Litcius/Paper detail

Sustained safety and efficacy of ligelizumab in patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria: A one‐year extension study

Marcus Maurer, Ana M. Giménez‐Arnau, Jonathan A. Bernstein, Chia‐Yu Chu, I V Danilycheva, Michihiro Hide, Μichael Μakris, Martin Metz, Sinisa Savic, Karl Sitz, Weily Soong, Petra Staubach, Gordon Sussman, Avantika Barve, Alis Burciu, Eva Hua, Reinhold Janocha, Thomas Severin

2021Allergy39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Ligelizumab, a next-generation, humanized anti-immunoglobulin E (IgE) monoclonal antibody is in development as a treatment for patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria, whose symptoms are inadequately controlled with standard-of-care therapy. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the long-term safety and re-treatment efficacy of ligelizumab 240 mg in patients who completed the core study and extension study. METHODS: This open-label, single-arm, long-term Phase 2b extension study was designed to assess patients who were previously administered various doses of ligelizumab, omalizumab or placebo in the Phase 2b, dose-finding core study and who presented with active disease after Week 32. In the extension study, patients received ligelizumab 240 mg subcutaneously every 4 weeks, for 52 weeks and were monitored post-treatment for 48 weeks. RESULTS: Overall, ligelizumab was well-tolerated with no newly identified safety signals. A total of 95.4% (226/237) screened patients received ligelizumab 240 mg in the extension study; 84.1% (190/226) of patients experienced at least one treatment-emergent adverse event. Most reported events were mild (41.6%) or moderate (35.8%) and mostly unrelated to the study treatment. At Week 12, 46.5% of patients had a complete response increasing to 53.1% after 52 weeks. Following 52 weeks of extension study treatment, 75.8% (95% confidence interval, 69.9, 81.3) of patients had cumulative complete responses. The median time to relapse in complete responders was 38 weeks. CONCLUSION: The long-term safety profile of ligelizumab 240 mg in patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria was consistent with the core study and re-treatment efficacy was shown. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02477332 and NCT02649218.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineOmalizumabAdverse effectInternal medicineConfidence intervalPlaceboClinical trialSurgeryGastroenterologyImmunoglobulin EAntibodyImmunologyAlternative medicinePathologyUrticaria and Related ConditionsCoagulation, Bradykinin, Polyphosphates, and AngioedemaDrug-Induced Adverse Reactions