Abstract
Background: Hereditary angioedema (HAE) with C1 inhibitor deficiency (C1-INH) is characterized by swelling of subcutaneous and/or submucosal tissues. Objective: To evaluate efficacy/safety of fixed-dose subcutaneous plasma-derived C1-INH (pdC1-INH) liquid for HAE attack prevention (NCT02584959). Methods: Eligible patients were ≥12 years with ≥2 monthly attacks prescreening or pre–long-term prophylaxis. In a partial crossover design, 80% of patients were randomized to placebo or pdC1-INH liquid for 14 weeks and crossed over from active to placebo or vice versa for another 14 weeks. The remainder were randomized to pdC1-INH liquid for 28 weeks. The primary efficacy endpoint was normalized number of attacks (NNA) versus placebo. Key additional endpoints were the proportion of patients achieving NNA reduction ≥50%, attack severity, number of attack-free days, and safety. Results: Seventy-five patients were randomized and 58 (77%) completed the study. Mean age 41 years; 88% HAE type I. Least-squares means of NNA were reduced from 3.9 with placebo to 1.6 with pdC1-INH (from day 1; P < .0001). Most patients had ≥50% NNA reduction with pdC1-INH (from day 1, 78%). A total of 8.8% of placebo-treated patients were attack-free and 5.3%, 22.8%, and 63.2% had mild, moderate, and severe attacks, respectively; 37.5% of pdC1-INH–treated patients were attack-free and 8.9%, 26.8%, and 26.8% had mild, moderate, and severe attacks, respectively. Treatment-emergent adverse event rates were similar between groups (52% vs 56% for pdC1-INH crossover vs placebo, respectively). Conclusions: Fixed-dose subcutaneous pdC1-INH liquid was superior to placebo in preventing HAE attacks and demonstrated a favorable safety profile.
Original language | English (US) |
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Pages (from-to) | 1610-1618.e4 |
Journal | Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice |
Volume | 7 |
Issue number | 5 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - May 1 2019 |
All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes
- Immunology and Allergy
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In: Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice, Vol. 7, No. 5, 01.05.2019, p. 1610-1618.e4.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
TY - JOUR
T1 - Fixed-Dose Subcutaneous C1-Inhibitor Liquid for Prophylactic Treatment of C1-INH-HAE
T2 - SAHARA Randomized Study
AU - SAHARA study group
AU - Lumry, William R.
AU - Martinez-Saguer, Inmaculada
AU - Yang, William H.
AU - Bernstein, Jonathan A.
AU - Jacobs, Joshua
AU - Moldovan, Dumitru
AU - Riedl, Marc A.
AU - Johnston, Douglas T.
AU - Li, H. Henry
AU - Tang, Yongqiang
AU - Schranz, Jennifer
AU - Lu, Peng
AU - Vardi, Moshe
AU - Farkas, Henriette
AU - Keith, P.
AU - Yang, W.
AU - Maurer, M.
AU - Martinez-Saguer, I.
AU - Farkas, H.
AU - Reshef, A.
AU - Kivity, S.
AU - Moldovan, D.
AU - Caballero, T.
AU - Guilarte, M.
AU - Hernandez, M. D.
AU - González-Quevedo, M. T.
AU - Banerji, A.
AU - Bernstein, J.
AU - Bewtra, A.
AU - Craig, T.
AU - Fineman, S.
AU - Gower, R.
AU - Jacobs, J.
AU - Johnston, D.
AU - Kashkin, J.
AU - Li, H. H.
AU - Lumry, W. R.
AU - Manning, M.
AU - McNeil, D.
AU - Melamed, I.
AU - Mumneh, N.
AU - Nickel, T.
AU - Panuto, J.
AU - Soteres, D.
AU - Tachdjian, R.
AU - Offenberger, J.
AU - Wedner, J.
