4.4 Article

Two-Year US Pharmacovigilance Report on Brodalumab

Journal

DERMATOLOGY AND THERAPY
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages 173-180

Publisher

ADIS INT LTD
DOI: 10.1007/s13555-020-00472-x

Keywords

Adverse events; Brodalumab; Pharmacovigilance; Psoriasis; Real-world data; Safety; Suicidal ideation and behavior

Categories

Funding

  1. Ortho Dermatologics

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The pharmacovigilance report on brodalumab in the US showed no causal association between brodalumab and suicides, suicide attempts, or serious fungal infections, supporting the safety profile previously reported in long-term analyses and 1-year pharmacovigilance data.
Introduction Brodalumab is a human interleukin-17 receptor A antagonist indicated for the treatment of moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis in adult patients who are candidates for systemic therapy or phototherapy and have failed to respond or have lost response to other systemic therapies. In the United States, brodalumab carries a boxed warning about suicidal ideation and behavior; however, no causal association was established between brodalumab and suicides reported during pivotal trials. We have previously reported results from an analysis of 1-year pharmacovigilance data in patients in the United States who took brodalumab, in which the most commonly reported adverse event was psoriasis flare. There were no completed suicides, suicide attempts, or serious fungal infections. Here, we provide a 2-year US pharmacovigilance report. Methods This analysis summarizes pharmacovigilance data reported to Ortho Dermatologics by US patients and healthcare providers from August 15, 2017, through August 14, 2019. The most common adverse events listed in the brodalumab package insert (incidence >= 1%; arthralgia, headache, fatigue, diarrhea, oropharyngeal pain, nausea, myalgia, injection-site reactions, influenza, neutropenia, and tinea infections) and adverse events of special interest are reported. Results Data were collected from 2677 patients in the United States who took brodalumab, with an estimated exposure of 1656 patient-years. Arthralgia was the most commonly reported adverse event (73 events; 0.04 events per patient-year). No suicide attempts or completed suicides were reported; there were 25 reports of depression. There were 46 serious infections and no serious fungal infections. One event of Crohn's disease was reported, which led to discontinuation. There were 13 malignancies, with none deemed related to brodalumab. Conclusions This pharmacovigilance report supports the safety profile of brodalumab previously reported from long-term analyses of clinical trials and 1-year pharmacovigilance data.

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