Update on Biologics for Psoriasis in Clinical Practice

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Biologics have transformed the management of moderate to severe psoriasis. There currently are 11 biologics approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (Table) for psoriasis treatment that have been affirmed by various clinical studies. This article provides dosing initiation, maintenance information, and updated clinical data using phase 3 studies (N=8) published between May 2020 and February 2021. Generic names of the 11 biologics were searched separately in the PubMed database within the specified date range. Subsequent results were reviewed by title and selected for phase 3 and 4 trials. Clinical data in this review focus on reducing patient disease burden by allocating a biologic best fit for each patient’s individual health profile.

IL-17A Inhibitors Update

Secukinumab is safe and efficacious for skin clearance in the presence of comorbidities and can be used for improving plaque psoriasis and palmoplantar pustular psoriasis. An extension of a phase 3 randomized controlled trial (RCT)—2PRECISE—evaluated the efficacy and safety of secukinumab dosing at 300 mg (n=79) and 150 mg (n=80) in adults with moderate to severe palmoplantar pustular psoriasis (palmoplantar psoriasis area and severity index [PPPASI] score ≥12 and dermatology life quality index [DLQI] ≥10) over 148 weeks.1 Extension patients were included from the 52-week 2PRECISE study per the investigator’s judgement of a meaningful clinical response (exact criteria not described). All treatment groups demonstrated a mean (SD) PPPASI of 22.7 (9.5) by the extension trial’s start. Results affirmed that clinical response waned after week 148 in all groups excluding placebo/secukinumab 150 mg, which maintained a mean (SD) PPPASI of 22.7 (9.5). The most frequent adverse events were nasopharyngitis, pustular psoriasis, headache, and pruritus.1

Comorbidities do not have a major impact on secukinumab’s efficacy. A post hoc analysis of 4 phase 3 RCTs—ERASURE, FIXTURE, FEATURE, and JUNCTURE—gathered data from adult patients (N=2401) to assess baseline comorbidities with efficacy and safety of secukinumab vs etanercept after 12 weeks of treatment.2 Sixty-one percent (n=1469) had at least 1 comorbidity, most frequently obesity, hypertension, psoriatic arthritis, hyperlipidemia, or diabetes mellitus. All patient groups had a greater likelihood of a psoriasis area and severity index (PASI) response with any dose of secukinumab vs patients with comorbidities who were taking etanercept or placebo (P<.05) at week 12. All groups had a greater likelihood of achieving investigator global assessment scores of 0/1 (clear/almost clear) vs patients with comorbidities taking etanercept or placebo (P<.05). Baseline comorbidities did not significantly affect treatment response, except obesity, which was associated with decreased probability of achieving all PASI and investigator global assessment (P<.01) responses. Secukinumab-treated patients with and without comorbidities had equivalent likelihood of treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs).2

Brodalumab is an effective biologic that has shown long-term safety with continuous administration. Continuous brodalumab and brodalumab after placebo demonstrated impactful skin clearance after 120 weeks in AMAGINE-1, a phase 3 RCT involving adults (N=442) with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis.3 Patients randomized to brodalumab 210 mg (n=222) or placebo (n=220) were rerandomized according to initial treatment response. In patients switching from brodalumab to placebo at week 12, 55% and 94% achieved PASI 75 at week 20 and week 120, respectively, and 75% reached PASI 100 at week 120. Of patients with static physician global assessment (sPGA) scores of 0/1 (clear/almost clear) at week 12 who were rerandomized to brodalumab, 96% and 80% (using observed data) achieved PASI 75 and PASI 100, respectively. Mean (SD) time to return of skin disease following withdrawal of brodalumab was 74.7 (50.5) days. Treatment-emergent adverse events included headaches, arthralgia, diarrhea, and nausea. Suicidal ideation was rare (this study had 1 completed suicide), and authors cited that no causal association has been made between brodalumab and suicidality. Brodalumab also demonstrated favorable treatment response in patients who underwent a lapse in treatment, offering real-world value, as intermittent treatment administration can occur because of personal or financial reasons.3

Ixekizumab is associated with more rapid skin clearance, better resolution of nail psoriasis, and superior improvement in quality-of-life measures when compared with guselkumab. The phase 3 study IXORA-R compared skin and nail clearance as well as patient-reported outcomes over 24 weeks with ixekizumab 80 mg (n=520) vs guselkumab 100 mg (n=507) in adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis.4 Ixekizumab (50%) was shown to be no worse than guselkumab (52%; difference, 2.3%) using a noninferiority test (noninferiority margin of 11.4%). The treatments exhibited similar efficacy, with no significant difference in proportion of patients reaching PASI 100 (P=.41). Ixekizumab patients tended to have skin clearance sooner than guselkumab patients, reaching PASI 50/75/90 and PASI 100 in a median time that was 2 weeks and 7.5 weeks earlier, respectively. More ixekizumab patients (52%) achieved clear nails vs guselkumab patients (31%; P=.007). Ixekizumab patients reported greater satisfaction with their skin disease affecting quality of life (DLQI), with more DLQI 0/1 (no effect at all on patient’s life) scores and being itch free (P<.05). Ixekizumab was associated with significantly more days of complete skin clearance (PASI 100) vs guselkumab (55.6 days vs 42.2 days; P<.001). Although an upper respiratory tract infection was the most common TEAE, the proportion of TEAEs was similar between treatments.4

IL-23 Inhibitors Update

Tildrakizumab has similar long-term skin clearance efficacy and safety in patients with psoriasis with and without comorbid metabolic syndrome (MetS). A post hoc analysis of 2 phase 2 RCTs (reSURFACE 1/2) involving adults (N=338 and N=307) with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis assessed long-term efficacy (3 years), drug survival, and safety for 5 years of continuous tildrakizumab 100 mg and 200 mg in adults with comorbid MetS.5 Although no difference in efficacy was concluded, greater body mass index of the MetS population was shown to be associated with lower biologic efficacy compared to the general population. The proportion of patients who achieved PASI 75 at week 52 was comparable in patients with MetS and patients without MetS (tildrakizumab 100 mg, 85% and 86% vs 86% and 94% for reSURFACE 1/2, respectively; tildrakizumab 200 mg, 76% and 87% vs 76% and 87% for reSURFACE 1/2, respectively).5

Tildrakizumab also demonstrated efficacy and safety for up to 5 years in 2 other phase 3 RCTs with no dose-related differences in frequency of injections and malignancies. Tildrakizumab 100 mg is the recommended dose. The 200-mg dose can be utilized in patients with a high burden of disease and disability. reSURFACE 1 and reSURFACE 2 involved adults with chronic moderate to severe plaque psoriasis randomized to tildrakizumab 100 mg, 200 mg, or placebo with the option of long-term extension to week 244 if patients reached 50% or greater improvement from baseline PASI score.6 Patients in reSURFACE 2 also were randomized to etanercept 50 mg with partial responders and nonresponders at week 28 switching to tildrakizumab 200 mg until week 244. Extension results showed PASI 75 achievement in 88.7% (95% CI, 84.6%-92.1%) of patients taking tildrakizumab 100 mg (n=235), 92.5% (95% CI, 88.1%-95.7%) of patients taking tildrakizumab 200 mg (n=176), and 81.3% (95% CI, 72.6%-88.2%) of patients taking etanercept/partial nonresponders (n=85). The most common TEAE was nasopharyngitis (10.5/100 patient-years for tildrakizumab 100 mg and 10.7/100 patient-years for tildrakizumab 200 mg). The frequency of severe infections (eg, diverticulitis, pneumonia, cellulitis, appendicitis) was 1.2 per 100 patient-years for tildrakizumab 100 mg and 1.3 per 100 patient-years for tildrakizumab 200 mg.6

Risankizumab and tildrakizumab require the lowest number of injections, thereby providing sustainable skin clearance with a convenient injection dosing schedule for patients. Risankizumab efficacy (8.2% with inferiority margin of 12%) was noninferior to secukinumab when assessing the proportion of PASI 90 responders at week 16 (after 2 doses of risankizumab vs 7 doses of secukinumab).7 IMMerge, an international phase 3 RCT, involved adults (N=327) with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis to compare the safety and efficacy of risankizumab 150 mg (n=164) vs secukinumab 300 mg (n=163) up to 52 weeks. A greater proportion of the risankizumab arm (86.6%) achieved PASI 90 in 52 weeks compared to the secukinumab arm (57.1%). Superior skin clearance (PASI 90) at week 52 was achieved after 5 doses with risankizumab vs 16 doses of secukinumab. Risankizumab TEAEs were nasopharyngitis, upper respiratory tract infection, headache, arthralgia, diarrhea, and bronchitis.7



