Litcius/Paper detail

Apremilast in a Japanese subgroup with Behçet’s syndrome: Results from a Phase 3, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled study

Mitsuhiro Takeno, Hiroaki Dobashi, Yoshiya Tanaka, Hajime Kono, Shouji Sugii, Mitsumasa Kishimoto, Sue Cheng, Shannon McCue, Maria Paris, Mindy Chen, Yoshiaki Ishigatsubo

2021Modern Rheumatology15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Apremilast efficacy and safety was assessed in a prespecified subgroup of Japanese patients with oral ulcers associated with Behçet's syndrome from a Phase 3 randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind study of apremilast (RELIEF). METHODS: The primary end point was area under the curve for number of oral ulcers during the 12-week placebo-controlled phase (AUCWk0-12). Key secondary end points were change from baseline in oral ulcer pain, complete oral ulcer resolution, and measures of disease activity and quality of life (QoL). RESULTS: Thirty-nine Japanese patients were randomised (apremilast 30 mg BID: n = 19; placebo: n = 20). Improvements at Week 12 were observed for apremilast vs. placebo in AUCWk0-12 for the number of oral ulcers (115.9 vs. 253.3; nominal P = 0.0168); 57.9% vs. 25.0% achieved complete oral ulcer resolution, 47.4% vs. 0.0% achieved oral ulcer resolution by Week 6 and maintained oral ulcer-free status for ≥6 additional weeks; mean change from baseline in BSAS was -10.5 vs. 0.5. Favourable effects were observed for apremilast vs. placebo in other secondary end points, including QoL. Clinical benefits were sustained over 28 weeks of continued apremilast treatment. Adverse events were consistent with apremilast's known safety profile. CONCLUSIONS: Apremilast reduced the number of oral ulcers and overall disease activity in this Japanese subgroup with Behçet's syndrome.

Topics & Concepts

ApremilastMedicineInternal medicineSubgroup analysisRheumatologyPhase (matter)DiseasePharmacologyPhases of clinical researchGastroenterologyPsoriatic arthritisThalidomideOncologyImmunologyOcular Diseases and Behçet’s SyndromeAutoimmune and Inflammatory DisordersVascular Anomalies and Treatments