble CD163, soluble intercellular adhesion molecule-1, pentraxin-3.
AA, axillary artery; C-GCA, cranial GCA; CRP, C reactive protein; ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate; GC, glucocorticoids; HS, Halo Score; IMT, intima–media thickness; LV-GCA, large vessel GCA; mo, month; PETVAS, Positron Emission Tomography Vascular Activity Score; SA, subclavian artery; TA, temporal artery; TBR, Target to Background ratio; TCZ, tocilizumab; TVS, Total Vascular Score; wk, week.