Sanofi

Author Of 1 Presentation

Disease Modifying Therapies – Risk Management Oral Presentation

FC02.01 - Safety of Alemtuzumab Over 9 Years in Patients With Non-MS Autoimmunity

Speakers
Presentation Number
FC02.01
Presentation Topic
Disease Modifying Therapies – Risk Management
Lecture Time
13:00 - 13:12

Abstract

Background

Alemtuzumab is an anti-CD52 monoclonal antibody therapy approved for treating RRMS. Although alemtuzumab is associated with non–MS-related secondary autoimmune events, the role pre-existing non-MS autoimmunity plays in secondary autoimmunity is unclear.

Objectives

To assess the impact of 1) pre-existing non-MS autoimmunity and 2) post-alemtuzumab thyroid autoimmunity on subsequent onset of new autoimmunity up to 9 years after initiating alemtuzumab.

Methods

In clinical trials (NCT00050778, NCT00530348, NCT00548405, NCT00930553, NCT02255656), patients were monitored for autoimmune adverse events (AEs). All patient- and investigator-reported AEs were recorded. An autoimmune event was pre-existing if it occurred prior to initiating alemtuzumab or was in the medical history database.

Results

A total of 1216 patients from the alemtuzumab clinical development program who received alemtuzumab 12 mg were included in the analysis. Ninety-six had pre-existing non-MS autoimmunity. Up to 9 years after alemtuzumab initiation, the percentage of patients with new autoimmune disease was similar in those with (35.4%) versus without (35.3%) pre-existing autoimmunity; similar percentages of patients with versus without pre-existing autoimmunity had ≥2 new autoimmune events (5.2% vs 8.2%, respectively). Most patients with thyroid disorders at baseline did not experience new autoimmunity after alemtuzumab. Treatment-emergent thyroid autoimmunity after alemtuzumab Course 1 was not associated with subsequent nonthyroid autoimmunity after Course 2 (0% of patients with vs 3.0% of patients without thyroid autoimmunity after Course 1). Similarly, thyroid autoimmunity after Course 2 did not predict nonthyroid autoimmunity after Course 3 (1.8% vs 2.0%, respectively). Among 25,292 patients treated with alemtuzumab in the postmarketing setting as of 31 March 2019, additional events (occurring 18–36 months post treatment) included autoimmune hepatitis (10.7 in 10,000) and hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (2.7 in 10,000).

Conclusions

Over 9 years after alemtuzumab initiation, pre-existing non-MS autoimmunity was not associated with subsequent new autoimmune disease. Emergence of thyroid autoimmunity after Courses 1 and 2 does not appear to predict subsequent serious autoimmune disease.

STUDY SUPPORT: Sanofi and Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals.

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Author Of 4 Presentations

Clinical Outcome Measures Poster Presentation

P0024 - Alemtuzumab slowed brain atrophy over 6 years in patients without relapse and MRI disease activity: post hoc analysis of the pooled CARE-MS studies (ID 784)

Abstract

Background

Over 2 years in the CARE-MS trials (NCT00530348; NCT00548405), alemtuzumab (12 mg/day; baseline (BL): 5 days; 12 months later: 3 days) significantly improved clinical and MRI outcomes versus subcutaneous interferon beta-1a (SC IFNB-1a) in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis patients. Alemtuzumab efficacy was maintained through a 4-year extension study (NCT00930553), wherein patients could receive additional 3-day courses (≥12 months apart, as needed for disease activity) or receive other disease-modifying therapy per investigator’s discretion.

Objectives

To evaluate post hoc the effects of alemtuzumab on brain atrophy over 6 years in CARE-MS patients without relapses and MRI disease activity.

Methods

Analysis included pooled CARE-MS patients with or without disease activity between BL and Year 1 or BL and Year 2. Absence of disease activity was defined as no BL gadolinium (Gd)-enhancing T1 lesions and no clinical relapses or MRI disease activity (new Gd-enhancing or new/enlarging T2 lesions) from Years 0-1 or Years 0-2 (Definition 1). A second definition had the additional criterion of no relapse within 60 days before BL (Definition 2). Brain atrophy was measured by brain parenchymal fraction (BPF); differences in the median annualized percent change in BPF were assessed using ranked ANCOVA adjusted for region and BL BPF.

Results

Compared with SC IFNB-1a, alemtuzumab reduced median annualized percent change in BPF in patients free of disease activity during Years 0-1 (Definition 1: -0.37% vs -0.61%, P=0.006; Definition 2: -0.36% vs -0.54%, P=0.024) or Years 0-2 (Definition 1: -0.27% vs -0.44%, P=0.014; Definition 2: -0.28% vs -0.41%, P=0.045). Median annualized percent change in BPF was reduced with alemtuzumab versus SC IFNB-1a in patients with disease activity in Years 0-1 (-0.61% vs -0.79%, P=0.005) or Years 0-2 (-0.40% vs -0.56%, P<0.0001). Over 6 years, brain volume loss (BVL) was slower in patients without disease activity who initiated alemtuzumab at core study BL (-1.66%) than in those who received SC IFNB-1a in the core studies and initiated alemtuzumab in the extension (-2.05%).

