| Literature DB >> 36064563 |
T Graier1, W Weger1, C Jonak2, P Sator3, C Zikeli4, K Prillinger5, C Sassmann4, B Gruber6, W Saxinger6, G Ratzinger7, C Painsi8, A Mlynek9, N Häring10, B Sadoghi1, H Trattner2, R Müllegger4, F Quehenberger1, W Salmhofer1, Peter Wolf11.
Abstract
With the introduction of the latest class of biologic drugs targeting interleukin (IL)-23p19, three new, highly effective drugs can be used for the treatment of chronic plaque psoriasis. However, poorer skin improvement as well as higher rates of serious adverse events have been reported for patients under real-world conditions (outside clinical trials). This accounts especially for patients who have already been treated with biologic drugs. We therefore aimed to determine effectiveness and safety of IL-23p19 inhibitors in real-world patients by analysing data from the Psoriasis Registry Austria (PsoRA) in this observational, retrospective, multicentre cohort study. Data for 197 patients (52.3% biologic-non-naïve), who were treated with anti-IL-23p19 antibodies (127 guselkumab, 55 risankizumab and 15 tildrakizumab) for at least 3 months, were eligible for analysis. In general, biologic-non-naïve patients displayed a less favourable response to anti-IL-23 treatment as compared to biologic-naïve patients. However, after correction for previous biologic exposure, few differences in PASI improvement were detected among biologic-naïve and -non-naïve patients treated with different IL-23p19 inhibitors. This indicates that treatment effectiveness is not related to the class of the previously administered therapy in biologic-non-naïve patients. Therefore, IL-23p19 inhibitors represent a promising treatment alternative for patients who have not responded to previous biologics. However, as with other biologic agents (including IL-17 inhibitors), we did not observe an entirely satisfactory treatment response (i.e. PASI < 3 and/or PASI 75) to anti-IL-23 treatment in one out of four to five patients. Adverse events (mainly non-severe infections) were observed in 23 (11.7%) patients with no major differences regarding the administered IL-23 inhibitor or previous biologic exposure.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36064563 PMCID: PMC9442573 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-18790-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Patient characteristics.
| Treatment characteristics | Treatment | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Guselkumab | Risankizumab | Tildrakizumab | All treatments | |||
| Total number of treatments/patients | 127 | 55 | 15 | 197 | ||
| Characteristic at start of treatment | Number (%) of females | 44 (34.6) | 19 (34.5) | 4 (26.7) | 67 (34.0) | 0.891 |
| Mean age (SD) | 46.0 (14.2) | 47.9 (11.6) | 45.9 (14.1) | 46.5 (13.5) | 0.668 | |
| Mean PASI (SD) in biologic naïve patients | 9.63 (6.59) | 11.13 (6.67) | 11.67 (11.08) | 10.25 (7.23) | 0.545 | |
| Mean PASI (SD) in biologic non-naïve patients | 7.80 (7.52) | 9.13 (8.10) | 9.13 (5.22) | 8.01 (7.44) | 0.700 | |
| Number (%) of patients with PASI ≤ 3 | 37 (29.1) | 12 (21.8) | 3 (20.0) | 52 (26.4) | 0.496812 | |
| Number (%) of cycles in patients with arthritis | 31 (24.4) | 19 (34.5) | 1 (6.7) | 51 (25.9) | 0.077 | |
| Mean weight in kg (SD) | 92.0 (19.2) | 88.9 (13.4) | 94.4 (11.8) | 91.3 (17.4) | 0.736 | |
| Mean BMI (SD) | 30.0 (6.5) | 29.3 (4.4) | 29.9 (2.3) | 29.8 (5.6) | 0.914 | |
| Number (%) of patient with the last previous biologic treatment | None | 54 (42.5) | 29 (52.7) | 11 (73.3) | 94 (47.7) | 0.068 |
| TNF-alpha | 14 (11.0) | 6 (10.9) | 0 (0) | 20 (10.2)+ | ||
| IL-12/23 | 33 (26.0) | 5 (9.1) | 2 (13.3) | 40 (20.3)* | ||
| IL-17 | 26 (20.5) | 15 (27.3) | 2 (13.3) | 43 (21.8)# | ||
| Number (%) of previous biologic therapies | 1 | 41 (55.4) | 13 (50.0) | 2 (50.0) | 56 (53.8) | 0.767 |
| 2 | 14 (18.9) | 8 (30.8) | 1 (25.0) | 23 (22.1) | ||
| ≥ 3 | 19 (25.7) | 5 (19.2) | 1 (25.0) | 25 (24.0) | ||
Analysis of variances and chi-square test did not reveal differences in allocation to treatment regarding sex, age, PASI, psoriatic arthritis, or (type of) previous biologic exposure. Chi-square test results revealed that a previous treatment with TNF-alpha and IL-12/23 inhibitors were the first biologic treatments for a significantly higher proportion of patients (p = 0.000778).
