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Long-term prevention of hereditary angioedema attacks with lanadelumab in adolescents

Timothy Craig, Raffi Tachdjian, Jonathan A. Bernstein, John Anderson, Christina Nurse, Maureen Watt, Ming Yu, Salomé Juethner

2024Annals of Allergy Asthma & Immunology11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Lanadelumab was well tolerated and effective in preventing hereditary angioedema (HAE) attacks in the phase 3, double-blind, placebo-controlled Hereditary angioEdema Long-term Prophylaxis (HELP) study and subsequent HELP open-label extension (OLE) study (NCT02741596). OBJECTIVE: To evaluate outcomes from HELP OLE for adolescent patients aged 12 to 17 years. METHODS: The HELP OLE study comprised patients who completed the HELP study (rollovers) and new eligible (lanadelumab-naive) patients. Rollovers received a single dose of lanadelumab 300 mg at the last HELP study visit (day 0). Treatment was then paused until patients experienced their first investigator-confirmed HAE attack, after which lanadelumab 300 mg was administered every 2 weeks for up to 33 months (4 wk/mo). Lanadelumab-naive patients received lanadelumab 300 mg every 2 weeks from day 0. Patient-reported outcomes included Angioedema Quality of Life Questionnaire. Safety was monitored throughout the study. RESULTS: The subgroup analysis included 21 patients (8 rollovers and 13 lanadelumab-naive patients); 95.2% completed at least 30 months in the study. The mean (SD) monthly attack rate decreased from 1.58 (1.0) at baseline to 0.11 (0.2) during treatment (mean, 94.7% reduction). A total of 8 (38.1%) patients were attack-free during treatment and, on average, 99.1% of days were attack-free (mean, 27.7 d/mo). Patients reported a mean (SD) Angioedema Quality of Life Questionnaire total score of 27.5 (17.5) at baseline vs 7.5 (13.2) at the end of the study. There were 12 (57.1%) patients who reported treatment-related treatment-emergent adverse events; however, there were no treatment-related serious adverse events. CONCLUSION: Lanadelumab provided long-term efficacy in preventing HAE attacks, was associated with clinically meaningful improvements in health-related quality of life and high levels of treatment satisfaction, and was well tolerated in adolescent patients. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02741596.

Topics & Concepts

Hereditary angioedemaMedicineAngioedemaDermatologyTerm (time)PlaceboPediatricsIntensive care medicineAlternative medicinePathologyQuantum mechanicsPhysicsCoagulation, Bradykinin, Polyphosphates, and AngioedemaHemophilia Treatment and ResearchUrticaria and Related Conditions
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