| Literature DB >> 35927518 |
Maria Luisa Brandi1, Suzanne Jan de Beur2, Karine Briot3, Thomas Carpenter4, Hae Il Cheong5, Martine Cohen-Solal6, Rachel K Crowley7, Richard Eastell8, Yasuo Imanishi9, Erik A Imel10, Steven W Ing11, Karl Insogna12, Nobuaki Ito13, Kassim Javaid14, Peter Kamenicky15, Richard Keen16, Takuo Kubota17, Robin H Lachmann18, Farzana Perwad19, Pisit Pitukcheewanont20, Anthony Portale19, Stuart H Ralston21, Hiroyuki Tanaka22, Thomas J Weber23, Han-Wook Yoo24, Wei Sun25, Angela Williams26, Annabel Nixon27, Yasuhiro Takeuchi28.
Abstract
The anti-fibroblast growth factor 23 monoclonal antibody burosumab corrects hypophosphatemia in adults with X-linked hypophosphatemia (XLH) and improves pain, stiffness, physical function, and fatigue. This post hoc subgroup analysis used data from the 24-week placebo-controlled period of a phase 3 study in 134 adults with XLH (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02526160), to assess whether the benefits of burosumab are evident in 14 clinically relevant subgroups defined by baseline demographic and functional criteria, including sex, Brief Pain Inventory-short form (BPI-SF) Average And Worst Pain, region, race, Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC®) Stiffness, Physical Function and Pain domains and total score, use of opioid/other pain medication, active fractures/pseudo-fractures, and 6-min walk test distance. There were no statistically significant interactions between any of the subgroups and treatment arm for any endpoint. Higher proportions of subjects achieved mean serum phosphate concentration above the lower limit of normal (the primary endpoint) with burosumab than with placebo in all subgroups. For the key secondary endpoints (WOMAC Stiffness and Physical Function; BPI-SF Worst Pain) individual subgroup categories showed improvements with burosumab relative to placebo. For additional efficacy endpoints, burosumab was favored in some subgroups but differences were not significant and confidence intervals were wide. For some endpoints the treatment effect is small at 24 weeks in all subjects. This subgroup analysis shows that burosumab was largely superior to placebo across endpoints in the 14 clinically relevant subgroup variables at 24 weeks and is likely to benefit all symptomatic adults with active XLH.Entities:
Keywords: Burosumab; Fibroblast growth factor 23; Patient-reported outcomes; Serum phosphate; Subgroup analysis; X-linked hypophosphatemia
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35927518 DOI: 10.1007/s00223-022-01006-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Calcif Tissue Int ISSN: 0171-967X Impact factor: 4.000