+Seven patients (35.0%) were biologic-non-naïve when treated with TNF-alpha inhibitors.
*Ten patients (25.0%) were biologic-non-naïve when treated with IL-12/23 inhibitors.
#Twenty-eight patients (65.1%) were biologic-non-naïve when treated with IL-17 inhibitors.
BMI, body mass index; IL, interleukin; PASI, Psoriasis Area and Severity Index; SD, standard deviation; TNF, tumour necrosis factor.
Figure 1Effectiveness of IL-23 inhibitors in terms of absolute PASI. Absolute Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) value (± 95% confidence interval) plotted over time for patients analysed as observed (a) and per last observation carried forward (LOCF) (b).
Treatment effectiveness regarding biologic naivety.
| Timepoint | Mean PASI (SD) in biologic-naïve/-non-naïve patients as observed | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Biologic naive | Biologic non-naive | ||
| Baseline | 10.25 (7.23) | 8.01 (7.44) | |
| 3 months | 1.27 (3.01) | 2.35 (3.83) | |
| 6 months | 0.53 (0.82) | 2.86 (4.45) | |
| 12 months | 0.71 (2.68) | 1.77 (2.69) | 0.07 |
A two-sample t-test revealed significantly higher PASI values in biologic naïve patients at treatment start, as well as significantly higher PASI values in biologic-non-naïve patients at 3 and 6 months after treatment initiation.
Significant p-values are in bold. PASI, Psoriasis Area and Severity Index; SD, standard deviation.
Treatment effectiveness as observed regarding biologic naivety in patients treated with different IL-23 inhibitors.
| Timepoint | Treatment | Biologic naïve patients | Biologic-non-naïve patients | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PASI (SD) | PASI (SD) | ||||
| Baseline | Guselkumab | 9.63 (6.59) | 0.545 | 7.80 (7.52) | 0.700 |
| Risankizumab | 11.13 (6.67) | 9.13 (8.10) | |||
| Tildrakizumab | 11.67 (11.08) | 9.13 (5.22) | |||
| 3 months | Guselkumab | 1.02 (1.55) | 0.085 | 2.59 (4.44) | 0.200 |
| Risankizumab | 0.95 (1.59) | 2.08 (2.76) | |||
| Tildrakizumab | 3.56 (7.78) | 6.47 (3.56) | |||
| 6 months | Guselkumab | 0.54 (0.86) | 0.745 | 3.25 (5.07) | 0.798 |
| Risankizumab | 0.42 (0.75) | 2.48 (3.22) | |||
| Tildrakizumab | 0.74 (0.86) | 4.20 (2.55) | |||
| 12 months | Guselkumab | 1.01 (3.34) | 0.609 | 1.42 (2.41) | |
| Risankizumab | 0.107 (0.29) | 2.76 (3.29) | |||
| Tildrakizumab | 0.60 (NA) | 10.20 (NA) | |||
Analysis of variances revealed no statistically significant differences in PASI for any timepoint among biologic-naïve or -non-naïve patients with regard to the administered drug, except for PASI at 12 months in biologic-non-naïve patients. However, post hoc analysis was not feasible due to the low number of patients at 12 months in the tildrakizumab group (n = 2).
