1
|
Deodhar A, Gensler LS, Sieper J, Clark M, Calderon C, Wang Y, Zhou Y, Leu JH, Campbell K, Sweet K, Harrison DD, Hsia EC, Heijde D, Ariel F, Asnal CA, Berman A, Citera G, Rodriguez G, Savio VG, Bird P, Griffiths H, Nicholls D, Rischmueller M, Zochling J, De Vlam K, Malaise M, Toukap AN, Van den Bosch F, Vanhoof J, Bonfiglioli R, Keiserman M, Scotton AS, Xavier R, Ximenes AC, Atanasov A, Goranov I, Kazmin I, Licheva RN, Nikolov N, Oparanov B, Stoilov R, Bessette L, Rodrigues J, Bortilik L, Dokoupilova E, Dvoarak Z, Galatikova D, Nemec P, Podrazilova L, Simkova G, Stejfova Z, Moravcova R, Vitek P, Cantagrel A, Baillet A, Banneville B, Combe B, Breban M, Nguyen M, Goupille P, Braun J, Everding A, Kekow J, Koenig R, Rubbert‐Roth A, Witte T, Bartha A, Drescher E, Kerekes K, Kovacs A, Pulai J, Rojkovich B, Szanto S, Toth E, Avila H, Torre IG, Irazoque F, Maradiaga M, Pacheco C, Brzosko M, Dudek A, Jeka S, Krogulec M, Kwiatkowska B, Wiland P, Wojciechowski R, Zielinska A, Santos H, Bugrova O, Christyakov V, Gorbunov V, Ilivanova E, Zemerova E, Kamalova R, Kameneva T, Macievskaya G, Marusenko I, Maslyansky A, Myasoedova S, Myasoutova L, et alDeodhar A, Gensler LS, Sieper J, Clark M, Calderon C, Wang Y, Zhou Y, Leu JH, Campbell K, Sweet K, Harrison DD, Hsia EC, Heijde D, Ariel F, Asnal CA, Berman A, Citera G, Rodriguez G, Savio VG, Bird P, Griffiths H, Nicholls D, Rischmueller M, Zochling J, De Vlam K, Malaise M, Toukap AN, Van den Bosch F, Vanhoof J, Bonfiglioli R, Keiserman M, Scotton AS, Xavier R, Ximenes AC, Atanasov A, Goranov I, Kazmin I, Licheva RN, Nikolov N, Oparanov B, Stoilov R, Bessette L, Rodrigues J, Bortilik L, Dokoupilova E, Dvoarak Z, Galatikova D, Nemec P, Podrazilova L, Simkova G, Stejfova Z, Moravcova R, Vitek P, Cantagrel A, Baillet A, Banneville B, Combe B, Breban M, Nguyen M, Goupille P, Braun J, Everding A, Kekow J, Koenig R, Rubbert‐Roth A, Witte T, Bartha A, Drescher E, Kerekes K, Kovacs A, Pulai J, Rojkovich B, Szanto S, Toth E, Avila H, Torre IG, Irazoque F, Maradiaga M, Pacheco C, Brzosko M, Dudek A, Jeka S, Krogulec M, Kwiatkowska B, Wiland P, Wojciechowski R, Zielinska A, Santos H, Bugrova O, Christyakov V, Gorbunov V, Ilivanova E, Zemerova E, Kamalova R, Kameneva T, Macievskaya G, Marusenko I, Maslyansky A, Myasoedova S, Myasoutova L, Nemtsov B, Nesmeyanova O, Plaksina T, Pokrovskaya T, Polyakova S, Rebrov A, Savina L, Smakotina S, Stanislav M, Ukhanova O, Vinogradova I, Zonova E, Baek HJ, Kim T, Lee C, Lee S, Lee S, Lee S, Park S, Song Y, Suh C, Ramos JA, Blanco FJ, Collantes E, Diaz MC, Vivar MLG, Gratacos J, Juanola X, Chen D, Chen H, Chen K, Chen Y, Chiu Y, Luo S, Tsai S, Tseng J, Wei C, Weng M, Abrahamovych O, Reshotko D, Golovchenko O, Hospodarsky I, Iaremenko O, Levchenko O, Dudnyk O, Garmish O, Grishyna O, Protsenko G, Rekalov D, Smiyan S, Stanislavchuk M, Trypilka S, Tseluyko V, Turianytsia S, Vasylets V, Virstyuk N, Kleban Y, Ciurtin C, Gaffney K, Gunasekera W, Mackay K, Packham J, Sengupta R, Tahir H, Aelion J, Bennett R, Deodhar A, Gonzalez‐Paoli J, Griffin RM, Grisanti M, Mallepalli J, Peters E, Schechtman J, Singhal A. Three Multicenter, Randomized, Double‐Blind, Placebo‐Controlled Studies Evaluating the Efficacy and Safety of Ustekinumab in Axial Spondyloarthritis. Arthritis Rheumatol 2018; 71:258-270. [DOI: 10.1002/art.40728] [Show More Authors] [Citation(s) in RCA: 173] [Impact Index Per Article: 24.