Conclusions

Brain atrophy was reduced with alemtuzumab compared with SC IFNB-1a in patients without disease activity over 2 years. A slower rate of BVL was maintained through Year 6 in patients without disease activity who received alemtuzumab in the core study compared with SC IFNB-1a, suggesting alemtuzumab may slow neurodegeneration associated with BVL.

STUDY SUPPORT: Sanofi.

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Clinical Outcome Measures Poster Presentation

P0128 - Outcomes in Alemtuzumab-Treated Patients With Thyroid Adverse Events: 6-Year Pooled CARE-MS Data (ID 736)

Abstract

Background

Over 6 years in the CARE-MS core and extension trials (NCT00530348; NCT00548405; NCT00930553), alemtuzumab improved outcomes in RRMS patients, but many experienced thyroid adverse events (AEs).

Objectives

To characterize thyroid AEs over 6 years in alemtuzumab-treated patients from the CARE-MS core and extension trials.

Methods

Patients received 2 alemtuzumab courses, with as-needed additional alemtuzumab ≥12 months after the most recent course. An expert panel of 3 independent endocrinologists reviewed all reported cases of thyroid-related laboratory abnormalities and AEs to assess diagnosis, start date, and outcome through a consensus approach. Cases for which consensus was not reached, or those that were preexisting or occurred after Y6 were excluded.

Results

Over 6 years, 378/811 (47%) alemtuzumab-treated patients had a thyroid AE or laboratory abnormality (342 [42%] with thyroid AE; 44 serious AEs). After panel review, 292 cases had a consensus diagnosis as a thyroid AE, no consensus diagnosis could be reached in 60 cases, 2 cases were deemed pre-existing, and 24 occurred after Y6. Cases with a consensus diagnosis were adjudicated to Graves’ disease (40%), Hashimoto’s disease (17%), transient thyroiditis (8%), Graves’ disease switching to hypothyroidism (6%), Hashimoto’s disease switching to hyperthyroidism (3%), or uncertain (27%). Oral thyroid medications were given to 245/292 (84%) patients, primarily levothyroxine/levothyroxine sodium (n=187; 64%) or thiamazole (n=126; 43%); 32/292 (11%) patients underwent thyroidectomy and 26/292 (9%) underwent radioiodine therapy. Within 2 years of the last alemtuzumab course, 83% of thyroid AEs appeared (>97% were detected within 4 years). Patients with vs without thyroid AEs received similar numbers of alemtuzumab courses (2 courses: 62% vs 60% of patients; 3 courses: 24% in each group). From baseline to Y6, MS disease outcomes were similar in patients with vs without thyroid AEs (annualized relapse rate: 0.20 vs 0.21; mean EDSS score change: −0.04 vs +0.08; proportion with stable/improved EDSS scores: 81% vs 80%; proportions MRI disease activity-free: 60%-78% per year vs 60%-76% per year; and median cumulative brain volume loss: −1.11% vs −1.27%). Outcomes as of last follow-up were recovered (53%), ongoing (46%), and unknown (0.3%).

Conclusions

Graves’ disease was the most common thyroid AE. Most thyroid AEs were treated with oral medications. No differences in 6-year MS disease outcomes were seen when comparing patients with or without thyroid AEs.

STUDY SUPPORT: Sanofi and Bayer Healthcare Pharmaceuticals.

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Clinical Trials Poster Presentation

P0203 - Effect of teriflunomide on MRI lesion activity across age groups in patients with relapsing multiple sclerosis from the TEMSO study (ID 870)

Speakers
Presentation Number
P0203
Presentation Topic
Clinical Trials

Abstract

Background

Teriflunomide is a once-daily oral immunomodulator approved for treating relapsing multiple sclerosis (RMS) and relapsing-remitting MS, depending on the local label. Efficacy and safety of teriflunomide were established in the phase 2 (NCT01487096) and phase 3 trials of patients with RMS (TEMSO [NCT00134563], TOWER [NCT00751881], TENERE [NCT00883337]) and clinically isolated syndrome (TOPIC [NCT00622700]). In post hoc analysis of TEMSO patients stratified by age, structural image evaluation using normalization of atrophy (SIENA) revealed teriflunomide 14 mg significantly reduced the percentage of brain volume change in patients aged >25 to ≤35 years (48%; P=0.0217) and >45 to ≤55 years (35%; P=0.0092) versus placebo over 2 years.

Objectives

To analyze the effect of teriflunomide treatment on MRI lesion activity in TEMSO study patients with RMS stratified by age.

