학술논문

Long‐Term Safety and Efficacy of Subcutaneous Tanezumab Versus Nonsteroidal Antiinflammatory Drugs for Hip or Knee Osteoarthritis: A Randomized Trial.
Document Type
Article
Source
Arthritis & Rheumatology. Jul2021, Vol. 73 Issue 7, p1167-1177. 11p.
Subject
*KNEE diseases
*NAPROXEN
*CYCLOOXYGENASE 2
*CONFIDENCE intervals
*NONSTEROIDAL anti-inflammatory agents
*FUNCTIONAL status
*DICLOFENAC
*MONOCLONAL antibodies
*RANDOMIZED controlled trials
*TREATMENT effectiveness
*OSTEOARTHRITIS
*BLIND experiment
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*DECISION making in clinical medicine
*PATIENT safety
*PAIN management
*PHARMACODYNAMICS
Language
ISSN
2326-5191
Abstract
Objective: To assess the long‐term safety and 16‐week efficacy of subcutaneous tanezumab in patients with hip or knee osteoarthritis (OA). Methods: This was a phase III randomized, double‐blind, active treatment–controlled (using nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs [NSAIDs] as the active treatment control) safety trial of tanezumab (56‐week treatment/24‐week posttreatment follow‐up) in adults who were receiving stable‐dose NSAID therapy at the time of screening and who had Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) pain and physical function scores of ≥5; patient global assessment (PtGA) of OA of fair, poor, or very poor; history of inadequate pain relief with standard analgesics; and no history or radiographic evidence of prespecified bone/joint conditions beyond OA. Patients received oral naproxen, celecoxib, or diclofenac twice daily (NSAID group; n = 996) or tanezumab 2.5 mg (n = 1,002) or 5 mg (n = 998) subcutaneously every 8 weeks. Coprimary efficacy end points at week 16 were changes in WOMAC pain and physical function scores and changes in PtGA. The primary joint safety end point over 80 weeks comprised adjudicated rapidly progressive OA type 1 or 2, primary osteonecrosis, subchondral insufficiency fracture, or pathologic fracture. Mean values, least squares mean values, and least squares mean differences between groups (with 95% confidence intervals [95% CIs]) were calculated. Results: Of 3,021 randomized patients, 2,996 received ≥1 treatment dose. Adverse events (AEs) were similar between patients treated with tanezumab 2.5 mg and those treated with NSAIDs, and were more prevalent in those treated with tanezumab 5 mg. Composite joint safety events were significantly more prevalent with tanezumab 2.5 mg and tanezumab 5 mg than with NSAIDs (observation time–adjusted rate/1,000 patient‐years 38.3 [95% CI 28.0, 52.5] and 71.5 [95% CI 56.7, 90.2], respectively, versus 14.8 [95% CI 8.9, 24.6]; P = 0.001 for tanezumab 2.5 mg versus NSAIDs; P < 0.001 for tanezumab 5 mg versus NSAIDs). Tanezumab 5 mg significantly improved pain and physical function but did not improve PtGA at week 16 when compared to NSAIDs; corresponding differences between the tanezumab 2.5 mg and NSAID groups were not statistically significant. Conclusion: In patients previously receiving a stable dose of NSAIDs, tanezumab administered subcutaneously resulted in more joint safety events than continued NSAIDs, with differences being dose dependent. Pain and physical function improved with both doses of tanezumab compared to NSAIDs, reaching statistical significance with tanezumab 5 mg at 16 weeks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]