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Rituximab versus tocilizumab and B-cell status in TNF-alpha inadequate-responder rheumatoid arthritis patients: the R4-RA RCT

Authors :
Frances Humby
Patrick Durez
Maya H Buch
Myles J Lewis
Michele Bombardieri
Christopher John
Hasan Rizvi
Louise Warren
Joanna Peel
Liliane Fossati-Jimack
Rebecca E Hands
Giovanni Giorli
Felice Rivellese
Juan D Cañete
Peter C Taylor
Peter Sasieni
João E Fonseca
Ernest Choy
Costantino Pitzalis
Source :
Efficacy and Mechanism Evaluation, Vol 9, Iss 7 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
NIHR Journals Library, 2022.

Abstract

Background: Although biological therapies have transformed the outlook for those with rheumatoid arthritis, there is a lack of any meaningful response in approximately 40% of patients. The role of B cells in rheumatoid arthritis pathogenesis is well recognised and is supported by the clinical efficacy of the B-cell-depleting agent rituximab (MabThera, F. Hoffman La-Roche Ltd, Basel, Switzerland). Rituximab is licensed for use in rheumatoid arthritis following failure of conventional synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs and tumour necrosis factor inhibitor therapy. However, over 50% of patients show low/absent synovial B-cell infiltration, suggesting that, in these patients, inflammation is driven by alternative cell types. This prompted us to test the hypothesis that, in synovial biopsy B-cell-poor patients, tocilizumab (RoActemra, F. Hoffman La-Roche Ltd, Basel, Switzerland) (targeting interleukin 6) is superior to rituximab (targeting CD20+/B cells). Design: The R4–RA (A Randomised, open-labelled study in anti-TNFalpha inadequate responders to investigate the mechanisms for Response, Resistance to Rituximab versus Tocilizumab in Rheumatoid Arthritis patients) trial is a 48-week Phase IV, open-label, randomised controlled trial conducted in 19 European centres that recruited patients failing on or intolerant to conventional synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drug therapy and at least one tumour necrosis factor inhibitor. Participants: Synovial tissue was obtained at trial entry and classified histologically as B-cell rich or B-cell poor to inform balanced stratification. Patients were randomised on a 1 : 1 basis to receive standard therapy with rituximab or tocilizumab. B-cell-poor/-rich molecular classification was also carried out. The study was powered to test the superiority of tocilizumab over rituximab at 16 weeks in the B-cell-poor population. Main outcome measures: The primary end point was defined as an improvement in the Clinical Disease Activity Index (CDAI) score of ≥ 50% from baseline. In addition, patients were considered to be non-responders if they did not reach an improvement in CDAI score of ≥ 50% and a CDAI score of

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20504365 and 20504373
Volume :
9
Issue :
7
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Efficacy and Mechanism Evaluation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.6d23cfaed3dc43e9b05659f3dd0b4105
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3310/GOPL1729