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Local adverse reaction rates decreased over time during treatment with recombinant human hyaluronidase-facilitated subcutaneous infusion of immunoglobulin G (fSCIG) in patients with primary immunodeficiency diseases in the fSCIG phase 3 studies

Authors :
Lina Laguado
Mark Stein
Richard L. Wasserman
Isaac Melamed
Sudhir Gupta
Lisa Kobrynski
Arye Rubinstein
Christopher J. Rabbat
Werner Engl
Barbara McCoy
Heinz Leibl
Leman Yel
Source :
Revista Alergia México, Vol 65 suppl 1, Pp 122-123 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Colegio Mexicano de Inmunología Clínica y Alergia, A.C., 2018.

Abstract

Background: fSCIG can be administered at similar doses/volumes and dosing intervals as intravenous immunoglobulin G (IgG) (IVIG) but, similar to conventional subcutaneous IgG, is associated with a lower risk of systemic and higher risk of local adverse reactions (ARs). Objective: We report local AR rates over time in patients with PID aged ≥ 16 years treated with fSCIG for up to ~3.5 years in the fSCIG pivotal phase 3 study and its extension. Methods: Following a 3-month IVIG treatment period, patients initiated fSCIG on a dose ramp-up schedule and thereafter received fSCIG every 3 (Q3W) or 4 weeks (Q4W) for ~18 months, followed by up to an additional 21 months. Local AR (temporally associated and/or causally related adverse events) rates were evaluated over time. Results: Of the 63 enrolled patients aged ≥ 16 (16-78) years, 61 received fSCIG for up to ~3.5 years at the established dose. Overall, the local AR rate per infusion was 0.191; discomfort/pain was the most commonly reported local AR. Rates of ARs per infusion decreased over time: 0.28 (months 1-12), 0.15 (months 13-24), and 0.08 (months 25-33.6). The percentage of patients experiencing ≥ 1 local AR per infusion was highest during the dose ramp-up period (33.3-41.7 % [Q3W] and 29.2-37.5 % [QW4]), and rapidly declined over time. Conclusions: In adults treated with fSCIG for up to ~3.5 years, rates of local ARs per infusion and the percentage of patients experiencing ≥ 1 local AR markedly declined over time.

Details

Language :
English, Spanish; Castilian
ISSN :
00025151 and 24489190
Volume :
65 suppl 1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Revista Alergia México
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.9aae66591f9d43e2bb416689d3ba4a8f
Document Type :
article