Continuous risankizumab treatment shows substantially stronger skin clearing performance compared with intermittent treatment following drug withdrawal, demonstrating that treatment gaps minimize therapeutic response. IMMhance, an international phase 3 RCT involving adults (N=507) with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis, evaluated the safety and efficacy with risankizumab 150 mg after 52 weeks and 104 weeks.8 Part A randomized patients to risankizumab 150 mg (n=407) or placebo (n=100). Part B rerandomized patients at week 28 to continue risankizumab 150 mg or placebo (designated as withdrawal of treatment; later re-treated with risankizumab 150 mg if patients had sPGA ≥3). At week 52, significantly more patients reached sPGA score of 0/1 with risankizumab/risankizumab (n=97 [87.4%]) vs risankizumab/placebo (n=138 [61.3%]; P<.001). At week 104, significantly more patients reached an sPGA score of 0/1 with risankizumab/risankizumab (n=90 [81.1%]) vs risankizumab/placebo (n=16 [7.1%]; P<.001). Risankizumab exhibited longevity following withdrawal, as median time to loss of response and relapse was 42 weeks (sPGA ≥3). The extent of TEAEs was similar between risankizumab and placebo and included nasopharyngitis, upper respiratory tract infection, headache, and back pain.8

Final Thoughts

Biologics for psoriasis help produce intended results for skin disease clearance and are tools for precision medicine. Recent data demonstrate safe, durable, and continuous efficacy with biologics, which offer patients a better chance of treatment success. This guide may serve as a quick reference for biologic selection with special consideration of individual disease characteristics and comorbidities.

References
  1. Mrowietz U, Bachelez H, Burden AD, et al. Efficacy and safety of secukinumab in moderate to severe palmoplantar pustular psoriasis over 148 weeks: extension of the 2PRECISE study. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2021;84:552-554. doi:10.1016/j.jaad.2020.06.038
  2. Gottlieb AB, Wu JJ, Griffiths CEM, et al. Clinical efficacy and safety of secukinumab in patients with psoriasis and comorbidities: pooled analysis of 4 phase 3 clinical trials [published online October 21, 2020]. J Dermatolog Treat. doi:10.1080/09546634.2020.1832187
  3. Papp K, Menter A, Leonardi C, et al. Long-term efficacy and safety of brodalumab in psoriasis through 120 weeks and after withdrawal and retreatment: subgroup analysis of a randomized phase III trial (AMAGINE-1). Br J Dermatol. 2020;183:1037-1048. doi:10.1111/bjd.19132
  4. Blauvelt A, Leonardi C, Elewski B, et al. A head-to-head comparison of ixekizumab vs. guselkumab in patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis: 24-week efficacy and safety results from a randomized, double-blinded trial. Br J Dermatol. 2021;184:1047-1058. doi:10.1111/bjd.19509
  5. Lebwohl MG, Leonardi CL, Mehta NN, et al. Tildrakizumab efficacy, drug survival, and safety are comparable in patients with psoriasis with and without metabolic syndrome: long-term results from 2 phase 3 randomized controlled studies (reSURFACE 1 and reSURFACE 2). J Am Acad Dermatol. 2021;84:398-407. doi:10.1016/j.jaad.2020.09.047
  6. Thaci D, Piaserico S, Warren RB, et al. Five-year efficacy and safety of tildrakizumab in patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis who respond at week 28: pooled analyses of two randomized phase III clinical trials (reSURFACE 1 and reSURFACE 2)[published online February 5, 2021]. Br J Dermatol. doi:10.1111/bjd.19866
  7. Warren RB, Blauvelt A, Poulin Y, et al. Efficacy and safety of risankizumab vs. secukinumab in patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis (IMMerge): results from a phase III, randomized, open-label, efficacy-assessor-blinded clinical trial. Br J Dermatol. 2021;184:50-59. doi:10.1111/bjd.19341
  8. Blauvelt A, Leonardi CL, Gooderham M, et al. Efficacy and safety of continuous risankizumab therapy vs treatment withdrawal in patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis: a phase 3 randomized clinical trial. JAMA Dermatol. 2020;156:649-658. doi:10.1001/jamadermatol.2020.0723
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Ms. Ivanic is from Meharry Medical College, School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee. Ms. Ahn is from the Department of Dermatology, University of California San Diego School of Medicine. Mr. Herndon is from Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine, Rochester, Michigan. Dr. Wu is from Dermatology Research and Education Foundation, Irvine, California.

Ms. Ivanic, Ms. Ahn, and Mr. Herndon report no conflict of interest.

Dr. Wu is or has been an investigator, consultant, or speaker for AbbVie, Almirall, Amgen, Arcutis, Aristea Therapeutics, Bausch Health (Ortho Dermatologics), Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Dermavant, Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories, Eli Lilly, Galderma, Janssen, LEO Pharma, Mindera, Novartis, Regeneron, Sanofi Genzyme, Solius, Sun Pharmaceutical, UCB, and Zerigo Health. Correspondence: Jashin J. Wu, MD (jashinwu@gmail.com). 

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Ms. Ivanic is from Meharry Medical College, School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee. Ms. Ahn is from the Department of Dermatology, University of California San Diego School of Medicine. Mr. Herndon is from Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine, Rochester, Michigan. Dr. Wu is from Dermatology Research and Education Foundation, Irvine, California.

Ms. Ivanic, Ms. Ahn, and Mr. Herndon report no conflict of interest.

Dr. Wu is or has been an investigator, consultant, or speaker for AbbVie, Almirall, Amgen, Arcutis, Aristea Therapeutics, Bausch Health (Ortho Dermatologics), Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Dermavant, Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories, Eli Lilly, Galderma, Janssen, LEO Pharma, Mindera, Novartis, Regeneron, Sanofi Genzyme, Solius, Sun Pharmaceutical, UCB, and Zerigo Health. Correspondence: Jashin J. Wu, MD (jashinwu@gmail.com). 

Author and Disclosure Information

Ms. Ivanic is from Meharry Medical College, School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee. Ms. Ahn is from the Department of Dermatology, University of California San Diego School of Medicine. Mr. Herndon is from Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine, Rochester, Michigan. Dr. Wu is from Dermatology Research and Education Foundation, Irvine, California.

Ms. Ivanic, Ms. Ahn, and Mr. Herndon report no conflict of interest.

Dr. Wu is or has been an investigator, consultant, or speaker for AbbVie, Almirall, Amgen, Arcutis, Aristea Therapeutics, Bausch Health (Ortho Dermatologics), Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Dermavant, Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories, Eli Lilly, Galderma, Janssen, LEO Pharma, Mindera, Novartis, Regeneron, Sanofi Genzyme, Solius, Sun Pharmaceutical, UCB, and Zerigo Health. Correspondence: Jashin J. Wu, MD (jashinwu@gmail.com). 

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Biologics have transformed the management of moderate to severe psoriasis. There currently are 11 biologics approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (Table) for psoriasis treatment that have been affirmed by various clinical studies. This article provides dosing initiation, maintenance information, and updated clinical data using phase 3 studies (N=8) published between May 2020 and February 2021. Generic names of the 11 biologics were searched separately in the PubMed database within the specified date range. Subsequent results were reviewed by title and selected for phase 3 and 4 trials. Clinical data in this review focus on reducing patient disease burden by allocating a biologic best fit for each patient’s individual health profile.