N1 - Funding Information: The SAHARA study was sponsored by Shire Human Genetic Therapies, Inc., a Takeda company. Under the direction of the authors, Sophia Shumyatsky, PharmD, employee of Excel Medical Affairs, provided writing assistance for this manuscript. Editorial assistance in formatting, proofreading, copy editing, and fact checking was also provided by Excel Medical Affairs. Shire Human Genetic Therapies, Inc., a Takeda company, provided funding to Excel Medical Affairs for support in writing and editing this manuscript. The interpretation of the data was made by the authors independently.Conflicts of interest: W. R. Lumry has received consultant fees from Adverum, BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); research grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); payments for lectures from CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and is a member of the Medical Advisory Board of the US Hereditary Angioedema Association. I. Martinez-Saguer has received honoraria, research funding, and travel grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company) and/or served as a consultant and/or participated in advisory boards for these companies. W. H. Yang is a consultant and member of the advisory board for CSL Behring and Shire (a Takeda company); has received unrestricted educational grants from AnaptysBio, BioCryst, CSL Behring, Novartis, and Shire (a Takeda company); and research grants from Aimmune, AstraZeneca, BioCryst, CSL Behring, DBV Technologies, Galderma, Genentech/Roche, GlaxoSmithKline, Merck, Pfizer, Pharming, Regeneron, Sanofi-Genzyme, and Shire (a Takeda company). J. A. Bernstein has been a clinical investigator for BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); a speaker for CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and a consultant for BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company). J. Jacobs has received research grants from 3M, Aimmune, AstraZeneca, CSL Behring, Genentech, Novartis, Sanofi, Shire (a Takeda company), and Teva; consulting fees from AstraZeneca, CSL Behring, Pharming, Regeneron, Shire (a Takeda company), and Teva; and speaker honoraria from Shire and Teva. D. Moldovan has served as clinical investigator for BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); a consultant for CSL Behring, Octapharma, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and has received travel grants from CSL Behring, Pharming, Shire (a Takeda company), and Swedish Orphan Biovitrum. M. A. Riedl has received research grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); consulting fees from Adverum, Alnylam, BioCryst, CSL Behring, Ionis, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); payments for lectures from CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and is a medical advisory board member of the US HAE Association. D. T. Johnston has served on advisory boards for CSL Behring, Pharming/Valeant, and Shire (a Takeda company); received speaker fees from Shire (a Takeda company); and has served as an investigator for BioCryst and Shire (a Takeda company). H. H. Li has been a clinical investigator and received grants and/or honoraria from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company). Y. Tang and J. Schranz were full-time employees of Shire (a Takeda company) at the time of this analysis. P. Lu and M. Vardi are full-time employees of Shire (a Takeda company). H. Farkas has received honoraria and travel grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, Shire (a Takeda company), and Swedish Orphan Biovitrum and/or served as a consultant for these companies. The SAHARA study was sponsored by Shire Human Genetic Therapies, Inc., a Takeda company. Under the direction of the authors, Sophia Shumyatsky, PharmD, employee of Excel Medical Affairs, provided writing assistance for this manuscript. Editorial assistance in formatting, proofreading, copy editing, and fact checking was also provided by Excel Medical Affairs. Shire Human Genetic Therapies, Inc., a Takeda company, provided funding to Excel Medical Affairs for support in writing and editing this manuscript. The interpretation of the data was made by the authors independently. Conflicts of interest: W. R. Lumry has received consultant fees from Adverum, BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); research grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); payments for lectures from CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and is a member of the Medical Advisory Board of the US Hereditary Angioedema Association. I. Martinez-Saguer has received honoraria, research funding, and travel grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company) and/or served as a consultant and/or participated in advisory boards for these companies. W. H. Yang is a consultant and member of the advisory board for CSL Behring and Shire (a Takeda company); has received unrestricted educational grants from AnaptysBio, BioCryst, CSL Behring, Novartis, and Shire (a Takeda company); and research grants from Aimmune, AstraZeneca, BioCryst, CSL Behring, DBV Technologies, Galderma, Genentech / Roche, GlaxoSmithKline, Merck, Pfizer, Pharming, Regeneron, Sanofi-Genzyme, and Shire (a Takeda company). J. A. Bernstein has been a clinical investigator for BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); a speaker for CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and a consultant for BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company). J. Jacobs has received research grants from 3M, Aimmune, AstraZeneca, CSL Behring, Genentech, Novartis, Sanofi, Shire (a Takeda company), and Teva; consulting fees from AstraZeneca, CSL Behring, Pharming, Regeneron, Shire (a Takeda company), and Teva; and speaker honoraria from Shire and Teva. D. Moldovan has served as clinical investigator for BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); a consultant for CSL Behring, Octapharma, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and has received travel grants from CSL Behring, Pharming, Shire (a Takeda company), and Swedish Orphan Biovitrum. M. A. Riedl has received research grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); consulting fees from Adverum, Alnylam, BioCryst, CSL Behring, Ionis, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); payments for lectures from CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and is a medical advisory board member of the US HAE Association. D. T. Johnston has served on advisory boards for CSL Behring, Pharming/Valeant, and Shire (a Takeda company); received speaker fees from Shire (a Takeda company); and has served as an investigator for BioCryst and Shire (a Takeda company). H. H. Li has been a clinical investigator and received grants and/or honoraria from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company). Y. Tang and J. Schranz were full-time employees of Shire (a Takeda company) at the time of this analysis. P. Lu and M. Vardi are full-time employees of Shire (a Takeda company). H. Farkas has received honoraria and travel grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, Shire (a Takeda company), and Swedish Orphan Biovitrum and/or served as a consultant for these companies. We thank Yi Wang, Senior Director, Clinical Pharmacology and Pharmacokinetics, Shire (a Takeda company), for providing content direction on the PK/PD findings reported herein. SAHARA Study Investigators: Canada: P. Keith, W. Yang; Germany: M. Maurer, I. Martinez-Saguer; Hungary: H. Farkas; Israel: A. Reshef, S. Kivity; Romania: D. Moldovan; Spain: T. Caballero, M. Guilarte, M. D. Hernandez, M. T. González-Quevedo; United States: A. Banerji, J. Bernstein, A. Bewtra, T. Craig, S. Fineman, R. Gower, J. Jacobs, D. Johnston, J. Kashkin, H. H. Li, W. R. Lumry, M. Manning, D. McNeil, I. Melamed, N. Mumneh, T. Nickel, J. Panuto, D. Soteres, R. Tachdjian, J. Offenberger, J. Wedner. The SAHARA study was sponsored by Shire Human Genetic Therapies, Inc., a Takeda company. Under the direction of the authors, Sophia Shumyatsky, PharmD, employee of Excel Medical Affairs, provided writing assistance for this manuscript. Editorial assistance in formatting, proofreading, copy editing, and fact checking was also provided by Excel Medical Affairs. Shire Human Genetic Therapies, Inc., a Takeda company, provided funding to Excel Medical Affairs for support in writing and editing this manuscript. The interpretation of the data was made by the authors independently. Conflicts of interest: W. R. Lumry has received consultant fees from Adverum, BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); research grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); payments for lectures from CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and is a member of the Medical Advisory Board of the US Hereditary Angioedema Association. I. Martinez-Saguer has received honoraria, research funding, and travel grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company) and/or served as a consultant and/or participated in advisory boards for these companies. W. H. Yang is a consultant and member of the advisory board for CSL Behring and Shire (a Takeda company); has received unrestricted educational grants from AnaptysBio, BioCryst, CSL Behring, Novartis, and Shire (a Takeda company); and research grants from Aimmune, AstraZeneca, BioCryst, CSL Behring, DBV Technologies, Galderma, Genentech / Roche, GlaxoSmithKline, Merck, Pfizer, Pharming, Regeneron, Sanofi-Genzyme, and Shire (a Takeda company). J. A. Bernstein has been a clinical investigator for BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); a speaker for CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and a consultant for BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company). J. Jacobs has received research grants from 3M, Aimmune, AstraZeneca, CSL Behring, Genentech, Novartis, Sanofi, Shire (a Takeda company), and Teva; consulting fees from AstraZeneca, CSL Behring, Pharming, Regeneron, Shire (a Takeda company), and Teva; and speaker honoraria from Shire and Teva. D. Moldovan has served as clinical investigator for BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); a consultant for CSL Behring, Octapharma, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and has received travel grants from CSL Behring, Pharming, Shire (a Takeda company), and Swedish Orphan Biovitrum. M. A. Riedl has received research grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); consulting fees from Adverum, Alnylam, BioCryst, CSL Behring, Ionis, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); payments for lectures from CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and is a medical advisory board member of the US HAE