Significant p-values are bold.
NA, not applicable (none); PASI, Psoriasis Area and Severity Index; SD, standard deviation.
Treatment effectiveness as observed with regard to class of previous biologic therapy.
| Timepoint (total number of patients) | Type of biologic | Number (percentage) of patients that received a certain class of previous biologic therapy | Biologic-non-naïve patients | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PASI (SD) | ||||
| Baseline (103) | TNF-α | 20 (19.4) | 7.36 (5.52) | |
| Il-17 | 43 (41.7) | 11.12 (8.94) | ||
| Il-12/23 | 40 (38.8) | 4.99 (4.86) | ||
| 3 months (91) | TNF-α | 17 (18.7) | 2.17 (3.29) | 0.312 |
| Il-17 | 34 (37.4) | 3.12 (5.23) | ||
| Il-12/23 | 38 (41.6) | 1.74 (2.24) | ||
| 6 months (55) | TNF-α | 10 (18.2) | 1.56 (2.32) | 0.535 |
| Il-17 | 28 (50.9) | 3.40 (5.05) | ||
| Il-12/23 | 17 (30.9) | 2.72 (4.40) | ||
| 12 months (43) | TNF-α | 5 (11.6) | 1.80 (2.00) | 0.999 |
| Il-17 | 19 (44.2) | 1.78 (2.89) | ||
| Il-12/23 | 19 (44.2) | 1.75 (2.78) | ||
Analysis of variances revealed statistically significant differences in disease severity (as measured in PASI) regarding the class of previous biologic treatment at baseline. Post hoc analysis results show significantly higher PASI in patients treated with IL-17 inhibitors as compared to those treated with IL-23 inhibitors (p < 0.001), but not TNF- α inhibitors (p = 0.147). There was no difference regarding PASI at baseline between TNF- α inhibitors and IL-12/23 inhibitors at baseline (p = 0.655).
Significant p-values are in bold.
IL, interleukin; PASI, Psoriasis Area and Severity Index; SD, standard deviation; TNF, tumour necrosis factor.
Figure 2Achievement of skin goals. Relative number of patients analysed as observed and per last observation carried forward (LOCF), in whom a certain Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) was achieved, plotted over time.
Achievement of treatment goals.
| Treatment | Timepoint (months) | Number of patients (as observed/LOCF) | Percentage of patients achieving a certain PASI reduction (as observed/LOCF) | Number (%) of patients of patients achieving ≤ PASI 3 (as observed /LOCF) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PASI 100 | > PASI 90 | > PASI 75 | > PASI 50 | < PASI 50 | Increase in PASI | ||||
| Guselkumab | 3 | 108/127 | 27.8/23.6 | 39.8/33.8 | 60.2/51.1 | 80.6/68.4 | 16.7/29.1 | 2.8/2.4 | 89 (82.4)/94 (74.0) |
| 6 | 77/127 | 44.2/33.9 | 52.0/41.0 | 67.6/59.1 | 78.0/74.1 | 16.9/21.3 | 5.2/4.7 | 65 (84.4)/104 (81.9) | |
| 12 | 60/127 | 46.7/36.2 | 61.7/45.6 | 76.7/62.9 | 83.4/74.7 | 11.7/18.9 | 5.0/6.3 | 53 (88.3)/105 (82.7) | |
| Risankizumab | 3 | 47/55 | 42.6/36.4 | 63.9/54.6 | 74.5/63.7 | 93.6/80.1 | 4.3/18.2 | 2.1/1.8 | 41 (87.2)/41 (74.5) |
| 6 | 30/55 | 50.0/45.5 | 70.0/71.0 | 90.0/87.4 | 96.7/94.7 | NA/1.8 | 3.3/3.6 | 27 (90.0)/48 (87.3) | |