IL-17A Inhibitors Update

Secukinumab is safe and efficacious for skin clearance in the presence of comorbidities and can be used for improving plaque psoriasis and palmoplantar pustular psoriasis. An extension of a phase 3 randomized controlled trial (RCT)—2PRECISE—evaluated the efficacy and safety of secukinumab dosing at 300 mg (n=79) and 150 mg (n=80) in adults with moderate to severe palmoplantar pustular psoriasis (palmoplantar psoriasis area and severity index [PPPASI] score ≥12 and dermatology life quality index [DLQI] ≥10) over 148 weeks.1 Extension patients were included from the 52-week 2PRECISE study per the investigator’s judgement of a meaningful clinical response (exact criteria not described). All treatment groups demonstrated a mean (SD) PPPASI of 22.7 (9.5) by the extension trial’s start. Results affirmed that clinical response waned after week 148 in all groups excluding placebo/secukinumab 150 mg, which maintained a mean (SD) PPPASI of 22.7 (9.5). The most frequent adverse events were nasopharyngitis, pustular psoriasis, headache, and pruritus.1

Comorbidities do not have a major impact on secukinumab’s efficacy. A post hoc analysis of 4 phase 3 RCTs—ERASURE, FIXTURE, FEATURE, and JUNCTURE—gathered data from adult patients (N=2401) to assess baseline comorbidities with efficacy and safety of secukinumab vs etanercept after 12 weeks of treatment.2 Sixty-one percent (n=1469) had at least 1 comorbidity, most frequently obesity, hypertension, psoriatic arthritis, hyperlipidemia, or diabetes mellitus. All patient groups had a greater likelihood of a psoriasis area and severity index (PASI) response with any dose of secukinumab vs patients with comorbidities who were taking etanercept or placebo (P<.05) at week 12. All groups had a greater likelihood of achieving investigator global assessment scores of 0/1 (clear/almost clear) vs patients with comorbidities taking etanercept or placebo (P<.05). Baseline comorbidities did not significantly affect treatment response, except obesity, which was associated with decreased probability of achieving all PASI and investigator global assessment (P<.01) responses. Secukinumab-treated patients with and without comorbidities had equivalent likelihood of treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs).2

Brodalumab is an effective biologic that has shown long-term safety with continuous administration. Continuous brodalumab and brodalumab after placebo demonstrated impactful skin clearance after 120 weeks in AMAGINE-1, a phase 3 RCT involving adults (N=442) with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis.3 Patients randomized to brodalumab 210 mg (n=222) or placebo (n=220) were rerandomized according to initial treatment response. In patients switching from brodalumab to placebo at week 12, 55% and 94% achieved PASI 75 at week 20 and week 120, respectively, and 75% reached PASI 100 at week 120. Of patients with static physician global assessment (sPGA) scores of 0/1 (clear/almost clear) at week 12 who were rerandomized to brodalumab, 96% and 80% (using observed data) achieved PASI 75 and PASI 100, respectively. Mean (SD) time to return of skin disease following withdrawal of brodalumab was 74.7 (50.5) days. Treatment-emergent adverse events included headaches, arthralgia, diarrhea, and nausea. Suicidal ideation was rare (this study had 1 completed suicide), and authors cited that no causal association has been made between brodalumab and suicidality. Brodalumab also demonstrated favorable treatment response in patients who underwent a lapse in treatment, offering real-world value, as intermittent treatment administration can occur because of personal or financial reasons.3

Ixekizumab is associated with more rapid skin clearance, better resolution of nail psoriasis, and superior improvement in quality-of-life measures when compared with guselkumab. The phase 3 study IXORA-R compared skin and nail clearance as well as patient-reported outcomes over 24 weeks with ixekizumab 80 mg (n=520) vs guselkumab 100 mg (n=507) in adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis.4 Ixekizumab (50%) was shown to be no worse than guselkumab (52%; difference, 2.3%) using a noninferiority test (noninferiority margin of 11.4%). The treatments exhibited similar efficacy, with no significant difference in proportion of patients reaching PASI 100 (P=.41). Ixekizumab patients tended to have skin clearance sooner than guselkumab patients, reaching PASI 50/75/90 and PASI 100 in a median time that was 2 weeks and 7.5 weeks earlier, respectively. More ixekizumab patients (52%) achieved clear nails vs guselkumab patients (31%; P=.007). Ixekizumab patients reported greater satisfaction with their skin disease affecting quality of life (DLQI), with more DLQI 0/1 (no effect at all on patient’s life) scores and being itch free (P<.05). Ixekizumab was associated with significantly more days of complete skin clearance (PASI 100) vs guselkumab (55.6 days vs 42.2 days; P<.001). Although an upper respiratory tract infection was the most common TEAE, the proportion of TEAEs was similar between treatments.4

IL-23 Inhibitors Update

Tildrakizumab has similar long-term skin clearance efficacy and safety in patients with psoriasis with and without comorbid metabolic syndrome (MetS). A post hoc analysis of 2 phase 2 RCTs (reSURFACE 1/2) involving adults (N=338 and N=307) with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis assessed long-term efficacy (3 years), drug survival, and safety for 5 years of continuous tildrakizumab 100 mg and 200 mg in adults with comorbid MetS.5 Although no difference in efficacy was concluded, greater body mass index of the MetS population was shown to be associated with lower biologic efficacy compared to the general population. The proportion of patients who achieved PASI 75 at week 52 was comparable in patients with MetS and patients without MetS (tildrakizumab 100 mg, 85% and 86% vs 86% and 94% for reSURFACE 1/2, respectively; tildrakizumab 200 mg, 76% and 87% vs 76% and 87% for reSURFACE 1/2, respectively).5

Tildrakizumab also demonstrated efficacy and safety for up to 5 years in 2 other phase 3 RCTs with no dose-related differences in frequency of injections and malignancies. Tildrakizumab 100 mg is the recommended dose. The 200-mg dose can be utilized in patients with a high burden of disease and disability. reSURFACE 1 and reSURFACE 2 involved adults with chronic moderate to severe plaque psoriasis randomized to tildrakizumab 100 mg, 200 mg, or placebo with the option of long-term extension to week 244 if patients reached 50% or greater improvement from baseline PASI score.6 Patients in reSURFACE 2 also were randomized to etanercept 50 mg with partial responders and nonresponders at week 28 switching to tildrakizumab 200 mg until week 244. Extension results showed PASI 75 achievement in 88.7% (95% CI, 84.6%-92.1%) of patients taking tildrakizumab 100 mg (n=235), 92.5% (95% CI, 88.1%-95.7%) of patients taking tildrakizumab 200 mg (n=176), and 81.3% (95% CI, 72.6%-88.2%) of patients taking etanercept/partial nonresponders (n=85). The most common TEAE was nasopharyngitis (10.5/100 patient-years for tildrakizumab 100 mg and 10.7/100 patient-years for tildrakizumab 200 mg). The frequency of severe infections (eg, diverticulitis, pneumonia, cellulitis, appendicitis) was 1.2 per 100 patient-years for tildrakizumab 100 mg and 1.3 per 100 patient-years for tildrakizumab 200 mg.6

Risankizumab and tildrakizumab require the lowest number of injections, thereby providing sustainable skin clearance with a convenient injection dosing schedule for patients. Risankizumab efficacy (8.2% with inferiority margin of 12%) was noninferior to secukinumab when assessing the proportion of PASI 90 responders at week 16 (after 2 doses of risankizumab vs 7 doses of secukinumab).7 IMMerge, an international phase 3 RCT, involved adults (N=327) with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis to compare the safety and efficacy of risankizumab 150 mg (n=164) vs secukinumab 300 mg (n=163) up to 52 weeks. A greater proportion of the risankizumab arm (86.6%) achieved PASI 90 in 52 weeks compared to the secukinumab arm (57.1%). Superior skin clearance (PASI 90) at week 52 was achieved after 5 doses with risankizumab vs 16 doses of secukinumab. Risankizumab TEAEs were nasopharyngitis, upper respiratory tract infection, headache, arthralgia, diarrhea, and bronchitis.7



Continuous risankizumab treatment shows substantially stronger skin clearing performance compared with intermittent treatment following drug withdrawal, demonstrating that treatment gaps minimize therapeutic response. IMMhance, an international phase 3 RCT involving adults (N=507) with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis, evaluated the safety and efficacy with risankizumab 150 mg after 52 weeks and 104 weeks.8 Part A randomized patients to risankizumab 150 mg (n=407) or placebo (n=100). Part B rerandomized patients at week 28 to continue risankizumab 150 mg or placebo (designated as withdrawal of treatment; later re-treated with risankizumab 150 mg if patients had sPGA ≥3). At week 52, significantly more patients reached sPGA score of 0/1 with risankizumab/risankizumab (n=97 [87.4%]) vs risankizumab/placebo (n=138 [61.3%]; P<.001). At week 104, significantly more patients reached an sPGA score of 0/1 with risankizumab/risankizumab (n=90 [81.1%]) vs risankizumab/placebo (n=16 [7.1%]; P<.001). Risankizumab exhibited longevity following withdrawal, as median time to loss of response and relapse was 42 weeks (sPGA ≥3). The extent of TEAEs was similar between risankizumab and placebo and included nasopharyngitis, upper respiratory tract infection, headache, and back pain.8

Final Thoughts

Biologics for psoriasis help produce intended results for skin disease clearance and are tools for precision medicine. Recent data demonstrate safe, durable, and continuous efficacy with biologics, which offer patients a better chance of treatment success. This guide may serve as a quick reference for biologic selection with special consideration of individual disease characteristics and comorbidities.

