| Literature DB >> 35329914 |
Santos Castañeda1,2, Diana Prieto-Peña3, Esther F Vicente-Rabaneda1, Ana Triguero-Martínez1, Emilia Roy-Vallejo4, Belén Atienza-Mateo3, Ricardo Blanco3, Miguel A González-Gay3,5,6.
Abstract
Giant cell arteritis (GCA) is the most common vasculitis among elderly people. The clinical spectrum of the disease is heterogeneous, with a classic/cranial phenotype, and another extracranial or large vessel phenotype as the two more characteristic patterns. Permanent visual loss is the main short-term complication. Glucocorticoids (GC) remain the cornerstone of treatment. However, the percentage of relapses with GC alone is high, and the rate of adverse events affects more than 80% of patients, so it is necessary to have alternative therapeutic options, especially in patients with worse prognostic factors or high comorbidity. MTX is the only DMARD that has shown to reduce the cumulative dose of GC, while tocilizumab is the first biologic agent approved due to its ability to decrease the relapse rate and lower the cumulative GC doses. However, apart from the IL-6 pathway, there are other pro-inflammatory cytokines and growth factors involved in the typical intima hyperplasia and vascular remodeling of GCA. Among them, the more promising targets in GCA treatment are the IL12/IL23 axis antagonists, IL17 inhibitors, modulators of T lymphocytes, and inhibitors of either the JAK/STAT pathway, the granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, or the endothelin, all of which are updated in this review.Entities:
Keywords: DMARD; abatacept; giant cell arteritis; glucocorticoids; jakinibs; mavrilimumab; methotrexate; temporal arteritis; tocilizumab; ustekinumab
Year: 2022 PMID: 35329914 PMCID: PMC8954453 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11061588
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Schematic representation of the pathophysiology of giant cell arteritis. Abbreviations: GM-CSF: granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor; IL: interleukin; INF-Υ: interferon gamma; JAK: Janus kinase; T cell: T lymphocytes; Th: T helper lymphocytes subpopulation; TGF-β: transforming growth factor beta; TNF-α: tumor necrosis factor alpha.
Tocilizumab in giant cell arteritis. Main observational studies including 15 or more patients and randomized clinical trials.
| Author, Year | Type of Study |
| Sex F (%) | Population/Median Follow-Up (FU) | Therapeutic Protocol | Prior DMARD | Main Efficacy Outcomes | Serious Adverse Events |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Observational Studies | ||||||||
| Loricera et al., 2015 [ | Retrospective multicenter open-label study | 22 | 17 (72.3) | Refractory GCA and/or with unacceptable GC-related AE. | i.v. TCZ 8mg/kg/m (monotherapy | 19 (86.4) | Clinical remission (17/22) or improvement (2/22). | TCZ discontinuation ( |
| Régent et al., 2016 [ | Retrospective multicenter open-label study | 34 | 27 (79.4) | GCA with unacceptable GC-related AEs ( | i.v. TCZ 8mg/kg/m (monotherapy | 20 (58.8) | Clinical improvement (28/34). | TCZ discontinuation ( |
| Samson et al., 2018 [ | Prospective multicenter open-label study | 20 | 15 (75) | New-onset (95%) or recurrent GCA. | 4 Infusions of i.v. TCZ 8 mg/kg/m from w0 to w12 | Prior DMARD within 6 m before inclusion were not allowed | Remission in 100% at w12 | 3 SAE: 1 sudden death for unknown reasons and 2 hospitalizations (atrial fibrillation and hip replacement) |
