Safety and efficacy of zilucoplan in patients with generalised myasthenia gravis (RAISE): a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3 study

  • James F Howard
  • , Saskia Bresch
  • , Angela Genge
  • , Channa Hewamadduma
  • , John Hinton
  • , Yessar Hussain
  • , Raul Juntas-Morales
  • , Henry J Kaminski
  • , Angelina Maniaol
  • , Renato Mantegazza
  • , Masayuki Masuda
  • , Kumaraswamy Sivakumar
  • , Marek Śmiłowski
  • , Kimiaki Utsugisawa
  • , Tuan Vu
  • , Michael D Weiss
  • , Małgorzata Zajda
  • , Babak Boroojerdi
  • , Melissa Brock
  • , Guillemette De La Borderie
  • Petra W Duda, Romana Lowcock, Mark Vanderkelen, M Isabel Leite, Dylan Sembinelli, Jeanne Teitelbaum, Michael Nicolle, Emilien Bernard, Juliette Svahn, Marco Spinazzi, Tanya Stojkovic, Sophie Demeret, Nicolas Weiss, Loïc Le Guennec, Sihame Messai, Christine Tranchant, Aleksandra Nadaj-Pakleza, Jean-Baptiste Chanson, Muhtadi Suliman, Leila Zaidi, Celine Tard, Peggy Lecointe, Jana Zschüntzsch, Jens Schmidt, Stefanie Glaubitz, Rachel Zeng, Matthias Scholl, Markus Kowarik, Ulf Ziemann, Markus Krumbholz, Pascal Martin, Christoph Ruschil, Jutta Dünschede, Roswitha Kemmner, Natalie Rumpel, Benjamin Berger, Andreas Totzeck, Tim Hagenacker, Benjamin Stolte, Raffaele Iorio, Amelia Evoli Stampanoni-B, Silvia Falso, Carlo Antozzi, Rita Frangiamore, Fiammetta Vanoli, Elena Rinaldi, Kazushi Deguchi, Naoya Minami, Yuriko Nagane, Yasushi Suzuki, Sayaka Ishida, Shigeaki Suzuki, Jin Nakahara, Astushi Nagaoka, Shunsuke Yoshimura, Shingo Konno, Youko Tsuya, Akiyuki Uzawa, Tomoya Kubota, Masanori Takahashi, Tatsusada Okuno, Hiroyuki Murai, Nils Erik Gilhus, Marion Boldingh, Tone Hakvåg Rønning, Urszula Chyrchel-Paszkiewicz, Klaudiusz Kumor, Tomasz Zielinski, Krzysztof Banaszkiewicz, Michał Błaż, Agata Kłósek, Mariola Świderek-Matysiak, Andrzej Szczudlik, Aneta Paśko, Lech Szczechowski, Marta Banach, Jan Ilkowski, Solange Kapetanovic Garcia, Patricia Ortiz Bagan, Ana Belén Cánovas Segura, Joana Turon Sans, Nuria Vidal Fernandez, Elena Cortes Vicente, Patricia Rodrigo Armenteros, Mohammad Ashraghi, Ana Cavey, Liam Haslam, Anna Emery, Kore Liow, Sharon Yegiaian, Alexandru Barboi, Rosa Maria Vazquez, Joshua Lennon, Robert M Pascuzzi, Cynthia Bodkin, Sandra Guingrich, Adam Comer, Mark Bromberg, Teresa Janecki, Sami Saba, Marco Tellez, Bakri Elsheikh, Miriam Freimer, Sarah Heintzman, Raghav Govindarajan, Jeffrey Guptill, Janice M Massey, Vern Juel, Natalia Gonzalez, Ali A Habib, Tahseen Mozaffar, Manisha Korb, Namita Goyal, Hannah Machemehl, Georgios Manousakis, Jeffrey Allen, Emily Harper, Constantine Farmakidis, Lilli Saavedra, Mazen Dimachkie, Mamatha Pasnoor, Salma Akhter, Said Beydoun, Courtney Mcilduff, Joan Nye, Bhaskar Roy, Bailey Munro Sheldon, Richard Nowak, Benjamin Barnes, Michael Rivner, Niraja Suresh, Jessica Shaw, Brittany Harvey, Lucy Lam, Nikki Thomas, Manisha Chopra, Rebecca E Traub, Sarah Jones, Mary Wagoner, Sejla Smajic, Radwa Aly, Jonathan Katz, Henry Chen, Robert G Miller, Liberty Jenkins, Shaida Khan, Bhupendra Khatri, Lisa Sershon, Pantelis Pavlakis, Shara Holzberg, Yuebing Li, Irys B Caristo, Robert Marquardt, Debbie Hastings, Jacob Rube, Robert P Lisak, Aparna Choudhury, Katherine Ruzhansky, Amit Sachdev, Susan Shin, Joan Bratton, Mary Fetter, Naya Mckinnon, Jonathan Mckinnon, Laura Sissons-Ross, Amos Sahu, B Jane Distad