Biologics have transformed the management of moderate to severe psoriasis. There currently are 11 biologics approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (Table) for psoriasis treatment that have been affirmed by various clinical studies. This article provides dosing initiation, maintenance information, and updated clinical data using phase 3 studies (N=8) published between May 2020 and February 2021. Generic names of the 11 biologics were searched separately in the PubMed database within the specified date range. Subsequent results were reviewed by title and selected for phase 3 and 4 trials. Clinical data in this review focus on reducing patient disease burden by allocating a biologic best fit for each patient’s individual health profile.

IL-17A Inhibitors Update

Secukinumab is safe and efficacious for skin clearance in the presence of comorbidities and can be used for improving plaque psoriasis and palmoplantar pustular psoriasis. An extension of a phase 3 randomized controlled trial (RCT)—2PRECISE—evaluated the efficacy and safety of secukinumab dosing at 300 mg (n=79) and 150 mg (n=80) in adults with moderate to severe palmoplantar pustular psoriasis (palmoplantar psoriasis area and severity index [PPPASI] score ≥12 and dermatology life quality index [DLQI] ≥10) over 148 weeks.1 Extension patients were included from the 52-week 2PRECISE study per the investigator’s judgement of a meaningful clinical response (exact criteria not described). All treatment groups demonstrated a mean (SD) PPPASI of 22.7 (9.5) by the extension trial’s start. Results affirmed that clinical response waned after week 148 in all groups excluding placebo/secukinumab 150 mg, which maintained a mean (SD) PPPASI of 22.7 (9.5). The most frequent adverse events were nasopharyngitis, pustular psoriasis, headache, and pruritus.1

Comorbidities do not have a major impact on secukinumab’s efficacy. A post hoc analysis of 4 phase 3 RCTs—ERASURE, FIXTURE, FEATURE, and JUNCTURE—gathered data from adult patients (N=2401) to assess baseline comorbidities with efficacy and safety of secukinumab vs etanercept after 12 weeks of treatment.2 Sixty-one percent (n=1469) had at least 1 comorbidity, most frequently obesity, hypertension, psoriatic arthritis, hyperlipidemia, or diabetes mellitus. All patient groups had a greater likelihood of a psoriasis area and severity index (PASI) response with any dose of secukinumab vs patients with comorbidities who were taking etanercept or placebo (P<.05) at week 12. All groups had a greater likelihood of achieving investigator global assessment scores of 0/1 (clear/almost clear) vs patients with comorbidities taking etanercept or placebo (P<.05). Baseline comorbidities did not significantly affect treatment response, except obesity, which was associated with decreased probability of achieving all PASI and investigator global assessment (P<.01) responses. Secukinumab-treated patients with and without comorbidities had equivalent likelihood of treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs).2

Brodalumab is an effective biologic that has shown long-term safety with continuous administration. Continuous brodalumab and brodalumab after placebo demonstrated impactful skin clearance after 120 weeks in AMAGINE-1, a phase 3 RCT involving adults (N=442) with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis.3 Patients randomized to brodalumab 210 mg (n=222) or placebo (n=220) were rerandomized according to initial treatment response. In patients switching from brodalumab to placebo at week 12, 55% and 94% achieved PASI 75 at week 20 and week 120, respectively, and 75% reached PASI 100 at week 120. Of patients with static physician global assessment (sPGA) scores of 0/1 (clear/almost clear) at week 12 who were rerandomized to brodalumab, 96% and 80% (using observed data) achieved PASI 75 and PASI 100, respectively. Mean (SD) time to return of skin disease following withdrawal of brodalumab was 74.7 (50.5) days. Treatment-emergent adverse events included headaches, arthralgia, diarrhea, and nausea. Suicidal ideation was rare (this study had 1 completed suicide), and authors cited that no causal association has been made between brodalumab and suicidality. Brodalumab also demonstrated favorable treatment response in patients who underwent a lapse in treatment, offering real-world value, as intermittent treatment administration can occur because of personal or financial reasons.3

Ixekizumab is associated with more rapid skin clearance, better resolution of nail psoriasis, and superior improvement in quality-of-life measures when compared with guselkumab. The phase 3 study IXORA-R compared skin and nail clearance as well as patient-reported outcomes over 24 weeks with ixekizumab 80 mg (n=520) vs guselkumab 100 mg (n=507) in adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis.4 Ixekizumab (50%) was shown to be no worse than guselkumab (52%; difference, 2.3%) using a noninferiority test (noninferiority margin of 11.4%). The treatments exhibited similar efficacy, with no significant difference in proportion of patients reaching PASI 100 (P=.41). Ixekizumab patients tended to have skin clearance sooner than guselkumab patients, reaching PASI 50/75/90 and PASI 100 in a median time that was 2 weeks and 7.5 weeks earlier, respectively. More ixekizumab patients (52%) achieved clear nails vs guselkumab patients (31%; P=.007). Ixekizumab patients reported greater satisfaction with their skin disease affecting quality of life (DLQI), with more DLQI 0/1 (no effect at all on patient’s life) scores and being itch free (P<.05). Ixekizumab was associated with significantly more days of complete skin clearance (PASI 100) vs guselkumab (55.6 days vs 42.2 days; P<.001). Although an upper respiratory tract infection was the most common TEAE, the proportion of TEAEs was similar between treatments.4

IL-23 Inhibitors Update

Tildrakizumab has similar long-term skin clearance efficacy and safety in patients with psoriasis with and without comorbid metabolic syndrome (MetS). A post hoc analysis of 2 phase 2 RCTs (reSURFACE 1/2) involving adults (N=338 and N=307) with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis assessed long-term efficacy (3 years), drug survival, and safety for 5 years of continuous tildrakizumab 100 mg and 200 mg in adults with comorbid MetS.5 Although no difference in efficacy was concluded, greater body mass index of the MetS population was shown to be associated with lower biologic efficacy compared to the general population. The proportion of patients who achieved PASI 75 at week 52 was comparable in patients with MetS and patients without MetS (tildrakizumab 100 mg, 85% and 86% vs 86% and 94% for reSURFACE 1/2, respectively; tildrakizumab 200 mg, 76% and 87% vs 76% and 87% for reSURFACE 1/2, respectively).5

Tildrakizumab also demonstrated efficacy and safety for up to 5 years in 2 other phase 3 RCTs with no dose-related differences in frequency of injections and malignancies. Tildrakizumab 100 mg is the recommended dose. The 200-mg dose can be utilized in patients with a high burden of disease and disability. reSURFACE 1 and reSURFACE 2 involved adults with chronic moderate to severe plaque psoriasis randomized to tildrakizumab 100 mg, 200 mg, or placebo with the option of long-term extension to week 244 if patients reached 50% or greater improvement from baseline PASI score.6 Patients in reSURFACE 2 also were randomized to etanercept 50 mg with partial responders and nonresponders at week 28 switching to tildrakizumab 200 mg until week 244. Extension results showed PASI 75 achievement in 88.7% (95% CI, 84.6%-92.1%) of patients taking tildrakizumab 100 mg (n=235), 92.5% (95% CI, 88.1%-95.7%) of patients taking tildrakizumab 200 mg (n=176), and 81.3% (95% CI, 72.6%-88.2%) of patients taking etanercept/partial nonresponders (n=85). The most common TEAE was nasopharyngitis (10.5/100 patient-years for tildrakizumab 100 mg and 10.7/100 patient-years for tildrakizumab 200 mg). The frequency of severe infections (eg, diverticulitis, pneumonia, cellulitis, appendicitis) was 1.2 per 100 patient-years for tildrakizumab 100 mg and 1.3 per 100 patient-years for tildrakizumab 200 mg.6

Risankizumab and tildrakizumab require the lowest number of injections, thereby providing sustainable skin clearance with a convenient injection dosing schedule for patients. Risankizumab efficacy (8.2% with inferiority margin of 12%) was noninferior to secukinumab when assessing the proportion of PASI 90 responders at week 16 (after 2 doses of risankizumab vs 7 doses of secukinumab).7 IMMerge, an international phase 3 RCT, involved adults (N=327) with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis to compare the safety and efficacy of risankizumab 150 mg (n=164) vs secukinumab 300 mg (n=163) up to 52 weeks. A greater proportion of the risankizumab arm (86.6%) achieved PASI 90 in 52 weeks compared to the secukinumab arm (57.1%). Superior skin clearance (PASI 90) at week 52 was achieved after 5 doses with risankizumab vs 16 doses of secukinumab. Risankizumab TEAEs were nasopharyngitis, upper respiratory tract infection, headache, arthralgia, diarrhea, and bronchitis.7