| Adler et al., 2019 [ | Open-label extension of iv TCZ trial | 17 | 13 (76.5) | Relapse-free patients from the TCZ arm. | If relapse, TCZ or GC could be added at physician discretion | No GC or other DMARD were given after TCZ discontinua-tion | Lasting remission DMARD-free in > 50% of patients. | NR |
| Nannini et al., 2019 [ | Single-center prospective open-label study | 15 | NR | New-onset ( | i.v. TCZ 8mg/kg/m ( | NR | 100% Sustained remission during TCZ therapy. | No SAE |
| Calderón-Goercke et al., 2019 [ | Multicenter retrospective series | 134 | 101 (75.4) | Refractory GCA (100%) | i.v. TCZ 8mg/kg/m ( | csDMARD | Clinical remission was achieved in 55.5%, 70.4%, 69.2% and 90% of patients at 6, 12, 18, 24 months, respectively | SAE: 32 (21.1 per 100 patients-year). |
| Amsler et al., 2021 [ | Observational monocentric study | 186 | 116 (62) | MR angiography of aorta performed/ positive in: 170 (91%)/123 (72%). | i.v. TCZ was added to GC in doses of 8 mg/kg body weight at 4-week intervals or at a dosage of 162 mg s.c. at weekly or bi-weekly intervals | NR | The occurrence of vision loss in a large GCA cohort treated with TCZ | Only visual AE described: Two patients (1.1%) developed vision loss, both at the initiation of TCZ treatment |
| Randomized clinical trials | ||||||||
| Villiger et al., 2016 [ | Single center, phase 2, DB, PBO-controlled | 30 | TCZ | New-onset (80% TCZ, 70% PBO) or relapsing GCA. | i.v. TCZ 8mg/kg/m + GC vs. PBO + GC | Prior bDMARD not allowed | Complete remission at week 12: 85% TCZ vs. 40% PBO (RD 45%, 95% CI 11–79; | 35% TCZ vs. 50% PBO, ( |
| Stone et al., 2017 [ | Multicenter, phase 3, DB, PBO-controlled | 251 | TCZ * | New-onset (47% and 52% TCZ groups *, 46% and 45% PBO groups #) or relapsing GCA. | s.c. TCZ 162 mg qw + GC 26 w ( | Baseline MTX in 4 (3) newly diagnosed GCA and 23 (17) relapsing GCA | Sustained GC-free remission at week 52 significantly favored TCZ over PBO ( | 15% TCZ qw, 14% TCZ q2w, 22% PBO + GC 26 w and 25% PBO + GC 52 w, NS. |
Abbreviations: AE(s): adverse event(s); AION: anterior ischemic optic neuropathy; bDMARD: biologic disease modifying antirheumatic drugs; CI: confidence interval; CMV: cytomegalovirus; CRP: C-reactive protein; csDMARD: conventional synthetic disease modifying antirheumatic drugs; CV: cardiovascular; DB: double-blind; DMARD: disease modifying antirheumatic drugs; ESR: erythrocyte sedimentation rate; F: female; FU: follow-up; GC: glucocorticoids; GCA: giant cell arteritis; GI: gastrointestinal; Hb: hemoglobin; i.v.: intravenous; kg: kilogram; LVV: large vessel vasculitis; m: month; mg: milligram; MI: myocardial infarction; MRA: magnetic resonance angiography; MTX: methotrexate; n: number; NS: not significant; PBO: placebo; PET/TC: 18-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG)-positron emission tomography; qw: every week; q2w: every other week; RD: risk difference; SAE: serious adverse events; s.c.: subcutaneous; TBC: tuberculosis; TCZ: tocilizumab; vs: versus; w: week. * TCZ groups: s.c. TCZ administered every week or every other week; # PBO groups: with a GC tapering protocol of 26 weeks or 52 weeks. Ϯ MTX allowed: stable doses of concomitant MTX were allowed by protocol if started more than 6 weeks prior to the study enrollment, and maintained stable throughout the screening and 52-week double-blind treatment periods. The rest of DMARD was excluded by protocol.
