Genentech, Inc

Author Of 1 Presentation

Disease Modifying Therapies – Risk Management Poster Presentation

P0389 - Safety of ocrelizumab in multiple sclerosis: updated analysis in patients with relapsing and primary progressive multiple sclerosis (ID 952)

Speakers
Presentation Number
P0389
Presentation Topic
Disease Modifying Therapies – Risk Management

Abstract

Background

Ongoing safety reporting is crucial to understanding the long-term benefit–risk profile of ocrelizumab in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). Safety/efficacy of ocrelizumab have been characterized in Phase II (NCT00676715) and Phase III (NCT01247324; NCT01412333; NCT01194570) trials in patients with relapsing-remitting MS, relapsing MS (RMS) and primary progressive MS (PPMS).

Objectives

To report longer-term safety evaluations from ocrelizumab clinical trials and open-label extension (OLE) periods up to January 2020 and selected post-marketing data.

Methods

Safety outcomes are reported for the ocrelizumab all-exposure population in Phase II/III trials and associated OLEs plus ongoing Phase IIIb trials in MS (VELOCE, CHORDS, CASTING, OBOE, ENSEMBLE, LIBERTO and CONSONANCE). The number of post-marketing ocrelizumab-treated patients is based on estimated number of vials sold and US claims data. To account for different exposure lengths, rates per 100 patient years (PY) are presented.

Results

In clinical trials, 5,680 patients with MS received ocrelizumab (18,218 PY of exposure) as of January 2020. Reported rates per 100 PY (95% confidence interval) were: adverse events (AEs), 248 (246–251); infections, 76.2 (74.9–77.4); serious AEs, 7.34 (6.96–7.75); serious infections, 2.01 (1.81–2.23); malignancies, 0.46 (0.37–0.57); and AEs leading to discontinuation, 1.06 (0.92–1.22). As of April 2020, over 158,000 patients with MS have initiated ocrelizumab globally in the post-marketing setting. Data remain generally consistent with those observed in clinical trials.

Conclusions

Reported rates of AEs in the ocrelizumab all-exposure clinical trial population and post-marketing settings remain generally consistent with the controlled treatment period in RMS/PPMS populations. Rates of serious infections and malignancies remain within the range reported for patients with MS in real-world registries. In patients with RMS and PPMS, ocrelizumab demonstrates a consistent and favorable safety profile, and these longer-term data are in accordance with the safety outcomes initially observed during the controlled treatment periods. Regular reporting of longer-term safety data will continue.

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