Continuous risankizumab treatment shows substantially stronger skin clearing performance compared with intermittent treatment following drug withdrawal, demonstrating that treatment gaps minimize therapeutic response. IMMhance, an international phase 3 RCT involving adults (N=507) with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis, evaluated the safety and efficacy with risankizumab 150 mg after 52 weeks and 104 weeks.8 Part A randomized patients to risankizumab 150 mg (n=407) or placebo (n=100). Part B rerandomized patients at week 28 to continue risankizumab 150 mg or placebo (designated as withdrawal of treatment; later re-treated with risankizumab 150 mg if patients had sPGA ≥3). At week 52, significantly more patients reached sPGA score of 0/1 with risankizumab/risankizumab (n=97 [87.4%]) vs risankizumab/placebo (n=138 [61.3%]; P<.001). At week 104, significantly more patients reached an sPGA score of 0/1 with risankizumab/risankizumab (n=90 [81.1%]) vs risankizumab/placebo (n=16 [7.1%]; P<.001). Risankizumab exhibited longevity following withdrawal, as median time to loss of response and relapse was 42 weeks (sPGA ≥3). The extent of TEAEs was similar between risankizumab and placebo and included nasopharyngitis, upper respiratory tract infection, headache, and back pain.8

Final Thoughts

Biologics for psoriasis help produce intended results for skin disease clearance and are tools for precision medicine. Recent data demonstrate safe, durable, and continuous efficacy with biologics, which offer patients a better chance of treatment success. This guide may serve as a quick reference for biologic selection with special consideration of individual disease characteristics and comorbidities.

References
  1. Mrowietz U, Bachelez H, Burden AD, et al. Efficacy and safety of secukinumab in moderate to severe palmoplantar pustular psoriasis over 148 weeks: extension of the 2PRECISE study. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2021;84:552-554. doi:10.1016/j.jaad.2020.06.038
  2. Gottlieb AB, Wu JJ, Griffiths CEM, et al. Clinical efficacy and safety of secukinumab in patients with psoriasis and comorbidities: pooled analysis of 4 phase 3 clinical trials [published online October 21, 2020]. J Dermatolog Treat. doi:10.1080/09546634.2020.1832187
  3. Papp K, Menter A, Leonardi C, et al. Long-term efficacy and safety of brodalumab in psoriasis through 120 weeks and after withdrawal and retreatment: subgroup analysis of a randomized phase III trial (AMAGINE-1). Br J Dermatol. 2020;183:1037-1048. doi:10.1111/bjd.19132
  4. Blauvelt A, Leonardi C, Elewski B, et al. A head-to-head comparison of ixekizumab vs. guselkumab in patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis: 24-week efficacy and safety results from a randomized, double-blinded trial. Br J Dermatol. 2021;184:1047-1058. doi:10.1111/bjd.19509
  5. Lebwohl MG, Leonardi CL, Mehta NN, et al. Tildrakizumab efficacy, drug survival, and safety are comparable in patients with psoriasis with and without metabolic syndrome: long-term results from 2 phase 3 randomized controlled studies (reSURFACE 1 and reSURFACE 2). J Am Acad Dermatol. 2021;84:398-407. doi:10.1016/j.jaad.2020.09.047
  6. Thaci D, Piaserico S, Warren RB, et al. Five-year efficacy and safety of tildrakizumab in patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis who respond at week 28: pooled analyses of two randomized phase III clinical trials (reSURFACE 1 and reSURFACE 2)[published online February 5, 2021]. Br J Dermatol. doi:10.1111/bjd.19866
  7. Warren RB, Blauvelt A, Poulin Y, et al. Efficacy and safety of risankizumab vs. secukinumab in patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis (IMMerge): results from a phase III, randomized, open-label, efficacy-assessor-blinded clinical trial. Br J Dermatol. 2021;184:50-59. doi:10.1111/bjd.19341
  8. Blauvelt A, Leonardi CL, Gooderham M, et al. Efficacy and safety of continuous risankizumab therapy vs treatment withdrawal in patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis: a phase 3 randomized clinical trial. JAMA Dermatol. 2020;156:649-658. doi:10.1001/jamadermatol.2020.0723
References
  1. Mrowietz U, Bachelez H, Burden AD, et al. Efficacy and safety of secukinumab in moderate to severe palmoplantar pustular psoriasis over 148 weeks: extension of the 2PRECISE study. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2021;84:552-554. doi:10.1016/j.jaad.2020.06.038
  2. Gottlieb AB, Wu JJ, Griffiths CEM, et al. Clinical efficacy and safety of secukinumab in patients with psoriasis and comorbidities: pooled analysis of 4 phase 3 clinical trials [published online October 21, 2020]. J Dermatolog Treat. doi:10.1080/09546634.2020.1832187
  3. Papp K, Menter A, Leonardi C, et al. Long-term efficacy and safety of brodalumab in psoriasis through 120 weeks and after withdrawal and retreatment: subgroup analysis of a randomized phase III trial (AMAGINE-1). Br J Dermatol. 2020;183:1037-1048. doi:10.1111/bjd.19132
  4. Blauvelt A, Leonardi C, Elewski B, et al. A head-to-head comparison of ixekizumab vs. guselkumab in patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis: 24-week efficacy and safety results from a randomized, double-blinded trial. Br J Dermatol. 2021;184:1047-1058. doi:10.1111/bjd.19509
  5. Lebwohl MG, Leonardi CL, Mehta NN, et al. Tildrakizumab efficacy, drug survival, and safety are comparable in patients with psoriasis with and without metabolic syndrome: long-term results from 2 phase 3 randomized controlled studies (reSURFACE 1 and reSURFACE 2). J Am Acad Dermatol. 2021;84:398-407. doi:10.1016/j.jaad.2020.09.047
  6. Thaci D, Piaserico S, Warren RB, et al. Five-year efficacy and safety of tildrakizumab in patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis who respond at week 28: pooled analyses of two randomized phase III clinical trials (reSURFACE 1 and reSURFACE 2)[published online February 5, 2021]. Br J Dermatol. doi:10.1111/bjd.19866
  7. Warren RB, Blauvelt A, Poulin Y, et al. Efficacy and safety of risankizumab vs. secukinumab in patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis (IMMerge): results from a phase III, randomized, open-label, efficacy-assessor-blinded clinical trial. Br J Dermatol. 2021;184:50-59. doi:10.1111/bjd.19341
  8. Blauvelt A, Leonardi CL, Gooderham M, et al. Efficacy and safety of continuous risankizumab therapy vs treatment withdrawal in patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis: a phase 3 randomized clinical trial. JAMA Dermatol. 2020;156:649-658. doi:10.1001/jamadermatol.2020.0723
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Practice Points

  • Choosing a biologic best fit for each patient’s individual health profile can reduce psoriasis disease burden.
  • Clinicians should educate psoriasis patients that biologics are safe for most comorbidities, and conditions such as obesity have been associated with poorer therapeutic response.
  • It is important to discuss possible side effects of biologics with patients and reassure them that mild side effects are the most common during therapy.
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Management of Psoriasis With Biologics in Clinical Practice: An Update for 2020

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The advent of biologic therapy over the last 2 decades has transformed the treatment of psoriasis; patients who either are not good candidates for or have an inadequate response to traditional treatments (topicals and/or phototherapy) now have numerous options for treatment.1 Patients burdened by extensive disease, recurrent flares, and stubborn treatment areas are ideal candidates for biologics. There are 11 biologics approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)(Table) for treating moderate to severe plaque psoriasis as supported by grade A evidence. The FDA has authorized 1 new biologic—risankizumab—since the joint guidelines from the American Academy of Dermatology and National Psoriasis Foundation were released for the treatment of psoriasis with biologics.2 This article aims to address updates on recent clinical trial findings (April 2019 to April 2020) regarding biologic therapy initiation and maintenance for adult patients. Prescribers should use this update as guidance for determining the appropriate biologic class based on patient characteristics and for approaching biologic-experienced patients with refractory psoriasis. This update also may serve as a reference for the recommended dosing regimens of the 11 approved biologics.