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 05/30/2018] [Accepted: 09/13/2018] [Indexed: 12/12/2022]
|
|
7 |
173 |
2
|
Park W, Božić-Majstorović L, Milakovic D, Berrocal Kasay A, El-Khouri EC, Irazoque-Palazuelos F, Molina FFC, Shesternya P, Miranda P, Medina-Rodriguez FG, Wiland P, Jeka S, Chavez-Corrales J, Garmish O, Linde T, Rekalov D, Hrycaj P, Krause A, Fomina N, Piura O, Abello-Banfi M, Suh CH, Shim SC, Lee SJ, Lee SY, Kim SH, Yoo DH. Comparison of biosimilar CT-P10 and innovator rituximab in patients with rheumatoid arthritis: a randomized controlled Phase 3 trial. MAbs 2018; 10:934-943. [PMID: 30010481 PMCID: PMC6152436 DOI: 10.1080/19420862.2018.1487912] [Citation(s) in RCA: 35] [Impact Index Per Article: 5.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/14/2022] Open
Abstract
This multinational, randomized, double-blind trial, (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT02149121) was designed to demonstrate equivalence in pharmacokinetics and efficacy between CT-P10 and innovator rituximab (RTX) in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Adults with active RA were treated with CT-P10, United States-sourced RTX (US-RTX; Rituxan®), or European Union-sourced RTX (EU-RTX; MabThera®) at weeks 0 and 2. The co-primary pharmacokinetic endpoints were area under the serum concentration–time curve (AUC) from time zero to last measurable concentration (AUC0–last), AUC from time zero to infinity (AUC0–∞), and maximum concentration (Cmax) after two infusions. The primary efficacy endpoint was change from baseline to week 24 in Disease Activity Score using 28 joints-C-reactive protein (DAS28-CRP). Pharmacodynamics, immunogenicity, and safety were also assessed. 372 patients were randomly assigned to CT-P10 (n = 161) or RTX (n = 211 [US-RTX, n = 151; EU-RTX, n = 60]). For the co-primary pharmacokinetic endpoints, 90% confidence intervals (CI) for ratios of geometric means (CT-P10/US-RTX, CT-P10/EU-RTX or EU-RTX/US-RTX) all fell within the equivalence margin of 80–125%. Adjusted least squares (LS) mean (standard error) change from baseline in DAS28-CRP at week 24 was −2.13 (0.175) for CT-P10 and −2.09 (0.176) for RTX. The 95% CI (−0.29, 0.21) of the estimated treatment difference between CT-P10 and RTX (−0.04) was entirely within the efficacy equivalence margin of ±0.5. Pharmacodynamics, immunogenicity, and safety profiles were similar for CT-P10 and RTX. The pharmacokinetics of CT-P10, US-RTX, and EU-RTX were equivalent. CT-P10 and RTX were also equivalent in terms of efficacy and displayed similar pharmacodynamic, immunogenicity, and safety profiles up to week 24.
