4.2 Article

Observed efficacy and clinically important improvements in participants with osteoarthritis treated with subcutaneous tanezumab: results from a 56-week randomized NSAID-controlled study

Journal

ARTHRITIS RESEARCH & THERAPY
Volume 24, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13075-022-02759-0

Keywords

Tanezumab; Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; Osteoarthritis; Nerve growth factor; Clinical-trial; Efficacy

Categories

Funding

  1. Pfizer
  2. Eli Lilly Company

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Both tanezumab and NSAIDs demonstrated early and sustained efficacy in improving pain and function in participants with moderate-to-severe OA over a 56-week treatment period. However, adverse events of abnormal peripheral sensation and joint safety issues were more common with tanezumab than NSAIDs.
Background: A recent phase 3 study demonstrated that treatment with tanezumab, a nerve growth factor inhibitor, or nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) improves pain and physical function in participants with moderate-to-severe osteoarthritis (OA) of the hip or knee. Here, we evaluated the time course and clinical importance of these initial efficacy findings using a mixture of primary, secondary, and post hoc endpoints. Methods: Participants on stable NSAID therapy and with a history of inadequate response to other standard OA analgesics were enrolled in an 80-week (56-week treatment/24-week safety follow-up), randomized, NSAID-controlled, phase 3 study primarily designed to assess the safety of tanezumab for moderate-to-severe OA of the knee or hip. Participants received oral NSAID (twice daily naproxen, celecoxib, or diclofenac) or subcutaneous tanezumab (2.5mg or 5mg every 8 weeks). Non-responders were discontinued at week 16. Changes from baseline in WOMAC Pain and Physical Function, Patient's Global Assessment of Osteoarthritis (PGA-OA), and average pain in the index joint were compared between tanezumab and NSAID groups over the 56-week treatment period. Clinically meaningful response (e.g., >= 30% and >= 50% improvement in WOMAC Pain and Physical Function), rescue medication use, and safety were also assessed. Results: All groups improved WOMAC Pain, WOMAC Physical Function, PGA-OA, and average pain in the index joint over the 56-week treatment period relative to baseline. Across all groups, improvements generally occurred from the time of first assessment (week 1 or 2) to week 16 and then slightly decreased from week 16 to 24 before stabilizing from weeks 24 to 56. The magnitude of improvement and the proportion of participants achieving >= 30% and >= 50% improvement in these measures was greater (unadjusted p <= 0.05) with tanezumab than with NSAID at some time-points on or before week 16. Adverse events of abnormal peripheral sensation, prespecified joint safety events, and total joint replacement surgery occurred more frequently with tanezumab than with NSAID. Conclusions: Tanezumab and NSAID both provided early and sustained (up to 56 weeks) efficacy relative to baseline. Improvements in pain and function were clinically meaningful in a substantial proportion of participants. Adverse events of abnormal peripheral sensation and joint safety events occurred more frequently with tanezumab than with NSAID.

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