Association. D. T. Johnston has served on advisory boards for CSL Behring, Pharming/Valeant, and Shire (a Takeda company); received speaker fees from Shire (a Takeda company); and has served as an investigator for BioCryst and Shire (a Takeda company). H. H. Li has been a clinical investigator and received grants and/or honoraria from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company). Y. Tang and J. Schranz were full-time employees of Shire (a Takeda company) at the time of this analysis. P. Lu and M. Vardi are full-time employees of Shire (a Takeda company). H. Farkas has received honoraria and travel grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, Shire (a Takeda company), and Swedish Orphan Biovitrum and/or served as a consultant for these companies. Funding Information: The SAHARA study was sponsored by Shire Human Genetic Therapies, Inc., a Takeda company. Under the direction of the authors, Sophia Shumyatsky, PharmD, employee of Excel Medical Affairs, provided writing assistance for this manuscript. Editorial assistance in formatting, proofreading, copy editing, and fact checking was also provided by Excel Medical Affairs. Shire Human Genetic Therapies, Inc., a Takeda company, provided funding to Excel Medical Affairs for support in writing and editing this manuscript. The interpretation of the data was made by the authors independently.Conflicts of interest: W. R. Lumry has received consultant fees from Adverum, BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); research grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); payments for lectures from CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and is a member of the Medical Advisory Board of the US Hereditary Angioedema Association. I. Martinez-Saguer has received honoraria, research funding, and travel grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company) and/or served as a consultant and/or participated in advisory boards for these companies. W. H. Yang is a consultant and member of the advisory board for CSL Behring and Shire (a Takeda company); has received unrestricted educational grants from AnaptysBio, BioCryst, CSL Behring, Novartis, and Shire (a Takeda company); and research grants from Aimmune, AstraZeneca, BioCryst, CSL Behring, DBV Technologies, Galderma, Genentech/Roche, GlaxoSmithKline, Merck, Pfizer, Pharming, Regeneron, Sanofi-Genzyme, and Shire (a Takeda company). J. A. Bernstein has been a clinical investigator for BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); a speaker for CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and a consultant for BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company). J. Jacobs has received research grants from 3M, Aimmune, AstraZeneca, CSL Behring, Genentech, Novartis, Sanofi, Shire (a Takeda company), and Teva; consulting fees from AstraZeneca, CSL Behring, Pharming, Regeneron, Shire (a Takeda company), and Teva; and speaker honoraria from Shire and Teva. D. Moldovan has served as clinical investigator for BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); a consultant for CSL Behring, Octapharma, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and has received travel grants from CSL Behring, Pharming, Shire (a Takeda company), and Swedish Orphan Biovitrum. M. A. Riedl has received research grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); consulting fees from Adverum, Alnylam, BioCryst, CSL Behring, Ionis, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); payments for lectures from CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and is a medical advisory board member of the US HAE Association. D. T. Johnston has served on advisory boards for CSL Behring, Pharming/Valeant, and Shire (a Takeda company); received speaker fees from Shire (a Takeda company); and has served as an investigator for BioCryst and Shire (a Takeda company). H. H. Li has been a clinical investigator and received grants and/or honoraria from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company). Y. Tang and J. Schranz were full-time employees of Shire (a Takeda company) at the time of this analysis. P. Lu and M. Vardi are full-time employees of Shire (a Takeda company). H. Farkas has received honoraria and travel grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, Shire (a Takeda company), and Swedish Orphan Biovitrum and/or served as a consultant for these companies. The SAHARA study was sponsored by Shire Human Genetic Therapies, Inc., a Takeda company. Under the direction of the authors, Sophia Shumyatsky, PharmD, employee of Excel Medical Affairs, provided writing assistance for this manuscript. Editorial assistance in formatting, proofreading, copy editing, and fact checking was also provided by Excel Medical Affairs. Shire Human Genetic Therapies, Inc., a Takeda company, provided funding to Excel Medical Affairs for support in writing and editing this manuscript. The interpretation of the data was made by the authors independently. Conflicts of interest: W. R. Lumry has received consultant fees from Adverum, BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); research grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); payments for lectures from CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and is a member of the Medical Advisory Board of the US Hereditary Angioedema Association. I. Martinez-Saguer has received