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Improved joint and patient-reported health assessments with pegloticase plus methotrexate co-therapy in patients with uncontrolled gout: 12-month exploratory outcomes of the MIRROR open-label trial

Authors :
John K. Botson
Katie Obermeyer
Brian LaMoreaux
Lin Zhao
Michael E. Weinblatt
Jeff Peterson
Source :
Arthritis Research & Therapy, Vol 24, Iss 1, Pp 1-8 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMC, 2022.

Abstract

Abstract Background Uncontrolled/refractory gout patients are recalcitrant/intolerant to oral urate-lowering therapies (ULTs), experiencing frequent gout flares, functionally limiting tophi, and low quality of life. Pegloticase lowers urate, but anti-pegloticase antibodies limit urate-lowering efficacy and increase infusion reaction (IR) risk. Immunomodulator + pegloticase co-administration may improve treatment response rates, with 79% of MIRROR open-label trial (MIRROR-OL, pegloticase + oral methotrexate) participants meeting 6-month response criteria. Exploratory outcomes from MIRROR-OL are described here. Methods Adults with uncontrolled gout (serum urate [SU] ≥ 6 mg/dL and ULT-intolerance/recalcitrance or functionally limiting tophi) were included. Oral methotrexate (15 mg/week) was administered 4 weeks before and during pegloticase treatment (biweekly 8 mg infusion, ≤ 52 weeks). Exploratory outcomes included change from baseline (CFB) in number of affected joints, Health Assessment Questionnaires (HAQs), and Gout Global Assessments. Results Fourteen patients received ≥ 1 pegloticase infusion, with 13 included in 52-week analyses (1 enrolled before treatment-extension amendment, exited at 24 weeks). Three patients prematurely exited due to SU rise; 10 completed 52-week evaluations (8 completed 52 weeks of co-therapy, 2 completed 24 weeks [met treatment goals]). At 52 weeks, SU averaged 1.1 ± 2.5 mg/dL, with improvements in HAQ pain and health (CFB: − 33.6 and − 0.7, respectively), Patient and Physician Global Assessments (CFB: − 4.6 and − 5.7, respectively), and joint involvement (CFB: − 5.6, − 8.4, − 6.0 tender, swollen, tophi-affected joints, respectively). Two patients underwent dual-energy computed tomography, showing concomitant monosodium urate volume reductions. All patients had ≥ 1 AE, with 92.9% experiencing acute flare. One mild IR (“cough”) occurred and no new safety signals were identified. Conclusion Pegloticase + methotrexate co-therapy resulted in sustained SU-lowering with meaningful improvements in clinical measures, urate burden, and patient-reported outcomes. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03635957)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14786362
Volume :
24
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Arthritis Research & Therapy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.0f301fd496504ffda486cd99a943931b
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13075-022-02979-4