Risultato della ricerca: Contributo in rivistaArticolo

Abstract

Background: Generalised myasthenia gravis is a chronic, unpredictable, and debilitating rare disease, often accompanied by high treatment burden and with an unmet need for more efficacious and well tolerated treatments. Zilucoplan is a subcutaneous, self-administered macrocyclic peptide complement C5 inhibitor. We aimed to assess safety, efficacy, and tolerability of zilucoplan in patients with acetylcholine receptor autoantibody (AChR)-positive generalised myasthenia gravis. Methods: RAISE was a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3 trial that was done at 75 sites in Europe, Japan, and North America. We enrolled patients (aged 18–74 years) with AChR-positive generalised myasthenia gravis (Myasthenia Gravis Foundation of America disease class II–IV), a myasthenia gravis activities of daily living (MG-ADL) score of least 6, and a quantitative myasthenia gravis score of at least 12. Participants were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive subcutaneous zilucoplan 0·3 mg/kg once daily by self-injection, or matched placebo, for 12 weeks. The primary efficacy endpoint was change from baseline to week 12 in MG-ADL score in the modified intention-to-treat population (all randomly assigned patients who received at least one dose of study drug and had at least one post-dosing MG-ADL score). Safety was mainly assessed by the incidence of treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) in all patients who had received at least one dose of zilucoplan or placebo. This trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04115293. An open-label extension study is ongoing (NCT04225871). Findings: Between Sept 17, 2019, and Sept 10, 2021, 239 patients were screened for the study, of whom 174 (73%) were eligible. 86 (49%) patients were randomly assigned to zilucoplan 0·3 mg/kg and 88 (51%) were assigned to placebo. Patients assigned to zilucoplan showed a greater reduction in MG-ADL score from baseline to week 12, compared with those assigned to placebo (least squares mean change −4·39 [95% CI –5·28 to –3·50] vs −2·30 [–3·17 to –1·43]; least squares mean difference −2·09 [−3·24 to −0·95]; p=0·0004). TEAEs occurred in 66 (77%) patients in the zilucoplan group and in 62 (70%) patients in the placebo group. The most common TEAE was injection-site bruising (n=14 [16%] in the zilucoplan group and n=8 [9%] in the placebo group). Incidences of serious TEAEs and serious infections were similar in both groups. One patient died in each group; neither death (COVID-19 [zilucoplan] and cerebral haemorrhage [placebo]) was considered related to the study drug. Interpretation: Zilucoplan treatment showed rapid and clinically meaningful improvements in myasthenia gravis-specific efficacy outcomes, had a favourable safety profile, and was well tolerated, with no major safety findings. Zilucoplan is a new potential treatment option for a broad population of patients with AChR-positive generalised myasthenia gravis. The long-term safety and efficacy of zilucoplan is being assessed in an ongoing open-label extension study. Funding: UCB Pharma.
Lingua originaleInglese
pagine (da-a)395-406
Numero di pagine12
RivistaLANCET NEUROLOGY
Volume22
DOI
Stato di pubblicazionePubblicato - 2023

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