Using Risankizumab

Risankizumab is a new biologic that selectively targets the IL-23 pathway by binding the p19 subunit of IL-23. It was approved by the FDA in April 2019. Two recent studies have demonstrated the efficacy of risankizumab in disease management.3,4

IMMvent was a double-blind, 2-part, phase 3, randomized controlled trial (RCT) of participants 18 years and older (N=605) with moderate to severe psoriasis (with or without psoriatic arthritis) across 11 countries.3 Inclusion criteria consisted of psoriasis involving at least 10% of the body surface area (BSA), absolute psoriasis area and severity index (PASI) score of 12 or higher, and static physician global assessment (sPGA) score of 3 or higher. Prior biologic treatment did not preclude study entry (excluding risankizumab or adalimumab), and nearly 40% of participants previously had been on a different biologic. Notably, this trial allowed for inclusion of patients with prior malignancy (>5 years prior) and patients who tested positive for exposure to tuberculosis (TB) but were not shown to have active TB (provided appropriate treatment for latent TB was started). Study participants identified as white (81%), Asian (14%), black/African American (4%), or other ethnicity (1%). Part A involved administration of 150 mg risankizumab (n=301) at weeks 0 and 4 or 80 mg adalimumab (n=304) loading dose at week 0 followed by 40 mg at week 1 and 40 mg every other week thereafter until the end of week 15. At week 16 there was a significant difference in proportion of participants achieving 90% or more improvement (PASI-90) with risankizumab (72%) vs adalimumab (47%)(P<.0001) and achieving an sPGA score of 0 or 1 (clear or almost clear) with risankizumab (84%) vs adalimumab (60%)(P<.0001). In part B (weeks 16–44), adalimumab immediate responder (PASI ≥50 to PASI <90) participants were re-randomized to continue adalimumab 40 mg every other week (starting from week 17 and stopping at week 44) or switch to 150 mg risankizumab administered at weeks 16, 20, and 32. Patients taking risankizumab in part A continued the drug, administered at weeks 16 and 28. At week 44, there was a significant difference in percentage of participants achieving PASI-90 with risankizumab (66%) vs adalimumab (21%)(P<.0001).3

IMMhance was another double-blind phase 3 RCT with 2 parts that assessed the clinical efficacy of risankizumab compared to placebo in patients 18 years or older (N=507) across 9 countries with the same inclusion criteria for patients as IMMvent.4 Part A involved administration of 150 mg risankizumab (n=407) or placebo (n=100) at weeks 0 and 4 using a 4:1 random allocation ratio. At week 16, regardless of initial treatment, all participants received 150 mg risankizumab. Treatment results at week 16 showed a significant difference in percentage of participants achieving PASI-90 with risankizumab (73.2%) vs placebo (2.0%)(P<.001) and sPGA score of 0 or 1 with risankizumab (83.5%) vs placebo (7.0%)(P<.001). Furthermore, in part B (weeks 16–104), at week 28 participants on risankizumab with an sPGA score of 0 or 1 were randomized with a 1:2 allocation ratio to continue 150 mg risankizumab or switch to placebo to produce a treatment withdrawal effect. Part B results showed a significant difference in the proportion of participants achieving an sPGA score of 0 or 1 with risankizumab (87.4%) vs placebo (61.3%)(P<.001) at week 52 and at week 104 with risankizumab (81.1%) vs placebo (7.1%)(P<.001). Risankizumab was well tolerated, with the most common adverse events (AEs) being nasopharyngitis (23.4%), upper respiratory tract infection (15.4%), and headache (6.8%). Serious AEs included cancer (2.6%; 2.2 events per 100 patient-years), hepatic events (4.6%) including hepatic cirrhosis (0.2%), and serious infections (1.8%; 1.4 events per 100 patient-years).4



Overall, the strengths of risankizumab with regard to its clinical efficacy and utility in biologic-experienced patients were confirmed in these studies. The inclusion of patients with prior treated malignancy and positive TB tests also was more in line with what one might encounter with real-world practice and, as such, provided valuable data to help aid treatment decisions. These 2 studies provided valuable evidence for the therapeutic benefit and relatively mild safety profile of risankizumab in treatment of moderate to severe psoriasis for patients with and without prior biologic therapy.

 

 

Choosing a Biologic

Refractory psoriasis involves nonresponse (primary failure) or return of disease symptoms after initial improvement (secondary failure) with a biologic. Selecting a biologic for patients who have experienced prior biologic failure is difficult. It is still unknown whether it is more efficacious for patients to try a same-class drug or a biologic targeting a different inflammatory pathway or cytokine. Studies have shown mixed results regarding how to manage patients with biologic failure, with both approaches demonstrating positive outcomes.

One analysis of the Corrona Psoriasis Registry included 144 patients, the majority of whom (89.8%) were biologic experienced, who began secukinumab treatment and returned for a 6-month follow-up (5–9 months).5 Patients enrolled in the registry were 18 years or older, had been diagnosed with psoriasis by a dermatologist, and initiated or switched an FDA-approved systemic agent or biologic within the last 12 months. Of biologic-experienced participants, 37.7% had used 3 or more biologics. More than half of included participants were either male (55%) or obese (53.4%). Comorbidities included hypertension (43.2%), hyperlipidemia (33.9%), anxiety (20.3%), diabetes mellitus (15.3%), cardiovascular disease (14.4%), and depression (13.6%). After 6 months of treatment, there was significant improvement in the involvement of BSA (mean difference, 12.1), investigator global assessment score (1.5), dermatology life quality index (DLQI)(4.8), pain (23.2), itch (−30.8), fatigue (8.8), and work productivity (9.2)(P<.01). Secukinumab therapy displayed notable reduction in symptom severity in this population with difficult-to-treat psoriasis. Its relative success in this cohort provides support for its use in treating patients who have failed other classes of biologics.5

Evidence supporting reduction of pruritus and pain with secukinumab also was notable. The CLEAR phase 3 RCT involved participants treated with 300 mg secukinumab every week for the first 4 weeks and then every 4 weeks thereafter for 48 weeks (n=312), up to 100 weeks (n=277).6 Participants had complete relief of pain (score 0), itching, and scaling at week 16 (69.4%, 49.7%, and 61.2%, respectively), week 52 (67.1%, 48.9%, and 53.3%, respectively), and week 104 (70.9%, 47.4%, and 54.8%, respectively). Reported AEs included candida infections (7.2%), malignant or unspecified tumors (1.5%), and neutropenia (<1%).6

Researchers investigated intraclass switching to brodalumab with prior failure of IL-17 inhibitors. An open-label study involved participants (n=39) with prior failure with secukinumab or ixekizumab therapy.7 Participants were administered 210 mg brodalumab with standard dosing at weeks 0, 1, and 2, and then every 2 weeks thereafter. At week 16, 69% of participants achieved PASI-75, 44% achieved PASI-90, 28% achieved PASI-100, and 62% achieved an sPGA score of 0 or 1. The authors attributed the relative success of brodalumab compared to prior anti–IL-17 agents to inhibition of the IL-17 receptor with brodalumab rather than the IL-17A ligand.7 Brodalumab may be a useful alternative biologic for patients with nonresponse to and secondary failure with biologics, including the IL-17A inhibitors.

Recent findings support effective skin clearance and improved symptom management with ixekizumab and ustekinumab. Of note, ixekizumab was reported to provide rapid improvement in skin lesions and quality of life to a greater extent than guselkumab.

The IXORA-R double-blinded RCT compared the clinical benefit of participants 18 years and older taking standard approved dosages of ixekizumab (n=520) or guselkumab (n=507).8 Patients were included if they had plaque psoriasis for at least 6 months before baseline, an sPGA score of at least 3, PASI score of 12 or higher, 10% or greater BSA, no prior IL-17 inhibitor failure, no use of IL-23 p19 inhibitors, and no use of any biologic within the specified period prior to baseline. At week 12, ixekizumab showed superior clinical improvement measured by the proportion of participants achieving complete skin clearance (ie, PASI-100)(41%) compared to guselkumab (25%)(P<.001). There were more participants taking ixekizumab who reported DLQI of 0 or 1 (no impact of disease on quality of life)(34%) compared to guselkumab (21%)(P<.001) as early on as week 4. The most common AE was upper respiratory tract infection (7%) in both groups. The risk of treatment-emergent AEs (56%), discontinuation because of AEs (2%), and serious AEs (3%) were comparable in both groups. The number of injection-site reactions was higher with ixekizumab (13%) vs guselkumab (3%). The authors concluded that ixekizumab offers the ability to provide rapid relief of symptoms, which is associated with improved DLQI.8



Response to ustekinumab therapy was assessed in a patient cohort enrolled in the Corrona Psoriasis Registry. This study involved 178 participants 18 years and older with psoriasis involvement of 3% or greater BSA who were treated with ustekinumab.9 By their 6-month follow-up visit, 55.6% of participants achieved adequate treatment response (BSA improving to <3% or 75% from enrollment). Increasing patient age was significantly associated with decreased likelihood of achieving a response (odds ratio, 0.981 [95% confidence interval, 0.962-0.999]; P=.049). Ustekinumab is a practical option for psoriasis treatment that seems to yield better results in younger patients.9 This evidence reveals that increased patient age is a characteristic that may contribute to poor treatment response and should be considered when choosing the best fit for biologic therapy.