Role of non-tocilizumab biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs in giant cell arteritis.
| Author, Year [Ref.] | Type of Study |
| Sex | Population/Median Follow-Up | Therapeutic Protocol | Prior DMARD n (%) | Main Efficacy Outcomes | Serious Adverse Events |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TNF-α Antagonists | ||||||||
| Hoffman et al., 2007 [ | Multicenter, randomized, DB, PBO-controlled trial | 44 (IFX 28, PBO 16) | IFX | Newly diagnosed GCA in GC-induced remission. | i.v. IFX 5mg/kg vs. PBO | Prior DMARD not allowed | Differences in relapse-free patients (43% IFX vs. 50% PBO) and % of patients with GC tapering without relapse (61% IFX vs. 75% PBO) at 22w between groups were NS | 29% IFX vs. 25% PBO, NS |
| Martinez-Taboada et al., 2008 [ | Multicenter, randomized, DB, PBO-controlled trial | 17 | ETN | Clinically asymptomatic biopsy-proven GCA with GC-related comorbidity. | s.c. ETN 25 mg twice weekly vs. PBO | Prior DMARD not allowed | Clinical disease control without GC at 52 w: 50% ETN vs. 22.2% PBO (NS). | 12.5% ETN vs. 11.1% PBO, NS |
| Seror et al., 2018 [ | Multicenter, randomized, DB, PBO-controlled trial | 70 | ADA | Newly diagnosed GCA | s.c. ADA 45 mg q2w vs. PBO | Prior DMARD not allowed | Remission on less than 0.1 mg/kg of prednisone at week 26: 59% ADA vs. 50% PBO (NS). | 14.5% ADA vs. 47.2% PBO. |
| Ustekinumab | ||||||||
| Conway et al., 2016 [ | Single center, prospective open-label registry | 14 | 11 (79) | Refractory GCA (inability to taper GC to <10 mg/d due to symptoms of active GCA with a minimum | s.c. UST 90 mg every 3 months | 12 (86) | No relapses. | 3 Discontinuations due to AE |
| Conway et al., 2018 [ | Multicenter, open-label prospective registry | 25 | 20 (80) | Refractory GCA (inability to taper GC due to recurrence of symptoms consistent with active GCA, after an initial treatment response to high-dose GC). | s.c. UST 90 mg every 3 months | 17 (68) | No relapses. | 3 Discontinuations due to AE: 1 recurrent respiratory tract infections, 1 alopecia and 1 non-dermatomal limb paresthesia |
| Matza et al., 2021 | Single center, single-arm prospective open-label trial | 13 | 11 (85) | Active new-onset (39%) or relapsing GCA. | s.c. UST 90 mg every 3 months | 2 (15) | 23% achieved prednisone-free remission (absence of relapse through week 52 and normalization of ESR and CRP). | 1 SAE: mild diverticulitis that required hospitalization |
| Abatacept | ||||||||
| Langford et al., 2017 [ | Multicenter, | 41 | ABA | Newly-diagnosed or relapsing GCA with active disease within the prior 2 m. | Initially ( | NR | Relapse-free survival at 12 m: 48% ABA vs. 31% PBO ( | 23 SAE in 15 patients. |
| Rossi et al., 2021 | Single center, two-arm prospective open-label study | 33 | 21 (63.6) | Consecutive biopsy-proven newly diagnosed or relapsing GCA. | TCZ: i.v. 8mg/kg/m ( | 22 (66.6) | i.v. TCZ, s.c. TCZ and ABA clinical response was complete in 57%, 67% and 31%, and partial in 43%, 16% and 31%, respectively | No significant side effects |
| Sirukumab | ||||||||
| Schmidt et al., 2020 [ | Multicenter, randomized | 161 (SIR 107, PBO 54) | 124 (77) | Newly diagnosed or relapsing GCA. | DB phase: s.c. SIR 100 mg q2w + 6 m or 3 m of GC taper; | Prior cs- and bDMARD was not allowed within established time schedule | At 52 w: Sustained remission not achieved by 82.4–88.9% patients in SIR arms and 100% in PBO arms; Lower % of flares with SIR than PBO (18.4–30.8% vs. 37–40%); Highest % of flares (23.1%) and withdrawals (61.5%) with SIR 100 mg q2w + 3 m GC taper. | At 52 w: 19.3% SAE; NS differences across arms; No deaths. |
