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Long-Term Safety and Efficacy of the Anti-Mucosal Addressin Cell Adhesion Molecule-1 Monoclonal Antibody Ontamalimab (SHP647) for the Treatment of Crohn’s Disease: The OPERA II Study

Authors :
Anindita Banerjee
Edouard Louis
Satyaprakash Nayak
Jochen Klaus
Kenneth J. Gorelick
Stefan Schreiber
Steven W. Martin
William J. Sandborn
Maria Kłopocka
Geert R. D'Haens
Xavier Hébuterne
Scott D. Lee
Fabio Cataldi
Peter Nagy
Walter Reinisch
Dino Tarabar
Dong Il Park
Gastroenterology and Hepatology
AGEM - Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism
Source :
Inflammatory bowel diseases, 28(7), 1034-1044. John Wiley and Sons Inc.
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2021.

Abstract

Background Patients with Crohn’s disease (CD) experience intestinal inflammation. Ontamalimab (SHP647), a fully human immunoglobulin G2 monoclonal antibody against mucosal addressin cell adhesion molecule-1, is a potential novel CD treatment. OPERA II, a multicenter, open-label, phase 2 extension study, assessed the long-term safety and efficacy of ontamalimab in patients with moderate-to-severe CD. Methods Patients had completed 12 weeks of blinded treatment (placebo or ontamalimab at 22.5, 75, or 225 mg subcutaneously) in OPERA (NCT01276509) or had a clinical response to ontamalimab 225 mg in TOSCA (NCT01387594). Participants received ontamalimab at 75 mg every 4 weeks (weeks 0–72), then were followed up every 4 weeks for 24 weeks. One-time dose reduction to 22.5 mg or escalation to 225 mg was permitted at the investigator’s discretion. The primary end points were safety and tolerability outcomes. Secondary end points included changes in serum drug and biomarker concentrations. Efficacy end points were exploratory, and used non-responder imputation methods. Results Overall, 149/268 patients completed the study. The most common adverse event leading to study discontinuation was CD flare (19.8%). Two patients died; neither death was considered to be drug related. No dose reductions occurred; 157 patients had their dose escalated. Inflammatory biomarker concentrations decreased. Serum ontamalimab levels were consistent with known pharmacokinetics. Remission rates (Harvey-Bradshaw Index [HBI] ≤ 5; baseline, 48.1%; week 72, 37.3%) and response rates (baseline [decrease in Crohn’s Disease Activity Index ≥ 70 points], 63.1%; week 72 [decrease in HBI ≥ 3], 42.5%) decreased gradually. Conclusions Ontamalimab was well tolerated; treatment responses appeared to be sustained over 72 weeks. ClinicalTrials.gov ID: NCT01298492.

Details

ISSN :
15364844 and 10780998
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....42c598bd58d2a3ecd2978a58a504cb71