Final Thoughts

Using evidence-based interventions to treat patients is the cornerstone of ethical and high-quality medical care. This guide sought to provide relevant updates in a variety of both comparator and pivotal trials, with the goal of summarizing clinically relevant information that may be extracted from these trials to guide patient care. It is not an exhaustive review but may be utilized as a reference tool to fine-tune selection criteria in choosing 1 of 11 biologics for the treatment of psoriasis.

References
  1. Pithadia DJ, Reynolds KA, Lee EB, et al. Translating the 2019 AAD-NPF Guidelines of Care for the Management of Psoriasis With Biologics to clinical practice. Cutis. 2019;104(suppl 2):12-16.
  2. Menter A, Strober BE, Kaplan DH, et al. Joint AAD-NPF guidelines of care for the management and treatment of psoriasis with biologics [published online February 13, 2019]. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2019;80:1029-1072.
  3. Reich K, Gooderham M, Thaçi D, et al. Risankizumab compared with adalimumab in patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis (IMMvent): a randomised, double-blind, active-comparator-controlled phase 3 trial. Lancet. 2019;394:576-586.
  4. Blauvelt A, Leonardi CL, Gooderham M, et al. Efficacy and safety of continuous risankizumab therapy vs treatment withdrawal in patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis: a phase 3 randomized clinical trial. JAMA Dermatol. 2020;156:649-658.
  5. Strober BE, Germino R, Guana A, et al. US real-world effectiveness of secukinumab for the treatment of psoriasis: 6-month analysis from the Corrona Psoriasis Registry. J Dermatolog Treat. 2020;31:333-341.
  6. Thaçi D, Puig L, Reich K, et al. Secukinumab demonstrates sustained efficacy in clearing skin and improving patient-reported outcomes in patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis through 2 years of treatment: results from the CLEAR study. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2019;81:1405-1409.
  7. Kimmel G, Chima M, Kim HJ, et al. Brodalumab in the treatment of moderate to severe psoriasis in patients when previous anti-interleukin 17A therapies have failed. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2019;81:857-859.
  8. Blauvelt A, Papp K, Gottlieb A, et al. A head‐to‐head comparison of ixekizumab vs. guselkumab in patients with moderate‐to‐severe plaque psoriasis: 12‐week efficacy, safety and speed of response from a randomized, double‐blinded trial. Br J Dermatol. 2020;182:1348-1358.
  9. Van Voorhees AS, Mason MA, Harrold LR, et al. Characterization of insufficient responders to ustekinumab in patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis in the US Corrona Psoriasis Registry [published online February 27, 2020]. J Dermatolog Treat. doi:10.1080/09546634.2020.1720586.
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Ms. Ivanic is from Meharry Medical College, Nashville, Tennessee. Ms. Naderi-Azad is from the University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, Ontario, Canada. Ms. Walia is from Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine, Pennsylvania. Dr. Han is from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York. Dr. Wu is from the Dermatology Research and Education Foundation, Irvine, California.

Ms. Ivanic, Ms. Naderi-Azad, and Ms. Walia report no conflict of interest. Dr. Han is or has been a consultant/advisor, investigator, or speaker for AbbVie; Athenex; Boehringer Ingelheim; Bond Avillion; Bristol-Myers Squibb; Celgene Corporation; Eli Lilly and Company; Janssen Biotech, Inc; LEO Pharma; MC2 Therapeutics; Novartis; Ortho Dermatologics; PellePharm; Pfizer; Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc; Sanofi Genzyme; Sun Pharmaceutical; and UCB. Dr. Wu is or has been a consultant, investigator, or speaker for AbbVie; Almirall; Amgen; Arcutis; Boehringer Ingelheim; Bristol-Myers Squibb; Celgene Corporation; Dermavant; Dermira; Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories; Eli Lilly and Company; Janssen Biotech, Inc; LEO Pharma; Novartis; Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc; Sanofi Genzyme; Sun Pharmaceutical; UCB; and Valeant Pharmaceuticals North America.

Correspondence: Jashin J. Wu, MD (jashinwu@gmail.com).

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Ms. Ivanic is from Meharry Medical College, Nashville, Tennessee. Ms. Naderi-Azad is from the University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, Ontario, Canada. Ms. Walia is from Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine, Pennsylvania. Dr. Han is from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York. Dr. Wu is from the Dermatology Research and Education Foundation, Irvine, California.

Ms. Ivanic, Ms. Naderi-Azad, and Ms. Walia report no conflict of interest. Dr. Han is or has been a consultant/advisor, investigator, or speaker for AbbVie; Athenex; Boehringer Ingelheim; Bond Avillion; Bristol-Myers Squibb; Celgene Corporation; Eli Lilly and Company; Janssen Biotech, Inc; LEO Pharma; MC2 Therapeutics; Novartis; Ortho Dermatologics; PellePharm; Pfizer; Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc; Sanofi Genzyme; Sun Pharmaceutical; and UCB. Dr. Wu is or has been a consultant, investigator, or speaker for AbbVie; Almirall; Amgen; Arcutis; Boehringer Ingelheim; Bristol-Myers Squibb; Celgene Corporation; Dermavant; Dermira; Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories; Eli Lilly and Company; Janssen Biotech, Inc; LEO Pharma; Novartis; Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc; Sanofi Genzyme; Sun Pharmaceutical; UCB; and Valeant Pharmaceuticals North America.

Correspondence: Jashin J. Wu, MD (jashinwu@gmail.com).

Author and Disclosure Information

Ms. Ivanic is from Meharry Medical College, Nashville, Tennessee. Ms. Naderi-Azad is from the University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, Ontario, Canada. Ms. Walia is from Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine, Pennsylvania. Dr. Han is from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York. Dr. Wu is from the Dermatology Research and Education Foundation, Irvine, California.

Ms. Ivanic, Ms. Naderi-Azad, and Ms. Walia report no conflict of interest. Dr. Han is or has been a consultant/advisor, investigator, or speaker for AbbVie; Athenex; Boehringer Ingelheim; Bond Avillion; Bristol-Myers Squibb; Celgene Corporation; Eli Lilly and Company; Janssen Biotech, Inc; LEO Pharma; MC2 Therapeutics; Novartis; Ortho Dermatologics; PellePharm; Pfizer; Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc; Sanofi Genzyme; Sun Pharmaceutical; and UCB. Dr. Wu is or has been a consultant, investigator, or speaker for AbbVie; Almirall; Amgen; Arcutis; Boehringer Ingelheim; Bristol-Myers Squibb; Celgene Corporation; Dermavant; Dermira; Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories; Eli Lilly and Company; Janssen Biotech, Inc; LEO Pharma; Novartis; Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc; Sanofi Genzyme; Sun Pharmaceutical; UCB; and Valeant Pharmaceuticals North America.

Correspondence: Jashin J. Wu, MD (jashinwu@gmail.com).

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The advent of biologic therapy over the last 2 decades has transformed the treatment of psoriasis; patients who either are not good candidates for or have an inadequate response to traditional treatments (topicals and/or phototherapy) now have numerous options for treatment.1 Patients burdened by extensive disease, recurrent flares, and stubborn treatment areas are ideal candidates for biologics. There are 11 biologics approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)(Table) for treating moderate to severe plaque psoriasis as supported by grade A evidence. The FDA has authorized 1 new biologic—risankizumab—since the joint guidelines from the American Academy of Dermatology and National Psoriasis Foundation were released for the treatment of psoriasis with biologics.2 This article aims to address updates on recent clinical trial findings (April 2019 to April 2020) regarding biologic therapy initiation and maintenance for adult patients. Prescribers should use this update as guidance for determining the appropriate biologic class based on patient characteristics and for approaching biologic-experienced patients with refractory psoriasis. This update also may serve as a reference for the recommended dosing regimens of the 11 approved biologics.

