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Interleukin‐1 Trap Rilonacept Improved Health‐Related Quality of Life and Sleep in Patients With Recurrent Pericarditis: Results From the Phase 3 Clinical Trial RHAPSODY

Authors :
Antonio Brucato
Michelle Z. Lim‐Watson
Allan Klein
Massimo Imazio
David Cella
Paul Cremer
Martin M. LeWinter
Sushil Allen Luis
David Lin
Dor Lotan
Massimo Pancrazi
Lucia Trotta
Brittany Klooster
Leighann Litcher‐Kelly
Liangxing Zou
Matt Magestro
Alistair Wheeler
John F. Paolini
Antonio Abbate
Wael Abo‐Auda
Asif Akhtar
Michael Arad
Shaul Atar
Bipul Baibhav
Karan Bhalla
Sean Collins
David Colquhoun
David Cross
Girish Dwivedi
Alon Eisen
Nahum Freedberg
Shmuel Fuchs
Eliyazar Gaddam
Marco Gattorno
Eli Gelfand
Paul Grena
Majdi Halabi
David Harris
Antonella Insalaco
Amin Karim
Kirk Knowlton
Apostolos Kontzias
Robert Kornberg
Faisal Latif
David Leibowitz
Martin LeWinter
Source :
Journal of the American Heart Association. 11
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2022.

Abstract

Background Recurrent pericarditis is characterized by painful flares and inflammation, which negatively impact health‐related quality of life. RHAPSODY (rilonacept inhibition of interleukin‐1 alpha and beta for recurrent pericarditis: a pivotal symptomatology and outcomes study) evaluated the efficacy and safety of rilonacept (IL‐1α and ‐β cytokine trap) in recurrent pericarditis. A secondary analysis of these data evaluated the patient‐reported outcome questionnaire score change during the trial. Methods and Results Participants completed 5 patient‐reported outcome (PRO) questionnaires assessing pericarditis pain, health‐related quality of life, general health status, sleep impact, and overall symptom severity. PRO score changes during the treatment run‐in period (12 weeks) and the blinded randomized withdrawal period (up to 24 weeks) were evaluated using descriptive statistics and mixed model repeated measures analyses. Participants with PRO data from the run‐in period (n=84) and the randomized withdrawal period (n=61; 30 rilonacept, 31 placebo) were included in analyses. Run‐in baseline PRO scores indicated that pericarditis symptoms during pericarditis recurrence impacted health‐related quality of life. All PRO scores significantly improved ( P Conclusions These results demonstrate the burden of pericarditis recurrences and the improved physical and emotional health of patients with recurrent pericarditis while on rilonacept treatment. These findings extend prior rilonacept efficacy results, demonstrating improvements in patient‐reported health‐related quality of life, sleep, pain, and global symptom severity while on treatment. Registration URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov ; Unique identifier: NCT03737110.

Details

ISSN :
20479980
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Heart Association
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....88bde3a3216e472c8ba7afe136db9818
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1161/jaha.121.023252