Neuroimmunology Unit (M.L.K., D.P., P.V., A.G.T., M.C.D.), Department of Pathophysiology, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens Medical School, Athens, Greece; and Thomas Jefferson University (M.C.D.) Philadelphia, PA.
Neurol Neuroimmunol Neuroinflamm. 2019 Jun 10;6(4):e581. doi: 10.1212/NXI.0000000000000581. eCollection 2019 Jul.
To assess whether canakinumab, a monoclonal antibody against IL-1β approved for autoinflammatory diseases, is effective as target-specific therapy in patients with sporadic inclusion body myositis (sIBM).
Because in sIBM IL-1β colocalizes with amyloid precursor protein and upregulates amyloid aggregates enhancing degeneration, targeting IL-1β with canakinumab may arrest disease progression. On this basis, 5 ambulatory patients with sIBM participated in an institutional review board--approved open-labeled study with 150 mg canakinumab [4 bimonthly, then monthly subcutaneous injections] for a mean period of 15.8 months. Patients were assessed bimonthly with a manual dynamometer in 12 proximal and distal muscles and with grip force (GF) in both hands. Total muscle strength (TMS) was expressed in kilograms. Efficacy was defined as >15% increased strength after 12 months.
Patient 1 stopped at month 5 because of 23% loss in TMS and 32.35% in GF; patient 2 showed 37.1% increase in TMS and 13% in GF by month 9; patient 3 exhibited 26.7% reduction in TMS and 10% in GF at month 33; patient 4 showed 6.5% reduction in TMS and 1.6% in GF after 15 months, denoting relative stability; and patient 5 showed 30.4% loss in TMS and 20.8% in GF after 18 months. In patients 2 and 4, in whom 3-year longitudinal data were available, no effect on disease progression was noted.
In this long-term, open-label study, canakinumab showed small, but not clinically appreciable, stabilizing benefits in 2 of 5 patients with sIBM over 1 year, was ineffective in 2 others, and might have worsened one. No patient improved.
This study provides Class IV evidence that canakinumab was ineffective for patients with sIBM.
评估白细胞介素-1β(IL-1β)单克隆抗体卡那单抗(canakinumab)是否可作为靶向治疗药物,用于治疗散发性包涵体肌炎(sIBM)患者。
由于在 sIBM 中,IL-1β与淀粉样前体蛋白共定位,并上调淀粉样聚合体,从而增强退变,因此用卡那单抗靶向 IL-1β可能会阻止疾病进展。在此基础上,5 名患有 sIBM 的门诊患者参与了一项机构审查委员会批准的开放性研究,给予 150mg 卡那单抗[每 2 个月皮下注射 4 次,然后每月 1 次],平均治疗 15.8 个月。患者每 2 个月通过手动测力计评估 12 块近端和远端肌肉的力量,以及双手的握力(GF)。总肌肉力量(TMS)以千克表示。疗效定义为治疗 12 个月后力量增加>15%。
患者 1 在第 5 个月因 TMS 下降 23%和 GF 下降 32.35%而停止治疗;患者 2 在第 9 个月时 TMS 增加 37.1%和 GF 增加 13%;患者 3 在第 33 个月时 TMS 减少 26.7%和 GF 减少 10%;患者 4 在第 15 个月时 TMS 减少 6.5%和 GF 减少 1.6%,表明相对稳定;患者 5 在第 18 个月时 TMS 减少 30.4%和 GF 减少 20.8%。在其中 2 名患者(患者 2 和患者 4)中,有 3 年的纵向数据,未观察到疾病进展的影响。
在这项长期、开放性研究中,卡那单抗在 5 名 sIBM 患者中的 2 名患者中显示出小但无临床意义的稳定益处,在另外 2 名患者中无效,可能使 1 名患者的病情恶化。没有患者得到改善。
本研究提供了 IV 级证据,表明卡那单抗对 sIBM 患者无效。