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Subcutaneous immunoglobulin for maintenance treatment in chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (PATH) : a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3 trial

Authors :
Michael Schroeter
Mazen M. Dimachkie
J. Zschuentssch
Takuya Ohkubo
Kenichi Kaida
M. Bednar
M. Tomiyama
J. Sussova
D. Mueller
E. Chi-Ho Lai
Nicolette C. Notermans
Toomas Toomsoo
C. D'Amour
J. Haas
B. Murinson
Masahiro Mori
Richard A. Lewis
Masayuki Baba
Anne D. Sperfeld
Vivian E. Drory
Hans-Peter Hartung
J. Demeestere
Satoshi Kuwabara
Leslie Roberts
S. Mumfrey
David Gosal
Katrin Gross-Paju
M. Zibetti
Martin Vališ
Filip Eftimov
David Yarnitsky
D. Aufauvre
G. Le Masson
Takashi Kanda
Lisa D. Hobson-Webb
I. Melamed
Alexander Shtilbans
Inna Rubanovits
P. MacDonald
Janneke G. J. Hoeijmakers
Vera Bril
Ericka Simpson
Orell Mielke
Michaela Praus
Martin Stangel
Masahiro Iijima
Richard J. Barohn
Robert D. Henderson
P. Baum
Mari Auranen
David Walk
Said R. Beydoun
A. Jaspert-Grehl
Alessandro Testori
Giovanni Antonini
Ingemar S. J. Merkies
Sabrina Matà
A. Di Muzio
Ivo N. van Schaik
T. Kalous
Josep Gamez
Juliane Klehmet
Dario Cocito
Angelo Schenone
R. Carne
P. Kunc
Dale J. Lange
Miriam Freimer
S. Muley
Norman Latov
T. Rao
Jens Ejbye Schmidt
Jasper M. Morrow
Ari Breiner
C. Marquez Infante
C. G. Faber
U. Chyrchel-Paszkiewicz
Anne-Cécile Wielanek-Bachelet
Russell L. Chin
John-Philip Lawo
I. N. van Schaik
C. Goerlitz
M. Chatzopoulos
Tim Hagenacker
Claudia Sommer
H. Johl
D. Kramer
Stefania Morino
R. Yoon
Daniela M. Menichella
M. Alberti Aguiló
K. Nishiyama
Daniele Cazzato
F. Bethke
Helmar C. Lehmann
Konrad Rejdak
T. Lavin
Kazumasa Yokoyama
Olaf Hoffmann
M. Kawai
C. Casanovas Pons
Sandro Sorbi
Takanori Yokota
Nora A. Visser
R. Talab
Eroboghene E. Ubogu
Florian Then Bergh
Stefan Blum
Ginna Gonzalez
J. Oechtering
David R. Cornblath
F. Ciccocioppo
A. Sabet
Fabian Klostermann
Nan van Geloven
K. George
A. Kutschenko
S. Benitez Rivero
Karissa L. Gable
Michael P. Lunn
Senda Ajroud-Driss
Shahram Attarian
Marina Grandis
P. Van Damme
C. Trebst
Jeffrey A. Allen
A. Algom
H. Onoue
D. Liebetanz
Billie L. Durn
Maria Salvado Figueras
Jean Pouget
Emilien Delmont
Khema Sharma
Gen Sobue
K. Ohyama
John T. Kissel
K. Kanai
Tsugio Akutsu
Pierre Clavelou
Andreas Meisel
Giuseppe Lauria
M. Saarela
S. Larue
R. Gold
U. Sorro
Shafeeq Ladha
Claude Desnuelle
P. Berlit
Neurologian yksikkö
Clinicum
HUS Neurocenter
ANS - Neuroinfection & -inflammation
AII - Inflammatory diseases
Other departments
Neurology
AII - Amsterdam institute for Infection and Immunity
Hagenacker, Tim (Beitragende*r)
RS: MHeNs - R1 - Cognitive Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience
Source :
Lancet Neurology, 17(1), 35. Lancet Publishing Group, The Lancet Neurology, Lancet neurology, 17(1), 35-46. Lancet Publishing Group, The Lancet Neurology, 17(1), 35-46, Lancet Neurology, 17(1), 35-46. Elsevier Science
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Mika Saarela työryhmän jäsenenä. Background Approximately two-thirds of patients with chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP) need long-term intravenous immunoglobulin. Subcutaneous immunoglobulin (SCIg) is an alternative option for immunoglobulin delivery, but has not previously been investigated in a large trial of CIDP. The PATH study compared relapse rates in patients given SCIg versus placebo. Methods Between March 12, 2012, and Sept 20, 2016, we studied patients from 69 neuromuscular centres in North America, Europe, Israel, Australia, and Japan. Adults with definite or probable CIDP who responded to intravenous immunoglobulin treatment were eligible. We randomly allocated participants to 0.2 g/kg or 0.4 g/kg of a 20% SCIg solution (IgPro20) weekly versus placebo (2% human albumin solution) for maintenance treatment for 24 weeks. We did randomisation in a 1: 1:1 ratio with an interactive voice and web response system with a block size of six, stratified by region (Japan or non-Japan). The primary outcome was the proportion of patients with a CIDP relapse or who were withdrawn for any other reason during 24 weeks of treatment. Patients, caregivers, and study personnel, including those assessing outcomes, were masked to treatment assignment. Analyses were done in the intention-to-treat and per-protocol sets. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials. gov, number NCT01545076. Findings In this randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, we randomly allocated 172 patients: 57 (33%) to the placebo group, 57 (33%) to the low-dose group, and 58 (34%) to the high-dose group. In the intention-to-treat set, 36 (63% [95% CI 50-74]) patients on placebo, 22 (39% [27-52]) on low-dose SCIg, and 19 (33% [22-46]) on high-dose SCIg had a relapse or were withdrawn from the study for other reasons (p=0.0007). Absolute risk reductions were 25% (95% CI 6-41) for low-dose versus placebo (p=0.007), 30% (12-46) for high-dose versus placebo (p=0.001), and 6% (-11 to 23) for high-dose versus low-dose (p=0.32). Causally related adverse events occurred in 47 (27%) patients (ten [18%] in the placebo group, 17 [30%] in the low-dose group, and 20 [34%] in the high-dose group). Six (3%) patients had 11 serious adverse events: one (2%) patient in the placebo group, three (5%) in the low-dose group, and two (3%) in the high-dose group; only one (an acute allergic skin reaction in the low-dose group) was assessed to be causally related. Interpretation This study, which is to our knowledge, the largest trial of CIDP to date and the first to study two administrations of immunoglobulins and two doses, showed that both doses of SCIg IgPro20 were efficacious and well tolerated, suggesting that SCIg can be used as a maintenance treatment for CIDP.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14744422
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Lancet Neurology, 17(1), 35. Lancet Publishing Group, The Lancet Neurology, Lancet neurology, 17(1), 35-46. Lancet Publishing Group, The Lancet Neurology, 17(1), 35-46, Lancet Neurology, 17(1), 35-46. Elsevier Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f23ad596dcdfe17d2212d3b57623ed37