| Meta-analysis | ||||||||
| Berti et al., 2018 [ | 10 RCT | 645 | TCZ, i.v. GC and MTX significantly improved the likelihood of being relapse free with relative risks and 95% CI of 3.54 (2.28, 5.51), 5.11 (1.39, 18.81) and 1.54 (1.02, 2.30) | |||||
| Song et al., 2020 | 6 RCT | 260 patients | Remission rate higher for TCZ than PBO (OR 7.009, 95% CI 3.854–12.75, | Number of SAE lower for TCZ than PBO (OR 0.539, 95% CI 0.296–0.982, | ||||
Abbreviations: ABA: abatacept; ADA: adalimumab; AE(s): adverse event(s); bDMARD: biologic disease modifying antirheumatic drug; CI: confidence interval; CMV: cytomegalovirus; CRP: C-reactive protein; csDMARD: conventional synthetic disease modifying antirheumatic drug; CV: cardiovascular; d: day; DB: double-blind; DMARD: disease modifying antirheumatic drug; ESR: erythrocyte sedimentation rate; ETN: etanercept; F: female; FU: follow-up; GC: glucocorticoids; GCA: giant cell arteritis; GI: gastrointestinal; i.v.: intravenous; kg: kilogram; m: month; LVV: large vessel vasculitis; mg: milligram; MI: myocardial infarction; MTX: methotrexate; n: number; NS: not significant; OL: open-label; PBO: placebo; qw: every week; q2w: every other week; RCT: randomized controlled trial; RD: risk difference; SAE: serious adverse event; s.c.: subcutaneous; SIR; sirukumab; TBC: tuberculosis; TCZ: tocilizumab; TNF: tumor necrosis factor; vs: versus; w: week.
Ongoing or yet to publish randomized clinical trials investigating biologic or targeted therapies for giant cell arteritis.
| Drug [Therapeutic Regimen ] [Ref.] | Trial Name and Identifier | Target | Duration | Type of Trial and Phase | Control | Population | Target | Primary Outcome | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IL-6R antagonists | |||||||||
| Tocilizumab | NCT03726749 | IL-6 | 52 weeks | Phase 4, open-label | None | New-onset and relapsing GCA | 30 | Sustained remission at w52 | Recruiting |
| Tocilizumab | TOCIAION | IL-6 | 18 months | Phase 2, randomized, parallel assignment, open-label, non-comparative | None | AION due to GCA | 58 | Ocular change at w8 | Unknown |
| Tocilizumab | METOGiA | IL-6 | 78 weeks | Phase 3, randomized, parallel assignment, open-label | MTX (≤20 mg/w) + GC | Active GCA within 6 weeks before randomization | 200 | Percentage of patients alive without relapse after initial remission or deviation from the scheduled regimen of prednisone at w78 | Recruiting |
| Tocilizumab | TOGIAC | IL-6 | 52 weeks | Phase 3, randomized, parallel assignment, quadruple blind | PBO | GCA with cerebrovascular involvement | 66 | Percentage of patients in complete remission of GCA with absence of ischemic stroke recurrence at w24 | Not yet recruiting |
| Tocilizumab | NCT03202368 | IL-6 | 156 weeks | Phase 3, open-label extension of WA28119 (NCT01791153) | None | GCA flare or persistent disease activity | 3 | Percentage of subjects with adverse events at w160 | Completed |
| Tocilizumab | GUSTO | IL-6 | 52 weeks | Open-label | GC | New-onset GCA | 18 | Analyze the effect of ultra-short GCs followed by TCZ monotherapy. Proportion of patients achieving remission within 31 days and without relapse until w24 | Completed |
