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Long-term efficacy and safety of canakinumab in patients with mevalonate kinase deficiency: results from the randomised Phase 3 CLUSTER trial

Authors :
Jeyaratnam, J.
Simon, A.
Calvo, I.
Constantin, T.
Shcherbina, A.
Hofer, M.
Gattorno, M.
Martini, A.
Bader-Meunier, B.
Vastert, B.
Levy, J.
Dekker, E.
Benedetti, F. De
Frenkel, J.
Jeyaratnam, J.
Simon, A.
Calvo, I.
Constantin, T.
Shcherbina, A.
Hofer, M.
Gattorno, M.
Martini, A.
Bader-Meunier, B.
Vastert, B.
Levy, J.
Dekker, E.
Benedetti, F. De
Frenkel, J.
Source :
Rheumatology; 2088; 2094; 1462-0324; 5; 61; ~Rheumatology~2088~2094~~~1462-0324~5~61~~
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Item does not contain fulltext<br />OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the long-term efficacy and safety of canakinumab in patients with mevalonate kinase deficiency during the open label extension (weeks 41-113) of the randomized controlled CLUSTER trial. METHODS: During a 72-week period, patients received open-label canakinumab 150 or 300 mg, every 4 or 8 weeks. The disease activity was evaluated every 8 weeks using physician global assessment and counting the number of flares. Concentrations of CRP and serum amyloid A protein were measured. The safety was studied by determination and classification of observed adverse events. The safety and efficacy were analysed separately in three subgroups of patients receiving a cumulative dose of less than <35 mg/kg, ≥35 to <70 mg/kg or ≥70 mg/kg. RESULTS: Of the 74 patients who started the CLUSTER study, 66 entered Epoch 4 and 65 completed it. During the 72-week period, 42 (64%) patients experienced no flares, while 13 (20%) had one flare, as compared with a median of 12 flares per year reported at baseline. Low physician global assessment scores were seen at the end of the study for all groups with >90% reporting minimal disease activity or none at all. Median CRP concentrations were consistently equal or lower than 10 mg/l, while median serum amyloid A concentrations remained only slightly above the normal range of 10 mg/l. The study showed no new or unexpected adverse events. CONCLUSION: Canakinumab proved effective to control disease activity and prevent flares in mevalonate kinase deficiency during the 72-week study period. No new safety concerns were reported. TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT02059291. https://clinicaltrials.gov.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Rheumatology; 2088; 2094; 1462-0324; 5; 61; ~Rheumatology~2088~2094~~~1462-0324~5~61~~
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1366758637
Document Type :
Electronic Resource