| Literature DB >> 35167037 |
John K Botson1, Herbert S B Baraf2, Robert T Keenan3, John Albert4, Karim R Masri5, Jeff Peterson6, Christianne Yung7, Brigid Freyne8, Mona Amin9, Abdul Abdellatif10, Nehad Soloman11, N Lawrence Edwards12, Vibeke Strand13.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Gout is a systemic disease from which some patients develop numerous painful tophi that adversely affect quality of life and functionality. Some patients treated with oral urate-lowering therapy are unable to maintain serum urate levels below 6 mg/dL, and these patients, thus classified as having refractory or uncontrolled gout, often require therapy with pegloticase to reduce symptoms and tophaceous burden. The objective of this expert opinion review is to summarize the available evidence supporting the use of concomitant immunomodulators with pegloticase to prevent development of anti-drug antibodies (ADAs) when treating patients with uncontrolled gout. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Antidrug antibodies; Gout; Immunogenicity; Immunomodulation; Pegloticase
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35167037 PMCID: PMC8866281 DOI: 10.1007/s11926-022-01055-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Rheumatol Rep ISSN: 1523-3774 Impact factor: 4.592
Summary of data: pegloticase and immunomodulation
| Author | Type of studya | IMT and run-in (time frame)b | Responders, |
|---|---|---|---|
| Berhanu et al. [ | Case report | Azathioprine (2 weeks) | 1/1 (100) |
| Freyne [ | Case report | Mycophenolate mofetil and cyclosporine (background therapy) | 1/1 (100) |
| Botson et al. [ | Proof-of-concept case series | Methotrexate (4 weeks) | 10/10 (100) |
| Albert et al. [ | Case series | Methotrexate (14–35 days)c | 8/10 (80) |
| Bessen et al. [ | Case series | Methotrexate, azathioprine, or cyclosporine (at first infusion) | 7/7 (100) |
| Masri et al. [ | Retrospective case study | Leflunomide (variable) | 4/6 (67) |
| Botson et al. [ | Open-label pilot study (MIRROR) | Methotrexate (4 weeks) | 11/14 (79) |
| Rainey et al. [ | Open-label pilot study (TRIPLE) | Azathioprine (2 weeks) | 6/10 (60)d |
| Khanna et al. [ | Randomized controlled trial (RECIPE) | Mycophenolate mofetil (2 weeks) | 19/22 (86) |
aStudies presented here are not head-to-head trials designed or statistically powered to compare the efficacy or safety of pegloticase alone or in combination with immunomodulation
bAll patients received a biweekly infusion of pegloticase 8 mg in combination with the immunomodulatory therapy shown
cOne patient received oral methotrexate 14 days after the initial pegloticase infusion
dExcludes 2 patients for whom treatment is ongoing
IMT immunomodulatory therapy
Fig. 1Proportion of patients receiving pegloticase and concomitant immunomodulatory therapy by year (2015–2019) [45•]. aPatients who started either methotrexate or azathioprine within 60 days of their first pegloticase infusion
Immunomodulator considerations for use
| Immunomodulator | Considerations | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Hepatic | Renal | Other | |
| Methotrexate [ | • Avoid in preexisting liver disease • Toxic interaction with alcohol • Monitor CBCs and LFTs | • Dose adjustment for renal impairment | • Contraindicated with pregnancy |
| Leflunomide [ | • Contraindicated with hepatic impairment • Liver function monitoring | • Patients with a history of renal failure or transplant may already be taking this medication | • Contraindicated with pregnancy |
| Mycophenolate mofetil [ | • Dose adjustment for adult transplant patients • Monitor CBCs and LFTs | • Patients with a history of renal transplant or lupus nephritis may already be taking this medication | • Potential for severe and limiting GI, glucose, and cholesterol side effects • Contraindicated with pregnancy |
| Azathioprine [ | • Potentially hepatotoxic in transplant patients • Monitor CBCs and LFTs | • Dose adjustment for renal impairment | • Drug–drug interaction with allopurinol • |
CBC complete blood cell count; GI, gastrointestinal, LFT liver function test, TPMT thiopurine S-methyltransferase