| Sarilumab | NCT03600805 | IL-6 | 52 weeks | Randomized, parallel assignment, quadruple blind | PBO | New-onset and refractory GCA | 83 | Proportion of patients with sustained remission at w52 | Terminated (Protracted recruitment timeline exacerbated by COVID-19 pandemic) |
| JAK inhibitors | |||||||||
| Baricitinib | NCT03026504 | JAK1+JAK2 | 52 weeks | Phase 2, open-label | None | Relapsing GCA | 15 | Percentage of subjects experiencing AE at w52 | Completed |
| Upadacitinib | SELECT-GCA | JAK1 | 52 weeks | Phase 3, randomized, parallel assignment, quadruple blind | PBO | New-onset and relapsing GCA | 420 | Percentage of patients achieving sustained remission at w52 | Recruiting |
| IL-17 inhibitors | |||||||||
| Secukinumab | TitAIN* | IL-17A | 52 weeks | Randomized, parallel assignment, double-blind | PBO | New-onset or relapsing GCA | 52 | Percentage of patients in sustained remission until w28 | Completed (not published) |
| Secukinumab | NCT04930094 | IL-17A | 52 weeks | Phase 3, randomized, parallel assignment, double-blind | PBO | New-onset or relapsing GCA | 240 | Number of participants with sustained remission at w52 | Recruiting |
| Other drugs | |||||||||
| Anakinra | GiAnT | IL-1 | 52 weeks | Phase 3, randomized, parallel assignment, double-blind | PBO | New-onset and relapsing GCA | 70 | Global relapse rate at w26 | Recruiting |
| Abatacept | ABAGART | CTLA-4 | 12 months | Phase 3, randomized, parallel assignment, double-blind | PBO | Newly diagnosed or relapsing GCA | 78 | Proportion of participants in remission of those randomized to ABA as compared to PBO at m12 | Recruiting |
| Ustekinumab | ULTRA | IL-12/IL-23 | 52 weeks | Phase 2, randomized, parallel assignment, open-label | None | Relapsing GCA | 38 | Percentage of patients in remission, without a new relapse or deviation from the GC tapering protocol planned at w52 | Recruiting |
| Guselkumab | THEIA | IL-23 | 52 weeks | Phase 2, randomized, parallel assignment, double-blind | PBO | New-onset or relapsing GCA | 60 | Percentage of participants achieving GC-free remission at w28 | Recruiting |
| Mavrilimumab | NCT03827018 | GM-CSF | 26 weeks | Phase 2, randomized, parallel assignment, quadruple blind | PBO | New-onset or relapsing GCA | 70 | Time to flare by w26 | Completed (not published) |
| Bosentan | CECIBO | Endothelin receptors A and B | 3 months | Phase 3, open-label | None | Sudden blindness due to GCA | 8 | Visual acuity calculated according to the Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study at m3 | Unknown |
| Glucocorticoids | CORTODOSE | 52 weeks | Phase 3, randomized, parallel assignment, open-label | GC | New-onset GCA | 150 | Patients in complete remission throughout 52 w, without relapse | Not yet recruiting | |
Abbreviations: ABA: abatacept; AE: adverse event; AION: anterior ischemic optic neuropathy; ANK: anakinra; ASA: acetylsalicylic acid; CTLA-4: cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen 4; COVID-19: coronavirus disease 2019; d: day; g: gram; GC(s): glucocorticoids; GCA: giant cell arteritis; GM-CSF: granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor; GUS: guselkumab; IL: interleukin; IL-6R: interleukin 6 receptor; i.v.: intravenous; JAK: Janus kinase; kg: kilogram; m: month; MAV: mavrilimumab; mg: milligram; MP: methylprednisolone; n: number; PBO: placebo; qw: every week; q2w: every other week; s.c.: subcutaneous; SEC: secukinumab; TCZ: tocilizumab; UPA: upadacitinib; UST: ustekinumab; vs: versus; w: week. *Secukinumab (TitAIN): currently only the protocol has been published [97].