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Long-term safety and tolerability of apremilast in patients with psoriasis: Pooled safety analysis for ≥156 weeks from 2 phase 3, randomized, controlled trials (ESTEEM 1 and 2).

Authors :
Crowley, Jeffrey
Thaçi, Diamant
Joly, Pascal
Peris, Ketty
Papp, Kim A.
Goncalves, Joana
Day, Robert M.
Chen, Rongdean
Shah, Kamal
Ferrándiz, Carlos
Cather, Jennifer C.
Source :
Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology; Aug2017, Vol. 77 Issue 2, p310-317.e1, 1p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>Randomized, controlled trials demonstrated efficacy and safety of apremilast for moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis.<bold>Objective: </bold>Assess long-term safety of oral apremilast in psoriasis patients.<bold>Methods: </bold>Safety findings are reported for 0 to ≥156 weeks from the Efficacy and Safety Trial Evaluating the Effects of Apremilast in Psoriasis (ESTEEM) 1 and 2.<bold>Results: </bold>The 0 to ≥156-week apremilast-exposure period included 1184 patients treated twice daily with apremilast 30 mg (1902.2 patient-years). During 0 to ≤52 weeks, the adverse events (AEs) that occurred in ≥5% of patients included diarrhea, nausea, upper respiratory tract infection, nasopharyngitis, tension headache, and headache. From 0 to ≥156 weeks, no new AEs (affecting ≥5% of the population) were reported. AEs, serious AEs, and study drug discontinuations caused by AEs did not increase with long-term exposure. During the 0 to ≥156-week period, the rates of major cardiac events (exposure-adjusted incidence rate [EAIR] 0.5/100 patient-years), malignancies (EAIR 1.2/100 patient-years), depression (EAIR 1.8/100 patient-years), or suicide attempts (EAIR 0.1/100 patient-years) did not increase in comparison with the rates found during the 0 to ≤52-week period. No serious opportunistic infections, reactivation of tuberculosis, or clinically meaningful effects on laboratory measurements were reported.<bold>Limitations: </bold>This study had a high dropout rate (21% of patients ongoing >156 weeks); most were unrelated to safety concerns.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>Apremilast demonstrated an acceptable safety profile and was generally well tolerated for ≥156 weeks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01909622
Volume :
77
Issue :
2
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
124113256
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaad.2017.01.052