Methods

In TEMSO, patients were randomized 1:1:1 to receive either placebo or teriflunomide 7 mg or 14 mg for ≤108 weeks (Year 2). Through Year 2, MRI lesion activity (unique combined active lesions [UCAL], contrast-enhancing T1 weighted lesions [CEL], and T2 weighted [T2w] lesions) and safety were assessed in the SIENA analysis subgroup; patients were stratified by age at baseline: ≥18 to ≤25 years (n=97 [10%]); >25 to ≤35 years (n=283 [29%]); >35 to ≤45 years (n=388 [40%]); and >45 to ≤55 years (n=201 [21%]). P values between treatment groups were determined for MRI lesions using a Poisson model.

Results

Of 1086 patients in the TEMSO core study, 969 (89%) had scans appropriate for SIENA analysis. Compared with placebo, teriflunomide 14 mg significantly reduced the number of UCAL (0.31–1.44 vs 0.92–6.11 lesions; P≤0.0013) and CEL (0.10–0.46 vs 0.54–3.42 lesions; P≤0.0001) per scan across all age groups. In all age groups except the >45 to ≤55 years group, teriflunomide 14 mg significantly reduced the number of T2w lesions (0.50–0.93 vs 1.07–2.80 lesions; P≤0.001) per scan versus placebo. Similar effects on MRI lesion activity were seen with teriflunomide 7 mg versus placebo. Incidence of adverse events (AEs) generally increased with age, with no deaths reported through Year 2.

Conclusions

Over 2 years in TEMSO RMS patients, teriflunomide reduced the number of new MRI lesions versus placebo across age groups. Significant treatment effects were seen with teriflunomide 14 mg across all age groups for UCAL and CEL. Age-related increases in AEs were observed through Year 2.

STUDY SUPPORT: Sanofi.

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Patient-Reported Outcomes and Quality of Life Poster Presentation

P1065 - Treatment Satisfaction Across Age Groups in Patients Who Switched to Teriflunomide: Analysis of the Real-world Teri-PRO Study (ID 814)

Speakers
Presentation Number
P1065
Presentation Topic
Patient-Reported Outcomes and Quality of Life

Abstract

Background

Teriflunomide is a once-daily oral immunomodulator approved for treating relapsing forms of MS (RMS) and relapsing-remitting MS, depending on the local label. In the phase 4, real-world Teri-PRO study (NCT01895335), patient-reported outcomes in RMS patients showed significantly improved satisfaction with teriflunomide versus prior disease-modifying therapy (DMT) at Week 48; safety was consistent with prior teriflunomide trials.

Objectives

To assess changes in treatment satisfaction stratified by age in Teri-PRO patients who switched to teriflunomide 14 mg from prior DMTs.

Methods

Patients switching to teriflunomide 14 mg were stratified by age at baseline (≤35 years [n=85]; >35 to ≤45 years [n=167]; >45 to ≤55 years [n=175]; >55 years [n=129]). Assessment: Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire for Medication (TSQM version 1.4 [4 domains: Global Satisfaction, Effectiveness, Side Effects, and Convenience; scores: 0-100, higher scores indicate improved satisfaction]) at baseline versus Week 48.

Results

Compared with baseline, mean scores in each TSQM domain were significantly increased at Week 48 in patients aged >35 to ≤45 years (least-squares mean change [LS]: Global Satisfaction, 15.0, P<0.0001; Effectiveness, 6.3, P=0.0157; Side Effects, 20.6, P<0.0001; Convenience, 31.6, P<0.0001), >45 to ≤55 years (LS: Global Satisfaction, 15.4, P<0.0001; Effectiveness, 8.3, P<0.0001; Side Effects, 20.4, P<0.0001; Convenience, 31.0, P<0.0001), and >55 years (LS: Global Satisfaction, 11.3, P=0.0001; Effectiveness, 9.3, P=0.0001; Side Effects, 11.7, P<0.0001; Convenience, 29.8, P<0.0001). In patients aged ≤35 years, significantly improved mean TSQM scores at Week 48 versus baseline were observed in the Side Effects (LS: 26.2, P<0.0001) and Convenience (LS: 28.7, P<0.0001) domains. Across age groups, similar improvements in treatment satisfaction were also seen at Week 4 versus baseline, except for the Effectiveness domain in patients aged ≤35 years.

Conclusions

Over 48 weeks across age groups, patients aged >35 years who switched to teriflunomide 14 mg had significant improvements in all 4 TSQM domains versus baseline, and patients aged ≤35 years experienced significant improvements in the Side Effects and Convenience domains. These findings indicate teriflunomide improves treatment satisfaction regardless of age in RMS patients switching from other DMTs, with improvements occurring as early as Week 4 and persisting at Week 48 of treatment.

STUDY SUPPORT: Sanofi.

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