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THU0165 PROSARA - A PROSPECTIVE, MULTICENTER, NON-INTERVENTIONAL STUDY TO EVALUATE THE SAFETY AND EFFECTIVENESS OF SARILUMAB FOR THE TREATMENT OF ACTIVE RHEUMATOID ARTHRITIS IN REGULAR CARE IN GERMANY
- Source :
- Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases. 79:298.1-298
- Publication Year :
- 2020
- Publisher :
- BMJ, 2020.
-
Abstract
- Background:Blockade of IL-6 signaling by sarilumab has been demonstrated to be an effective treatment approach for rheumatoid arthritis. Due to strict inclusion and exclusion criteria, randomized controlled trials may not represent the heterogeneous RA patient population encountered in regular care.Objectives:The current study investigated the safety and effectiveness of sarilumab in the treatment of RA in regular care in Germany.Methods:The prospective, observational, single-arm 24-months PROSARA study (SARILL08661) is currently running in Germany at 79 sites, aiming to include up to 750 RA patients treated with sarilumab. RA patients are selected at physician discretion and treated according to the label. Study objectives include the documentation of safety and various effectiveness outcomes. This interim analysis included patients with data available up to 12 weeks. All analyses are descriptive only.Results:To date 348 patients were included in the study; of which 265 patients had post-baseline data. The mean age of the patients analyzed was 58.6 years (24-83); 76.3% are female. The mean disease duration was 10.3 years; comorbidities were present in 80.7% of patients. At baseline, 32.5% were biologic naïve. Most common pretreatment with b/ts DMARDs included TNF-inhibitors (TNFi, 56.2%), non-TNFi biologics (29.1%) or JAK-inhibitors (JAKi, 17.4%). At baseline, 49% received sarilumab as monotherapy and 29% in combination with conventional DMARDs (not specified for 22%). After 12 weeks of treatment with sarilumab, the mean DAS28-ESR decreased from 5.0±1.46 to 3.0±1.44 and CDAI from 26.7±13.79 to 13.6±11.4, respectively. DAS28-ESR remission/ low disease activity was achieved in 42.8% [n=77/180 patients with valid data on this parameter]/ 59.4% [n=107/180] of patients; 13.6% [n=28/206] and 49% [n=101/206] of patients reached CDAI remission and low disease activity. Boolean remission was observed in 9.5% [n=19/201] of patients at week 12. HAQ-DI improved from 1.3 at baseline to 1.1 at week 12 (n=195). The mean CDAI improvement was similar for autoantibody-positive (RF and/or ACPA; CDAI -12.5 at week 12) compared to -negative patients (CDAI -15.4 at week 12). Patients switching from JAKi to sarilumab (n=32), were more severely affected, had longer disease duration and received more prior treatments than patients switched from another compound. Of note, similar efficacy was observed among patients that switched from JAKi to sarilumab vs patients switched from other DMARDs; disease activity outcome measures including DAS28, CDAI, TJC, SJC and global assessments improved consistently (Figure 1).Safety was consistent with the anticipated profile of IL-6-R-inhibition and no new safety signals occurred. Adverse events and serious adverse events were described in 33.9% and 6.3% of patients, respectively.Conclusion:Sarilumab administered in regular care demonstrated rapid and clinically meaningful improvement in a general RA patient population including patients switching from JAKi. The safety profile was consistent with data reported from controlled clinical trials.Disclosure of Interests:Eugen Feist Consultant of: Novartis, Roche, Sobi, Lilly, Pfizer, Abbvie, BMS, MSD, Sanofi, Speakers bureau: Novartis, Roche, Sobi, Lilly, Pfizer, Abbvie, BMS, MSD, Sanofi, Peer-Malte Aries Consultant of: Sanofi, Speakers bureau: Sanofi, Silke Zinke: None declared, Harald Burkhardt Grant/research support from: Pfizer, Roche, Abbvie, Consultant of: Sanofi, Pfizer, Roche, Abbvie, Boehringer Ingelheim, UCB, Eli Lilly, Chugai, Bristol Myer Scripps, Janssen, and Novartis, Speakers bureau: Sanofi, Pfizer, Roche, Abbvie, Boehringer Ingelheim, UCB, Eli Lilly, Chugai, Bristol Myer Scripps, Janssen, and Novartis, Inka Albrecht Employee of: Sanofi, Oliver Bley Employee of: Sanofi, Michael Obermeier: None declared, Patrizia Sternad: None declared, Martin Welcker Grant/research support from: Abbvie, Novartis, UCB, Hexal, BMS, Lilly, Roche, Celgene, Sanofi, Consultant of: Abbvie, Actelion, Aescu, Amgen, Celgene, Hexal, Janssen, Medac, Novartis, Pfizer, Sanofi, UCB, Speakers bureau: Abbvie, Aescu, Amgen, Biogen, Berlin Chemie, Celgene, GSK, Hexal, Mylan, Novartis, Pfizer, UCB, Cornelia Kühne Grant/research support from: Novartis, Amgen, Roche/Chugai, Pfizer, Celgene, AbbVie, Sanofi, Ann-Dörthe Holst: None declared, Niklas Thomas Baerlecken: None declared, Hans-Peter Tony Consultant of: AbbVie, Astra-Zeneca, BMS, Chugai, Janssen, Lilly, MSD, Novartis, Pfizer, Roche, Sanofi
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
business.industry
Immunology
Interim analysis
medicine.disease
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
law.invention
Clinical trial
Sarilumab
Rheumatology
Randomized controlled trial
law
Internal medicine
Rheumatoid arthritis
Non interventional
medicine
Immunology and Allergy
Effective treatment
business
Bristol-Myers
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14682060 and 00034967
- Volume :
- 79
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........1131a3deefc4ce6ef0ef35f71f89296f