| 12 | 25/55 | 60.0/50.9 | 72.0/72.7 | 84.0/85.4 | 96.0/94.5 | 4.0/1.8 | NA/3.6 | 22 (88.0)/48 (87.3) | |
| Tildrakizumab | 3 | 12/15 | 8.3/6.7 | 50.0/40.0 | 50.0/40.0 | 66.7/53.3 | 33.3/46.7 | NA/NA | 9 (75.0)/10 (66.7) |
| 6 | 7/15 | 28.6/13.3 | 42.9/46.6 | 57.2/53.3 | 71.5/66.6 | 14.3/26.7 | 14.3/6.7 | 6 (85.7)/11 (73.3) | |
| 12 | 2/15 | NA/13.3 | NA/46.6 | 50.0/59.9 | 50.0/66.6 | NA/26.7 | 50.0/6.7 | 1 (50.0)/11 (73.3) | |
| All treatments ( | 3 | 167/197 | 29.9/25.4 | 47.3/40.1 | 63.5/53.8 | 82.0/70.6 | 14.4/27.4 | 2.4/2.0 | 139 (83.2%)/145 (73.6%) |
| 6 | 114/197 | 44.7/35.5 | 56.1/49.7 | 72.8/66.5 | 82.5/79.2 | 12.3/16.2 | 5.3/4.6 | 98 (86.7%)/163 (82.7%) | |
| 12 | 87/197 | 49.4/38.6 | 63.2/53.3 | 78.2/69.0 | 86.2/79.7 | 9.2/14.7 | 4.6/5.6 | 76 (87.4%)/164 (83.3%) | |
| Patients with PASI > 3 at treatment start ( | 3 | 131/145 | 30.5/27.6 | 51.1/46.2 | 64.1/57.9 | 80.9/73.1 | 9.9/25.5 | 1.5/1.4 | 94 (77.7%)/94 (64.8%) |
| 6 | 86/145 | 50.0/37.9 | 62.8/55.2 | 81.4/48.3 | 91.9/85.5 | 5.8/11.7 | 2.3/2.8 | 75 (87.2%)/116 (80.0%) | |
| 12 | 63/145 | 55.6/41.4 | 71.4/59.3 | 85.7/76.6 | 93.7/86.9 | 4.8/9.7 | 1.6/3.4 | 54 (85.7)/116 (80.0%) | |
In 52 patients, the PASI at baseline was ≤ 3, of whom 9 had a PASI ≤ 1 at baseline. The number (%) of those patients achieving a PASI ≤ 1 as observed/LOCF was 32 (69.6)/32 (61.5), 16 (59.3)/34 (65.4), 18 (75.0)/35 (67.3) at 3, 6 and 12 months, respectively. In 2/4 patients, the PASI increased to > 3 at 12 months with regard to the analysis as observed/LOCF, while the remaining patients had a stable disease (continued having PASI ≤ 3).
LOCF, last observation carried forward; NA, not applicable (none); PASI, Psoriasis Area and Severity Index.
Occurrence of adverse events under treatment with Il-23 inhibitors.
| Type of adverse event | Number (%) of patients reporting an adverse event once per drug | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| All ( | Guselkumab ( | Risankizumab ( | Tildrakizumab ( | |
| Gastrointestinal symptoms | 2 (1.02)+ | 1 (0.79) | 1 (1.82) | NA |
| Infection | 18 (9.14)* | 16 (12.60) | 2 (3.64) | NA |
| Neurological symptoms | 2 (1.02)# | 1 (0.79) | NA | 1 (6.67) |
| Rash | 1 (0.05) | 1 (0.79) | NA | NA |
| All | 23 (11.67) | 19 (14.96) | 3 (5.45) | 1 (6.67) |
Fisher’s exact test results indicate no significant differences in the occurrence of adverse events regarding drug (p = 0.159). N = 197.
NA, not applicable (none).
+Included two patients with diarrhoea.
*Included seven patients with common cold, two patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), two patients with cellulitis, one patient with influenza, one patient with herpes zoster, one patient with skin abscess, one patient with angina tonsillaris, one patient with tooth abscess, and two patients with unspecified infections.
#Included one patient with headache and one patient with headache and paraesthesia.