Ustekinumab Safety in Psoriasis, Psoriatic Arthritis, and Crohn’s Disease: an integrated analysis of Phase II/III Clinical Development Programs

Subrata Ghosh, Lianne S. Gensler, Zijiang Yang, Chris Gasink, Soumya D. Chakravarty, Kamyar Farahi, Paraneedharan Ramachandran, Elyssa Ott, Bruce E. Strober

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34 Citations (Scopus)
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Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Theoretical risks of biologic agents remain under study.

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to integrate 1-year safety data from 12 ustekinumab registrational trials.

METHODS: Patients had moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis, active psoriatic arthritis (PsA) (± methotrexate), or moderate-to-severe Crohn's disease (CD; failed/intolerant of immunomodulators/corticosteroids). Psoriatic patients received subcutaneous ustekinumab 45/90 mg or placebo, generally at week 0, week 4, then every 12 weeks thereafter, while those with CD received a single intravenous ustekinumab dose (130 mg or weight range-based dosing of approximately 6 mg/kg) or placebo induction dose at week 0, followed by subcutaneous ustekinumab 90 mg at week 8 and every 8/12 weeks thereafter. The incidence rates of a priori-defined safety events were integrated post hoc (adjusted for duration of follow-up, reported per 100 patient-years [PYs]).

RESULTS: Among 6280 enrolled patients, 5884 ustekinumab-treated patients (psoriasis: 3117; PsA: 1018; CD: 1749) contributed 4521 PYs versus 674 PYs in placebo-treated patients through year 1 (829 PYs and 385 PYs during 8- to 16-week controlled periods). Combined across diseases among ustekinumab- versus placebo-treated patients, respective incidences/100 PYs (95% confidence intervals) of infections were 125.4 (122.2-128.7) versus 129.4 (120.9-138.3) through year 1, and not meaningfully increased in patients who did versus those who did not receive methotrexate (92.5 [84.2-101.5] vs. 115.3 [109.9-121.0]), or significantly increased in patients who did versus those who did not receive corticosteroids (116.3 [107.3-125.9] vs. 107.3 [102.0-112.8]) at baseline. Major adverse cardiovascular events (0.5 [0.3-0.7] vs. 0.3 [0.0-1.1]), malignancies (0.4 [0.2-0.6] vs. 0.2 [0.0-0.8]), and deaths (0.1 [0.0-0.3] vs. 0.0 [0.0-0.4]) were rare across indications.

CONCLUSIONS: Ustekinumab demonstrated a favorable and consistent safety profile across registrational trials in approved indications.

TRIAL REGISTRATIONS: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00320216, NCT00267969, NCT00307437, NCT00454584, NCT00267956, NCT01009086, NCT01077362, NCT00265122, NCT00771667, NCT01369329, NCT01369342, and NCT01369355.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)751-768
Number of pages18
JournalDrug Safety
Volume42
Issue number6
Early online date9 Feb 2019
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2019

Bibliographical note

Ghosh, S., Gensler, L.S., Yang, Z. et al. Drug Saf (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s40264-019-00797-3

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