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Subcutaneous dosing regimens of tocilizumab in children with systemic or polyarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis

Authors :
Ruperto, Nicolino
Brunner, Hermine, I
Ramanan, Athimalaipet, V
Horneff, Gerd
Cuttica, Ruben
Henrickson, Michael
Anton, Jordi
Lucica Boteanu, Alina
Calvo Penades, Inmaculada
Minden, Kirsten
Schmeling, Heinrike
Hufnagel, Markus
Weiss, Jennifer E.
Pardeo, Manuela
Nanda, Kabita
Roth, Johannes
Rubio-Perez, Nadina
Hsu, Joy C.
Wimalasundera, Sunethra
Wells, Chris
Bharucha, Kamal
Douglass, Wendy
Bao, Min
Mallalieu, Navita L.
Martini, Alberto
Lovell, Daniel
De Benedetti, Fabrizio
Ruperto, Nicolino
Brunner, Hermine, I
Ramanan, Athimalaipet, V
Horneff, Gerd
Cuttica, Ruben
Henrickson, Michael
Anton, Jordi
Lucica Boteanu, Alina
Calvo Penades, Inmaculada
Minden, Kirsten
Schmeling, Heinrike
Hufnagel, Markus
Weiss, Jennifer E.
Pardeo, Manuela
Nanda, Kabita
Roth, Johannes
Rubio-Perez, Nadina
Hsu, Joy C.
Wimalasundera, Sunethra
Wells, Chris
Bharucha, Kamal
Douglass, Wendy
Bao, Min
Mallalieu, Navita L.
Martini, Alberto
Lovell, Daniel
De Benedetti, Fabrizio
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Objectives. To determine s.c. tocilizumab (s.c.-TCZ) dosing regimens for systemic JIA (sJIA) and polyarticular JIA (pJIA). Methods. In two 52-week phase 1 b trials, s.c.-TCZ (162 mg/dose) was administered to sJIA patients every week or every 2 weeks (every 10 days before interim analysis) and to pJIA patients every 2 weeks or every 3 weeks with body weight >= 30 kg or <30 kg, respectively. Primary end points were pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics and safety; efficacy was exploratory. Comparisons were made to data from phase 3 trials with i.v. tocilizumab (i.v.-TCZ) in sJIA and pJIA. Results. Study participants were 51 sJIA patients and 52 pJIA patients aged 1-17 years who received s.c.-TCZ. Steady-state minimum TCZ concentration (C-trough) >5th percentile of that achieved with i.v.-TCZ was achieved by 49 (96%) sJIA and 52 (100%) pJIA patients. In both populations, pharmacodynamic markers of disease were similar between body weight groups. Improvements in Juvenile Arthritis DAS-71 were comparable between s.c.-TCZ and i.v.-TCZ. By week 52, 53% of sJIA patients and 31% of pJIA patients achieved clinical remission on treatment. Safety was consistent with that of i.v.-TCZ except for injection site reactions, reported by 41.2% and 28.8% of sJIA and pJIA patients, respectively. Infections were reported in 78.4% and 69.2% of patients, respectively. Two sJIA patients died; both deaths were considered to be related to TCZ. Conclusion. s.c.-TCZ provides exposure and risk/benefit profiles similar to those of i.v.-TCZ. S.c. administration provides an alternative administration route that is more convenient for patients and caregivers and that has potential for in-home use.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1312208149
Document Type :
Electronic Resource