4.7 Article

Relationship of anifrolumab pharmacokinetics with efficacy and safety in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus

Journal

RHEUMATOLOGY
Volume 61, Issue 5, Pages 1900-1910

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/rheumatology/keab704

Keywords

systematic lupus erythematosus; autoimmunity; biologic therapies; anifrolumab; population pharmacokinetics; exposure-response; clearance; efficacy; safety

Categories

Funding

  1. AstraZeneca

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The study aimed to characterize the relationship between anifrolumab pharmacokinetics and efficacy, safety in patients with SLE. Results showed that higher anifrolumab serum concentration predicted greater efficacy, with consistent positive benefit favoring anifrolumab 300 mg over placebo in the trials.
Objectives To characterize the relationship of anifrolumab pharmacokinetics with efficacy and safety in patients with moderate to severe SLE despite standard therapy, using pooled data from two phase 3 trials. Methods TULIP-1 and TULIP-2 were randomized, placebo-controlled, 52-week trials of intravenous anifrolumab (every 4 weeks for 48 weeks). For the exposure-response analysis, BILAG-based Composite Lupus Assessment (BICLA) or SLE Responder Index [SRI(4)] response rates at week 52 in each quartile/tertile of average anifrolumab serum concentration (C-ave) were compared for anifrolumab and placebo in all-comers, patients who completed treatment, and IFN gene signature (IFNGS)-high patients who completed treatment, using average marginal effect logistic regression. Relationships between exposure and key safety events were assessed graphically. Results Of patients in TULIP-1/TULIP-2 who received anifrolumab (150 mg, n = 91; 300 mg, n = 356) or placebo (n = 366), 574 completed treatment, of whom 470 were IFNGS high. In the exposure-efficacy analyses, BICLA and SRI(4) treatment differences favouring anifrolumab 300 mg vs placebo were observed across C-ave subgroups and all analysis populations. Logistic regression identified C-ave as a significant covariate for predicted BICLA response, as higher anifrolumab C-ave predicted greater efficacy. There was no evidence of exposure-driven incidence of key safety events through week 52 in patients receiving anifrolumab 150 or 300 mg. Conclusion While higher C-ave predicted greater efficacy, consistent positive benefit favouring anifrolumab 300 mg vs placebo was observed in BICLA and SRI(4) responses across C-ave subgroups in the TULIP trials. There was no evidence of exposure-driven safety events. ClinicalTrial.gov numbers NCT02446912, NCT02446899

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