Clark W, Jobanputra P, Barton P, Burls A
Medicines Evaluation Unit, Department of Medicines Management, Keele University, UK.
Health Technol Assess. 2004 May;8(18):iii-iv, ix-x, 1-105. doi: 10.3310/hta8180.
To review the evidence of the clinical and cost-effectiveness of anakinra, an interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra), for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in adults.
Electronic bibliographic databases. Scrip, Food and Drug Administration (FDA) submissions for new drug applications, European Agency for the Evaluation of Medicinal Products (EMEA) reports and the pharmaceutical company submission to the National Institute for Clinical Excellence.
Studies were identified that included randomised controlled trials (RCTs) or economic evaluations of anakinra in adult patients with RA. Existing health economic reviews were also assessed. Data were extracted and quality assessed using a structured approach. The Birmingham Rheumatoid Arthritis Model (BRAM) was used to compare disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD) sequences, chosen to reflect current clinical practice, with and without anakinra, at different points in the DMARD sequence.
Five high-quality RCTs of anakinra in adult patients with RA, involving a total of 2905 patients, of whom 2146 received anakinra, were identified. The results of the clinical trials were consistent with clinical benefit (compared with placebo) as measured by American College of Rheumatology (ACR) composite response rate at 6 months. Variation in response rate was seen across the trials, which is likely to be a reflection of the size of the trials and the wide range of doses evaluated. Consistent benefit was seen at the higher dose evaluated. Benefit was evident both with monotherapy and when used in combination with methotrexate. Data on the efficacy end-points evaluated in a large pragmatic safety study have not been made available, which is of concern. Anakinra treatment was associated with a high incidence of injection-site reactions. Serious adverse events were infrequent, but longer term follow-up is required. No fully published economic evaluations of anakinra in patients with RA were identified. The BRAM gives a base-case estimate of the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of anakinra of 106,000 pounds to 604,000 pounds/quality-adjusted life-year (QALY). In the sensitivity analyses substantial variations were made in key parameters and ICERs were shown to be responsive. However, ICERs did not drop below 50,000 pounds/QALY in any univariate sensitivity analysis.
Anakinra can be considered modestly effective in the treatment of RA based on ACR response, although no conclusion can currently be made on the effect of treatment on disease progression. Adjusted indirect comparison suggests that anakinra may be significantly less effective at relieving the clinical signs and symptoms of RA, as measured by the ACR response criteria, than tumour necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitors all used in combination with methotrexate, although these results should be interpreted with caution. The BRAM produces an ICER for anakinra substantially higher than those for infliximab and etanercept. However, patients may respond to anakinra when they have not responded to other TNF inhibitors, as these agents have a different mechanism of action. Thus, anakinra may produce a clinically significant and important improvement in some patients that they could not otherwise have achieved. Further research would be valuable in the following areas: RCTs to evaluate the efficacy, safety and cost of anakinra over the longer term; comparative trials of anakinra with other DMARDs and biological modifiers; assessment of the role of anakinra in the treatment of patients who have failed to achieve a benefit while taking infliximab or etanercept; assessment on the impact of DMARDs and anakinra on joint replacement, mortality and quality of life; controlled clinical trials of combination therapy with two anticytokines; investigations into newer biological therapies; and the utility of radiographic outcomes in clinical trials of RA.
综述白细胞介素-1受体拮抗剂(IL-1Ra)阿那白滞素治疗成人类风湿关节炎(RA)的临床及成本效益证据。
电子文献数据库、Scrip、美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)新药申请文件、欧洲药品评估局(EMEA)报告以及制药公司提交给英国国家卫生与临床优化研究所的资料。
检索纳入阿那白滞素治疗成年RA患者的随机对照试验(RCT)或经济学评价的研究。对现有的卫生经济学综述也进行了评估。采用结构化方法提取数据并进行质量评估。使用伯明翰类风湿关节炎模型(BRAM)比较在疾病改善抗风湿药物(DMARD)治疗序列不同阶段加用或不加用阿那白滞素时,选择以反映当前临床实践的DMARD治疗方案。
共识别出5项阿那白滞素治疗成年RA患者的高质量RCT,涉及2905例患者,其中2146例接受阿那白滞素治疗。临床试验结果显示,与安慰剂相比,6个月时美国风湿病学会(ACR)综合反应率表明临床有获益。各试验反应率存在差异,这可能反映了试验规模及所评估剂量范围较宽。在较高评估剂量下可见一致的获益。单药治疗及与甲氨蝶呤联合使用时均有明显获益。一项大型实用安全性研究中评估的疗效终点数据尚未公布,这令人担忧。阿那白滞素治疗注射部位反应发生率较高。严重不良事件少见,但需要更长时间的随访。未发现已完全发表的阿那白滞素治疗RA患者的经济学评价。BRAM得出阿那白滞素的增量成本效益比(ICER)基础值为每质量调整生命年(QALY)106,000英镑至604,000英镑。在敏感性分析中,关键参数有显著变化,ICER显示有反应。然而,在任何单变量敏感性分析中,ICER均未降至50,000英镑/QALY以下。
基于ACR反应,阿那白滞素在RA治疗中可认为有一定疗效,尽管目前无法就治疗对疾病进展的影响得出结论。校正间接比较表明,以ACR反应标准衡量,阿那白滞素在缓解RA临床体征和症状方面可能明显不如与甲氨蝶呤联合使用的肿瘤坏死因子(TNF)抑制剂,不过这些结果应谨慎解读。BRAM得出阿那白滞素的ICER显著高于英夫利昔单抗和依那西普。然而,当患者对其他TNF抑制剂无反应时,可能对阿那白滞素有反应,因为这些药物作用机制不同。因此,阿那白滞素可能使部分患者取得临床上显著且重要的改善,否则他们无法实现。在以下领域进一步研究将很有价值:评估阿那白滞素长期疗效、安全性和成本的RCT;阿那白滞素与其他DMARD及生物制剂的对比试验;评估阿那白滞素在接受英夫利昔单抗或依那西普治疗未获益患者中的治疗作用;评估DMARD和阿那白滞素对关节置换、死亡率和生活质量的影响;两种抗细胞因子联合治疗的对照临床试验;对更新的生物疗法的研究;以及RA临床试验中影像学结果的效用。