Collapse
|
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't |
7 |
35 |
3
|
Shim SC, Božić-Majstorović L, Berrocal Kasay A, El-Khouri EC, Irazoque-Palazuelos F, Cons Molina FF, Medina-Rodriguez FG, Miranda P, Shesternya P, Chavez-Corrales J, Wiland P, Jeka S, Garmish O, Hrycaj P, Fomina N, Park W, Suh CH, Lee SJ, Lee SY, Bae YJ, Yoo DH. Efficacy and safety of switching from rituximab to biosimilar CT-P10 in rheumatoid arthritis: 72-week data from a randomized Phase 3 trial. Rheumatology (Oxford) 2020; 58:2193-2202. [PMID: 31184752 PMCID: PMC6880852 DOI: 10.1093/rheumatology/kez152] [Citation(s) in RCA: 25] [Impact Index Per Article: 5.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 11/15/2018] [Revised: 03/09/2019] [Indexed: 01/11/2023] Open
Abstract
Objective To evaluate the efficacy and safety of CT-P10, a rituximab biosimilar after a single switch, during a multinational, randomized, double-blind Phase 3 trial involving patients with RA. Methods Patients received 48 weeks’ treatment with CT-P10 or United States- or European Union-sourced reference rituximab (US-RTX and EU-RTX, respectively). Patients entering the extension period (weeks 48–72) remained on CT-P10 (CT-P10/CT-P10; n = 122) or US-RTX (US-RTX/US-RTX; n = 64), or switched to CT-P10 from US-RTX (US-RTX/CT-P10; n = 62) or EU-RTX (EU-RTX/CT-P10; n = 47) for an additional course. Efficacy endpoints included Disease Activity Score using 28 joints (DAS28), American College of Rheumatology (ACR) response rates, and quality of life-related parameters. Pharmacodynamics, immunogenicity and safety were also assessed. Results At week 72, similar improvements were observed by disease activity parameters including DAS28 and ACR response rate in the four extension period treatment groups. Quality of life improvements at week 72 vs baseline were similarly shown during the extension period in all groups. Newly developed anti-drug antibodies were detected in two patients following study drug infusion in the extension period. Similar pharmacodynamic and safety profiles were observed across groups. Conclusion Long-term use of CT-P10 up to 72 weeks was effective and well tolerated. Furthermore, switching from reference rituximab to CT-P10 in RA was well tolerated and did not result in any clinically meaningful differences in terms of efficacy, pharmacodynamics, immunogenicity and safety. Trail registration ClinicalTrials.gov, http://clinicaltrials.gov, NCT02149121.
Collapse
|
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't |
5 |
25 |
5
|
Haridas VM, Katta R, Nalawade A, Kharkar S, Zhdan V, Garmish O, Lopez-Lazaro L, Batra SS, Kankanwadi S. Pharmacokinetic Similarity and Comparative Pharmacodynamics, Safety, Efficacy, and Immunogenicity of DRL_RI Versus Reference Rituximab in Biologics-Naïve Patients with Moderate-to-Severe Rheumatoid Arthritis: A Double-Blind, Randomized, Three-Arm Study. BioDrugs 2020; 34:183-196. [PMID: 32052313 PMCID: PMC7113224 DOI: 10.1007/s40259-020-00406-1] [Citation(s) in RCA: 5] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/20/2022]
Abstract
OBJECTIVES The aims were to demonstrate pharmacokinetic (PK) similarity between DRL_RI, a proposed rituximab biosimilar, and two reference innovator products (Rituxan® [RTX-US] and MabThera® [RTX-EU]) and compare their pharmacodynamics (PD), efficacy, safety, and immunogenicity in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients with inadequate response to methotrexate (MTX)-based therapy and no prior biologic administration. METHODS In this randomized, double-blind, parallel-group study, 276 patients with moderate-to-severe active RA were randomized to receive DRL_RI, RTX-US, or RTX-EU on days 1 and 15. The primary PK end points included area under the concentration-time curve from time 0 to 336 h after first infusion (AUC0-14 days, first infusion), AUC from day 1 through week 16 (AUC0-∞, entire course), and AUC from time 0 to time of last quantifiable concentration after the second dose (AUC0-t, second infusion). Secondary end points included other PK parameters, such as maximum concentration (Cmax), time to Cmax after each infusion, terminal half-life, systemic clearance, and volume of distribution after the second infusion; PD parameters and efficacy until week 24; safety and immunogenicity at week 24 and 52; and B cell recovery until week 52. AUC from time 0 to time of last quantifiable concentration after the first dose and over the entire course from day 1 through week 16 (AUC0-t, entire course) was analyzed as an exploratory end point. RESULTS The 91% confidence intervals (CIs) of the geometric mean ratios (GMRs) for the primary end point of AUC0-∞, entire course were within the bioequivalence limits of 80-125% for all comparisons: DRL_RI versus RTX-US 100.37% (92.30-109.14), DRL_RI versus RTX-EU 93.58% (85.98-101.85), and RTX-US versus RTX-EU 93.24% (85.62-101.54). PD outcomes (peripheral blood B-cell depletion and mean change in Disease Activity Score [28 joints]-C-reactive protein), efficacy, safety, and immunogenicity were also comparable between DRL_RI and the reference products. CONCLUSION DRL_RI, a proposed biosimilar, demonstrated three-way PK similarity with RTX-EU and RTX-US, the reference innovator products, with comparable efficacy, PD, safety, and immunogenicity. CLINICAL TRIALS REGISTRATION NUMBER ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02296775.
Collapse
|
Randomized Controlled Trial |
5 |
5 |