honoraria, research funding, and travel grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company) and/or served as a consultant and/or participated in advisory boards for these companies. W. H. Yang is a consultant and member of the advisory board for CSL Behring and Shire (a Takeda company); has received unrestricted educational grants from AnaptysBio, BioCryst, CSL Behring, Novartis, and Shire (a Takeda company); and research grants from Aimmune, AstraZeneca, BioCryst, CSL Behring, DBV Technologies, Galderma, Genentech/ Roche, GlaxoSmithKline, Merck, Pfizer, Pharming, Regeneron, Sanofi-Genzyme, and Shire (a Takeda company). J. A. Bernstein has been a clinical investigator for BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); a speaker for CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and a consultant for BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company). J. Jacobs has received research grants from 3M, Aimmune, AstraZeneca, CSL Behring, Genentech, Novartis, Sanofi, Shire (a Takeda company), and Teva; consulting fees from AstraZeneca, CSL Behring, Pharming, Regeneron, Shire (a Takeda company), and Teva; and speaker honoraria from Shire and Teva. D. Moldovan has served as clinical investigator for BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); a consultant for CSL Behring, Octapharma, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and has received travel grants from CSL Behring, Pharming, Shire (a Takeda company), and Swedish Orphan Biovitrum. M. A. Riedl has received research grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); consulting fees from Adverum, Alnylam, BioCryst, CSL Behring, Ionis, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); payments for lectures from CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and is a medical advisory board member of the US HAE Association. D. T. Johnston has served on advisory boards for CSL Behring, Pharming/Valeant, and Shire (a Takeda company); received speaker fees from Shire (a Takeda company); and has served as an investigator for BioCryst and Shire (a Takeda company). H. H. Li has been a clinical investigator and received grants and/or honoraria from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company). Y. Tang and J. Schranz were full-time employees of Shire (a Takeda company) at the time of this analysis. P. Lu and M. Vardi are full-time employees of Shire (a Takeda company). H. Farkas has received honoraria and travel grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, Shire (a Takeda company), and Swedish Orphan Biovitrum and/or served as a consultant for these companies. We thank Yi Wang, Senior Director, Clinical Pharmacology and Pharmacokinetics, Shire (a Takeda company), for providing content direction on the PK/PD findings reported herein. SAHARA Study Investigators: Canada: P. Keith, W. Yang; Germany: M. Maurer, I. Martinez-Saguer; Hungary: H. Farkas; Israel: A. Reshef, S. Kivity; Romania: D. Moldovan; Spain: T. Caballero, M. Guilarte, M. D. Hernandez, M. T. González-Quevedo; United States: A. Banerji, J. Bernstein, A. Bewtra, T. Craig, S. Fineman, R. Gower, J. Jacobs, D. Johnston, J. Kashkin, H. H. Li, W. R. Lumry, M. Manning, D. McNeil, I. Melamed, N. Mumneh, T. Nickel, J. Panuto, D. Soteres, R. Tachdjian, J. Offenberger, J. Wedner. The SAHARA study was sponsored by Shire Human Genetic Therapies, Inc., a Takeda company. Under the direction of the authors, Sophia Shumyatsky, PharmD, employee of Excel Medical Affairs, provided writing assistance for this manuscript. Editorial assistance in formatting, proofreading, copy editing, and fact checking was also provided by Excel Medical Affairs. Shire Human Genetic Therapies, Inc., a Takeda company, provided funding to Excel Medical Affairs for support in writing and editing this manuscript. The interpretation of the data was made by the authors independently. Conflicts of interest: W. R. Lumry has received consultant fees from Adverum, BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); research grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); payments for lectures from CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and is a member of the Medical Advisory Board of the US Hereditary Angioedema Association. I. Martinez-Saguer has received honoraria, research funding, and travel grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company) and/or served as a consultant and/or participated in advisory boards for these companies. W. H. Yang is a consultant and member of the advisory board for CSL Behring and Shire (a Takeda company); has received unrestricted educational grants from AnaptysBio, BioCryst, CSL Behring, Novartis, and Shire (a Takeda company); and research grants from Aimmune, AstraZeneca, BioCryst, CSL Behring, DBV Technologies, Galderma, Genentech/Roche, GlaxoSmithKline, Merck, Pfizer, Pharming, Regeneron, Sanofi-Genzyme, and Shire (a Takeda company). J. A. Bernstein has been a clinical investigator for BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); a speaker for CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and a consultant for BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company). J. Jacobs has received research grants from 3M, Aimmune, AstraZeneca, CSL Behring, Genentech, Novartis, Sanofi, Shire (a Takeda company), and Teva; consulting fees from AstraZeneca, CSL