Secukinumab in the treatment of psoriatic arthritis: efficacy and safety results through 3 years from the year 1 extension of the randomised phase III FUTURE 1 trial

Philip J. Mease*, Arthur Kavanaugh, Andreas Reimold, Hasan Tahir, Juergen Rech, Stephen Hall, Piet Geusens, Pascale Pellet, Evie Maria Delicha, Shephard Mpofu, Luminita Pricop, FUTURE 1 Study Grp

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Objective To assess the long-term (3 year) efficacy and safety of secukinumab in patients with active psoriatic arthritis (PsA) in the extension phase of the FUTURE 1 study (NCT01892436). Methods Following the 2-year core trial, eligible patients receiving subcutaneous secukinumab 150 or 75 mg entered a 3-year extension phase. Results are presented for key efficacy and safety endpoints at week 156. Results In total, 460 patients entered the extension study; 308 patients originally randomised to secukinumab were assessed for efficacy. Sustained improvements in all efficacy endpoints were achieved with secukinumab through week 156. Overall, 76.8%/54.9% (secukinumab 150 mg) and 65.2%/39.0% (secukinumab 75 mg) of patients achieved an American College of Rheumatology (ACR) 20/50 response (multiple imputation data); ACR20 responses were sustained irrespective of previous antitumour necrosis factor exposure. Improvements in quality of life and physical function were also sustained through week 156. Radiographic results (observed data; van der Heijde modified total Sharp score (mTSS)) showed that 78.1% (secukinumab 150 mg) and 74.8% (secukinumab 75 mg) of patients had no radiographic progression (<= 0.5 increase in mTSS) through week 156. Exposure-adjusted incidence rates for selected adverse events per 100 patient-years (secukinumab 150/75 mg) were serious infections (1.7/1.6), Candida infections (1.4/0.7), Crohn's disease (0/0.3), ulcerative colitis (0/0.3) and major adverse cardiac events (0.3/0.8). Conclusion Subcutaneous secukinumab provided sustained improvements in the signs and symptoms, quality of life and physical function of patients with active PsA with low rate of radiographic disease progression through 3 years. Secukinumab was well tolerated with no new safety signals.
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere000723
Pages (from-to)1-9
Number of pages9
JournalRMD Open
Volume4
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jul 2018

Keywords

  • ANTI-INTERLEUKIN-17A MONOCLONAL-ANTIBODY
  • ANKYLOSING-SPONDYLITIS
  • DOUBLE-BLIND
  • PHARMACOLOGICAL THERAPIES
  • TREATMENT RECOMMENDATIONS
  • RHEUMATOID-ARTHRITIS
  • JOINT INFLAMMATION
  • CLINICAL-RESPONSE
  • EUROPEAN LEAGUE
  • BONE EROSION

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