학술논문

Integrated safety studies of the urate reabsorption inhibitor lesinurad in treatment of gout
Document Type
article
Source
Rheumatology. 58(1)
Subject
Kidney Disease
Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions
6.1 Pharmaceuticals
Good Health and Well Being
Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Aged
80 and over
Cardiovascular Diseases
Clinical Trials
Phase III as Topic
Drug Therapy
Combination
Enzyme Inhibitors
Female
Gout
Gout Suppressants
Humans
Kidney Diseases
Male
Middle Aged
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
Thioglycolates
Treatment Outcome
Triazoles
Uric Acid
Xanthine Oxidase
Young Adult
gout
lesinurad
serum creatinine
treatment-emergent adverse events
xanthine oxidase inhibitor
combination therapy
renal adverse events
cardiovascular adverse events
Clinical Sciences
Immunology
Public Health and Health Services
Arthritis & Rheumatology
Language
Abstract
ObjectiveLesinurad (LESU) is a selective urate reabsorption inhibitor approved at 200 mg daily for use with a xanthine oxidase inhibitor (XOI) to treat hyperuricaemia in gout patients failing to achieve target serum urate on XOI. The aim of the study was to investigate the long-term safety of LESU + XOI therapy.MethodsSafety data were pooled from three 12-month phase III (core) trials evaluating LESU 200 and 400 mg/day combined with an XOI (LESU200+XOI and LESU400+XOI), and two 12-month extension studies using descriptive statistics. To adjust for treatment duration, treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) were expressed as exposure-adjusted incidence rates (patients with events per 100 person-years).ResultsIn the core studies, exposure-adjusted incidence rates for total and total renal-related TEAEs were comparable for XOI alone and LESU200+XOI but higher with LESU400+XOI. Exposure-adjusted incidence rates for serum creatinine (sCr) elevations ⩾1.5×baseline were 2.9, 7.3 and 18.7, respectively. Resolution (sCr ⩽1.2×baseline) occurred in 75-90% of all events, with 66-75% occurring without any study medication interruption. Major adverse cardiovascular events were 3, 4 and 9 with XOI, LESU200+XOI and LESU400+XOI, respectively. Longer exposure in core+extension studies did not increase rates for any safety signals.ConclusionAt the approved dose of 200 mg once-daily combined with an XOI, LESU did not increase renal, cardiovascular or other adverse events compared with XOI alone, except for sCr elevations. With extended exposure in the core+extension studies, the safety profile was consistent with that observed in the core studies, and no new safety concerns were identified.