Guest guest Posted June 14, 2005 Report Share Posted June 14, 2005 Two Phase 3 Trials Show Abatacept's Potential in Treating Rheumatoid Arthritis a Moyer, MA June 13, 2005 (Vienna) — People with rheumatoid arthritis who have not responded to conventional disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) have a slower progression in structural damage to the joints when they are treated with the investigational biologic therapy abatacept, according to investigators whose findings were presented here at the Annual European Congress of Rheumatology. " The findings showed that patients treated with abatacept had less structural change than those who were receiving placebo, among patients who did not get an adequate response to conventional therapy, " said principal investigator Harry K. Genant, MD. " Since 30% to 40% of patients have an inadequate response, a drug in a new class represents a valuable addition to the armamentarium of physicians who treat rheumatoid arthritis. " Dr. Genant is a professor emeritus of radiology, medicine, epidemiology, and orthopedic surgery at the University of California in San Francisco. Dr. Genant referred to abatacept's mechanism as a costimulatory inhibition of T-cells, which means that it intercepts the CD80/86:CD28 pathway, which activates T-cells through a dual signaling pathway. Most of the biologic therapies used to treat rheumatoid arthritis are tumor necrosis factor inhibitors. In the first study, Abatacept in Inadequate responders to Methotrexate (AIM), investigators had recruited 652 patients to participate in a trial involving either abatacept or placebo as well as one additional DMARD. The key findings of AIM were presented at the American College of Rheumatology in October 2004. In the current research, investigators evaluated the radiographic findings of the participants. The investigators in AIM had taken x-rays of patients' hands and feet at the onset of the study and one year later. Among patients who discontinued the study early, x-rays were taken at the time that they left the study. The 433 patients in the abatacept group received 10 mg/kg of the study drug on days 1, 15, and 29, and then every 28 days. Patients in both groups could take one additional DMARD. The investigative team obtained x-rays from 391 (92%) of the 433 patients receiving the study drug and 195 (91%) of the 219 patients in the placebo group. Patients in the abatacept group had a mean increase in joint erosion of 0.63 on the Genant-modified Sharp scoring method compared with 1.14 in the placebo group (P = .008). The average increase in joint-space narrowing was 0.58 for those taking the study drug and 1.18 for those receiving placebo (P < .001). The average total score increase was 1.21 for the abatacept group and 2.32 for the placebo group (P < .001). The median change in scores compared with baseline were also significantly less for the abatacept patients regarding joint erosion, joint-space narrowing, and total scores (P = ..029, P = .009, and P = .012). In the other study, the Abatacept Study of Safety in Use with other RA thErapies (ASSURE), investigators studied patients' ability to tolerate treatment with abatacept when they were using either biologic or nonbiologic DMARDs as well. The study involved 1,441 patients, who were treated with either abatacept or placebo along with their DMARD medication. The patients were randomized into the following groups: 856 took abatacept and nonbiologic DMARD, 103 took abatacept and a biologic DMARD, 418 took placebo and a nonbiologic DMARD, and 64 took placebo and a biologic DMARD. Among these patients, 123 abatacept-treated patients and 87 patients in the placebo group did not complete the study. Within these groups, 5.3% of abatacept patients and 3.9% of placebo patients discontinued the study due to adverse events. Discontinuations due to lack of efficacy occurred among 2.7% of abatacept patients and 9.1% of placebo patients. The investigators documented the largest number of adverse events in the group receiving abatacept and a biologic therapy, which had a rate of 95.1% compared with 86.1% to 89.7% in the other groups. Treatment-related adverse events occurred in 55.7% of abatacept-treated patients and 49.6% of placebo patients. Treatment-related serious adverse events occurred in 2.4% of abatacept patients and in 2.7% of those taking placebo. The most common adverse events were headache, nasaopharyngitis, and nausea. No patients developed lymphoma, which has been the adverse event in patients treated with biologic DMARDs. Nine patients died in the study, and those deaths occurred in five of those in the abatacept group and four of those taking placebo. Four of the deaths in the abatacept group and two of those in the placebo group were probably cardiac related as determined by autopsy. No cause could be found for the remaining death in the abatacept group; among the remaining two deaths in the placebo group, one followed aortic dissection and stroke and the other was a consequence of Pneumocystic carinii pneumonia. The findings showed similar rates of adverse events in the treatment and placebo groups, although the combination of abatacept and a biologic therapy was not tolerated as well as the combination that involved nonbiologic DMARDs, according to principal investigator Weinblatt, MD. Dr. Weinblatt is the associate director of the Center for Arthritis and Joint Diseases at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts. The studies were funded by Bristol Myers Squibb, the maker of abatacept. EULAR: Abstract OP00. Presented June 9, 2005. Reviewed by D. 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