Sibilia J, Westhovens R
Rheumatology Department, Immunopathology Laboratory, Louis Pasteur University, Strasbourg, France.
Clin Exp Rheumatol. 2007 Sep-Oct;25(5 Suppl 46):S46-56.
Abatacept selectively modulates the CD80/CD86:CD28 co-stimulatory signal required for full T-cell activation, and has been approved for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in combination with methotrexate in a number of countries, including the United States, Canada, and the European Union. As with any new agent, it is important to assess the safety and tolerability of abatacept, and hence an integrated safety analysis of five randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind core abatacept clinical trials was performed. The 2,944 patients enrolled had active RA and were receiving a variety of biologic and non-biologic background disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs. Overall, 1,955 patients were treated with abatacept during the double-blind periods, and 2,688 during the cumulative double-blind and open-label periods (yielding 4764 patient-years of exposure in total). Overall frequencies of adverse events (AEs; 88.8% vs. 85.1%), serious AEs (SAEs14.0% vs. 12.5%) and malignancies (1.4% vs. 1.1%) were similar in abatacept- versus placebo-treated patients, respectively (regardless of the potential relationship to the study therapy). Discontinuations due to SAEs were 2.8% in the abatacept group vs. 1.6% in the placebo group. The frequency of serious infections was low overall (3.0% vs. 1.9% in abatacept- versus placebo-treated patients, respectively). Acute infusional AEs (9.8% vs. 6.7% in the abatacept versus placebo groups, respectively) were mostly mild-to-moderate in intensity. Safety data through cumulative exposure were consistent with those from the double-blind periods; there was no evidence of an increase in the incidence of serious infections or malignancies with increasing exposure to abatacept. Abatacept was associated with low levels of immunogenicity, with no detectable association between immunogenicity and safety or efficacy. Abatacept treatment did not result in a higher rate of seroconversion for anti-nuclear or anti-dsDNA antibodies versus placebo, and was associated with a similar frequency of autoimmune events versus placebo (1.4% vs. 1.8%, respectively). Moreover, treatment with abatacept may not markedly impair the response to vaccination in healthy volunteers or RA patients. Overall, these findings suggest that abatacept has acceptable safety and tolerability in patients with RA. Ongoing follow-up will monitor whether these features are maintained over long-term abatacept use.
阿巴西普可选择性调节完全激活T细胞所需的CD80/CD86:CD28共刺激信号,在美国、加拿大和欧盟等多个国家已被批准与甲氨蝶呤联合用于治疗类风湿关节炎(RA)。与任何新药一样,评估阿巴西普的安全性和耐受性很重要,因此对五项随机、安慰剂对照、双盲的阿巴西普核心临床试验进行了综合安全性分析。入组的2944例患者患有活动性RA,正在接受各种生物和非生物背景的改善病情抗风湿药物治疗。总体而言,1955例患者在双盲期接受了阿巴西普治疗,2688例在累积双盲期和开放标签期接受了治疗(总计产生4764患者年的暴露量)。阿巴西普治疗组与安慰剂治疗组的不良事件(AE;88.8%对85.1%)、严重AE(SAE;14.0%对12.5%)和恶性肿瘤(1.4%对1.1%)的总体发生率分别相似(无论与研究治疗的潜在关系如何)。因SAE停药的比例在阿巴西普组为2.8%,在安慰剂组为1.6%。严重感染的总体发生率较低(阿巴西普治疗组与安慰剂治疗组分别为3.0%对1.9%)。急性输注AE(阿巴西普组与安慰剂组分别为9.8%对6.7%)大多为轻度至中度。累积暴露期的安全性数据与双盲期的数据一致;没有证据表明随着阿巴西普暴露量的增加,严重感染或恶性肿瘤的发生率会增加。阿巴西普的免疫原性水平较低,免疫原性与安全性或疗效之间未发现可检测到的关联。与安慰剂相比,阿巴西普治疗并未导致抗核抗体或抗双链DNA抗体的血清转化率更高,且与安慰剂相比,自身免疫事件的发生率相似(分别为1.4%对1.8%)。此外,阿巴西普治疗可能不会显著损害健康志愿者或RA患者对疫苗接种的反应。总体而言,这些发现表明阿巴西普在RA患者中具有可接受的安全性和耐受性。正在进行的随访将监测长期使用阿巴西普时这些特征是否得以维持。