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Efficacy and Safety of Bimagrumab in Sporadic Inclusion Body Myositis: Long-term Extension of RESILIENT

Authors :
Amato, Anthony A
Hanna, Michael G
Machado, Pedro M
Badrising, Umesh A
Chinoy, Hector
Benveniste, Olivier
Karanam, Ananda Krishna
Wu, Min
Tankó, László B
Schubert-Tennigkeit, Agnes Annette
Papanicolaou, Dimitris A
Lloyd, Thomas E
Needham, Merrilee
Liang, Christina
Reardon, Katrina A
de Visser, Marianne
Ascherman, Dana P
Barohn, Richard J
Dimachkie, Mazen M
Miller, James AL
Kissel, John T
Oskarsson, Björn
Joyce, Nanette C
Van den Bergh, Peter
Baets, Jonathan
De Bleecker, Jan L
Karam, Chafic
David, William S
Mirabella, Massimiliano
Nations, Sharon P
Jung, Hans H
Pegoraro, Elena
Maggi, Lorenzo
Rodolico, Carmelo
Filosto, Massimiliano
Shaibani, Aziz I
Sivakumar, Kumaraswamy
Goyal, Namita A
Mori-Yoshimura, Madoka
Yamashita, Satoshi
Suzuki, Naoki
Aoki, Masashi
Katsuno, Masahisa
Morihata, Hirokazu
Murata, Kenya
Nodera, Hiroyuki
Nishino, Ichizo
Romano, Carla D
Williams, Valerie SL
Vissing, John
Zhang Auberson, Lixin
RESILIENT Study Extension Group
Source :
Neurology, vol 96, iss 12
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2021.

Abstract

ObjectiveTo assess long-term (2 years) effects of bimagrumab in participants with sporadic inclusion body myositis (sIBM).MethodsParticipants (aged 36-85 years) who completed the core study (RESILIENT [Efficacy and Safety of Bimagrumab/BYM338 at 52 Weeks on Physical Function, Muscle Strength, Mobility in sIBM Patients]) were invited to join an extension study. Individuals continued on the same treatment as in the core study (10 mg/kg, 3 mg/kg, 1 mg/kg bimagrumab or matching placebo administered as IV infusions every 4 weeks). The co-primary outcome measures were 6-minute walk distance (6MWD) and safety.ResultsBetween November 2015 and February 2017, 211 participants entered double-blind placebo-controlled period of the extension study. Mean change in 6MWD from baseline was highly variable across treatment groups, but indicated progressive deterioration from weeks 24-104 in all treatment groups. Overall, 91.0% (n = 142) of participants in the pooled bimagrumab group and 89.1% (n = 49) in the placebo group had ≥1 treatment-emergent adverse event (AE). Falls were slightly higher in the bimagrumab 3 mg/kg group vs 10 mg/kg, 1 mg/kg, and placebo groups (69.2% [n = 36 of 52] vs 56.6% [n = 30 of 53], 58.8% [n = 30 of 51], and 61.8% [n = 34 of 55], respectively). The most frequently reported AEs in the pooled bimagrumab group were diarrhea 14.7% (n = 23), involuntary muscle contractions 9.6% (n = 15), and rash 5.1% (n = 8). Incidence of serious AEs was comparable between the pooled bimagrumab and the placebo group (18.6% [n = 29] vs 14.5% [n = 8], respectively).ConclusionExtended treatment with bimagrumab up to 2 years produced a good safety profile and was well-tolerated, but did not provide clinical benefits in terms of improvement in mobility. The extension study was terminated early due to core study not meeting its primary endpoint.Clinical trial registrationClinicaltrials.gov identifier NCT02573467.Classification of evidenceThis study provides Class IV evidence that for patients with sIBM, long-term treatment with bimagrumab was safe, well-tolerated, and did not provide meaningful functional benefit. The study is rated Class IV because of the open-label design of extension treatment period 2.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurology, vol 96, iss 12
Accession number :
edsair.od.......325..822569fa2ab8be68ed99a644876723a8