Behring, Pharming, Regeneron, Shire (a Takeda company), and Teva; and speaker honoraria from Shire and Teva. D. Moldovan has served as clinical investigator for BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); a consultant for CSL Behring, Octapharma, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and has received travel grants from CSL Behring, Pharming, Shire (a Takeda company), and Swedish Orphan Biovitrum. M. A. Riedl has received research grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); consulting fees from Adverum, Alnylam, BioCryst, CSL Behring, Ionis, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); payments for lectures from CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company); and is a medical advisory board member of the US HAE Association. D. T. Johnston has served on advisory boards for CSL Behring, Pharming/Valeant, and Shire (a Takeda company); received speaker fees from Shire (a Takeda company); and has served as an investigator for BioCryst and Shire (a Takeda company). H. H. Li has been a clinical investigator and received grants and/or honoraria from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, and Shire (a Takeda company). Y. Tang and J. Schranz were full-time employees of Shire (a Takeda company) at the time of this analysis. P. Lu and M. Vardi are full-time employees of Shire (a Takeda company). H. Farkas has received honoraria and travel grants from BioCryst, CSL Behring, Pharming, Shire (a Takeda company), and Swedish Orphan Biovitrum and/or served as a consultant for these companies. Publisher Copyright: © 2019 The Authors
PY - 2019/5/1
Y1 - 2019/5/1
N2 - Background: Hereditary angioedema (HAE) with C1 inhibitor deficiency (C1-INH) is characterized by swelling of subcutaneous and/or submucosal tissues. Objective: To evaluate efficacy/safety of fixed-dose subcutaneous plasma-derived C1-INH (pdC1-INH) liquid for HAE attack prevention (NCT02584959). Methods: Eligible patients were ≥12 years with ≥2 monthly attacks prescreening or pre–long-term prophylaxis. In a partial crossover design, 80% of patients were randomized to placebo or pdC1-INH liquid for 14 weeks and crossed over from active to placebo or vice versa for another 14 weeks. The remainder were randomized to pdC1-INH liquid for 28 weeks. The primary efficacy endpoint was normalized number of attacks (NNA) versus placebo. Key additional endpoints were the proportion of patients achieving NNA reduction ≥50%, attack severity, number of attack-free days, and safety. Results: Seventy-five patients were randomized and 58 (77%) completed the study. Mean age 41 years; 88% HAE type I. Least-squares means of NNA were reduced from 3.9 with placebo to 1.6 with pdC1-INH (from day 1; P < .0001). Most patients had ≥50% NNA reduction with pdC1-INH (from day 1, 78%). A total of 8.8% of placebo-treated patients were attack-free and 5.3%, 22.8%, and 63.2% had mild, moderate, and severe attacks, respectively; 37.5% of pdC1-INH–treated patients were attack-free and 8.9%, 26.8%, and 26.8% had mild, moderate, and severe attacks, respectively. Treatment-emergent adverse event rates were similar between groups (52% vs 56% for pdC1-INH crossover vs placebo, respectively). Conclusions: Fixed-dose subcutaneous pdC1-INH liquid was superior to placebo in preventing HAE attacks and demonstrated a favorable safety profile.
AB - Background: Hereditary angioedema (HAE) with C1 inhibitor deficiency (C1-INH) is characterized by swelling of subcutaneous and/or submucosal tissues. Objective: To evaluate efficacy/safety of fixed-dose subcutaneous plasma-derived C1-INH (pdC1-INH) liquid for HAE attack prevention (NCT02584959). Methods: Eligible patients were ≥12 years with ≥2 monthly attacks prescreening or pre–long-term prophylaxis. In a partial crossover design, 80% of patients were randomized to placebo or pdC1-INH liquid for 14 weeks and crossed over from active to placebo or vice versa for another 14 weeks. The remainder were randomized to pdC1-INH liquid for 28 weeks. The primary efficacy endpoint was normalized number of attacks (NNA) versus placebo. Key additional endpoints were the proportion of patients achieving NNA reduction ≥50%, attack severity, number of attack-free days, and safety. Results: Seventy-five patients were randomized and 58 (77%) completed the study. Mean age 41 years; 88% HAE type I. Least-squares means of NNA were reduced from 3.9 with placebo to 1.6 with pdC1-INH (from day 1; P < .0001). Most patients had ≥50% NNA reduction with pdC1-INH (from day 1, 78%). A total of 8.8% of placebo-treated patients were attack-free and 5.3%, 22.8%, and 63.2% had mild, moderate, and severe attacks, respectively; 37.5% of pdC1-INH–treated patients were attack-free and 8.9%, 26.8%, and 26.8% had mild, moderate, and severe attacks, respectively. Treatment-emergent adverse event rates were similar between groups (52% vs 56% for pdC1-INH crossover vs placebo, respectively). Conclusions: Fixed-dose subcutaneous pdC1-INH liquid was superior to placebo in preventing HAE attacks and demonstrated a favorable safety profile.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jaip.2019.01.021
DO - 10.1016/j.jaip.2019.01.021
M3 - Article
C2 - 30682573
AN - SCOPUS:85063206261
SN - 2213-2198
VL - 7
SP - 1610-1618.e4
JO - Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice
JF - Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice
IS - 5
ER -