Using Risankizumab

Risankizumab is a new biologic that selectively targets the IL-23 pathway by binding the p19 subunit of IL-23. It was approved by the FDA in April 2019. Two recent studies have demonstrated the efficacy of risankizumab in disease management.3,4

IMMvent was a double-blind, 2-part, phase 3, randomized controlled trial (RCT) of participants 18 years and older (N=605) with moderate to severe psoriasis (with or without psoriatic arthritis) across 11 countries.3 Inclusion criteria consisted of psoriasis involving at least 10% of the body surface area (BSA), absolute psoriasis area and severity index (PASI) score of 12 or higher, and static physician global assessment (sPGA) score of 3 or higher. Prior biologic treatment did not preclude study entry (excluding risankizumab or adalimumab), and nearly 40% of participants previously had been on a different biologic. Notably, this trial allowed for inclusion of patients with prior malignancy (>5 years prior) and patients who tested positive for exposure to tuberculosis (TB) but were not shown to have active TB (provided appropriate treatment for latent TB was started). Study participants identified as white (81%), Asian (14%), black/African American (4%), or other ethnicity (1%). Part A involved administration of 150 mg risankizumab (n=301) at weeks 0 and 4 or 80 mg adalimumab (n=304) loading dose at week 0 followed by 40 mg at week 1 and 40 mg every other week thereafter until the end of week 15. At week 16 there was a significant difference in proportion of participants achieving 90% or more improvement (PASI-90) with risankizumab (72%) vs adalimumab (47%)(P<.0001) and achieving an sPGA score of 0 or 1 (clear or almost clear) with risankizumab (84%) vs adalimumab (60%)(P<.0001). In part B (weeks 16–44), adalimumab immediate responder (PASI ≥50 to PASI <90) participants were re-randomized to continue adalimumab 40 mg every other week (starting from week 17 and stopping at week 44) or switch to 150 mg risankizumab administered at weeks 16, 20, and 32. Patients taking risankizumab in part A continued the drug, administered at weeks 16 and 28. At week 44, there was a significant difference in percentage of participants achieving PASI-90 with risankizumab (66%) vs adalimumab (21%)(P<.0001).3

IMMhance was another double-blind phase 3 RCT with 2 parts that assessed the clinical efficacy of risankizumab compared to placebo in patients 18 years or older (N=507) across 9 countries with the same inclusion criteria for patients as IMMvent.4 Part A involved administration of 150 mg risankizumab (n=407) or placebo (n=100) at weeks 0 and 4 using a 4:1 random allocation ratio. At week 16, regardless of initial treatment, all participants received 150 mg risankizumab. Treatment results at week 16 showed a significant difference in percentage of participants achieving PASI-90 with risankizumab (73.2%) vs placebo (2.0%)(P<.001) and sPGA score of 0 or 1 with risankizumab (83.5%) vs placebo (7.0%)(P<.001). Furthermore, in part B (weeks 16–104), at week 28 participants on risankizumab with an sPGA score of 0 or 1 were randomized with a 1:2 allocation ratio to continue 150 mg risankizumab or switch to placebo to produce a treatment withdrawal effect. Part B results showed a significant difference in the proportion of participants achieving an sPGA score of 0 or 1 with risankizumab (87.4%) vs placebo (61.3%)(P<.001) at week 52 and at week 104 with risankizumab (81.1%) vs placebo (7.1%)(P<.001). Risankizumab was well tolerated, with the most common adverse events (AEs) being nasopharyngitis (23.4%), upper respiratory tract infection (15.4%), and headache (6.8%). Serious AEs included cancer (2.6%; 2.2 events per 100 patient-years), hepatic events (4.6%) including hepatic cirrhosis (0.2%), and serious infections (1.8%; 1.4 events per 100 patient-years).4



Overall, the strengths of risankizumab with regard to its clinical efficacy and utility in biologic-experienced patients were confirmed in these studies. The inclusion of patients with prior treated malignancy and positive TB tests also was more in line with what one might encounter with real-world practice and, as such, provided valuable data to help aid treatment decisions. These 2 studies provided valuable evidence for the therapeutic benefit and relatively mild safety profile of risankizumab in treatment of moderate to severe psoriasis for patients with and without prior biologic therapy.

 

 

Choosing a Biologic

Refractory psoriasis involves nonresponse (primary failure) or return of disease symptoms after initial improvement (secondary failure) with a biologic. Selecting a biologic for patients who have experienced prior biologic failure is difficult. It is still unknown whether it is more efficacious for patients to try a same-class drug or a biologic targeting a different inflammatory pathway or cytokine. Studies have shown mixed results regarding how to manage patients with biologic failure, with both approaches demonstrating positive outcomes.

One analysis of the Corrona Psoriasis Registry included 144 patients, the majority of whom (89.8%) were biologic experienced, who began secukinumab treatment and returned for a 6-month follow-up (5–9 months).5 Patients enrolled in the registry were 18 years or older, had been diagnosed with psoriasis by a dermatologist, and initiated or switched an FDA-approved systemic agent or biologic within the last 12 months. Of biologic-experienced participants, 37.7% had used 3 or more biologics. More than half of included participants were either male (55%) or obese (53.4%). Comorbidities included hypertension (43.2%), hyperlipidemia (33.9%), anxiety (20.3%), diabetes mellitus (15.3%), cardiovascular disease (14.4%), and depression (13.6%). After 6 months of treatment, there was significant improvement in the involvement of BSA (mean difference, 12.1), investigator global assessment score (1.5), dermatology life quality index (DLQI)(4.8), pain (23.2), itch (−30.8), fatigue (8.8), and work productivity (9.2)(P<.01). Secukinumab therapy displayed notable reduction in symptom severity in this population with difficult-to-treat psoriasis. Its relative success in this cohort provides support for its use in treating patients who have failed other classes of biologics.5

Evidence supporting reduction of pruritus and pain with secukinumab also was notable. The CLEAR phase 3 RCT involved participants treated with 300 mg secukinumab every week for the first 4 weeks and then every 4 weeks thereafter for 48 weeks (n=312), up to 100 weeks (n=277).6 Participants had complete relief of pain (score 0), itching, and scaling at week 16 (69.4%, 49.7%, and 61.2%, respectively), week 52 (67.1%, 48.9%, and 53.3%, respectively), and week 104 (70.9%, 47.4%, and 54.8%, respectively). Reported AEs included candida infections (7.2%), malignant or unspecified tumors (1.5%), and neutropenia (<1%).6

Researchers investigated intraclass switching to brodalumab with prior failure of IL-17 inhibitors. An open-label study involved participants (n=39) with prior failure with secukinumab or ixekizumab therapy.7 Participants were administered 210 mg brodalumab with standard dosing at weeks 0, 1, and 2, and then every 2 weeks thereafter. At week 16, 69% of participants achieved PASI-75, 44% achieved PASI-90, 28% achieved PASI-100, and 62% achieved an sPGA score of 0 or 1. The authors attributed the relative success of brodalumab compared to prior anti–IL-17 agents to inhibition of the IL-17 receptor with brodalumab rather than the IL-17A ligand.7 Brodalumab may be a useful alternative biologic for patients with nonresponse to and secondary failure with biologics, including the IL-17A inhibitors.

Recent findings support effective skin clearance and improved symptom management with ixekizumab and ustekinumab. Of note, ixekizumab was reported to provide rapid improvement in skin lesions and quality of life to a greater extent than guselkumab.

The IXORA-R double-blinded RCT compared the clinical benefit of participants 18 years and older taking standard approved dosages of ixekizumab (n=520) or guselkumab (n=507).8 Patients were included if they had plaque psoriasis for at least 6 months before baseline, an sPGA score of at least 3, PASI score of 12 or higher, 10% or greater BSA, no prior IL-17 inhibitor failure, no use of IL-23 p19 inhibitors, and no use of any biologic within the specified period prior to baseline. At week 12, ixekizumab showed superior clinical improvement measured by the proportion of participants achieving complete skin clearance (ie, PASI-100)(41%) compared to guselkumab (25%)(P<.001). There were more participants taking ixekizumab who reported DLQI of 0 or 1 (no impact of disease on quality of life)(34%) compared to guselkumab (21%)(P<.001) as early on as week 4. The most common AE was upper respiratory tract infection (7%) in both groups. The risk of treatment-emergent AEs (56%), discontinuation because of AEs (2%), and serious AEs (3%) were comparable in both groups. The number of injection-site reactions was higher with ixekizumab (13%) vs guselkumab (3%). The authors concluded that ixekizumab offers the ability to provide rapid relief of symptoms, which is associated with improved DLQI.8



Response to ustekinumab therapy was assessed in a patient cohort enrolled in the Corrona Psoriasis Registry. This study involved 178 participants 18 years and older with psoriasis involvement of 3% or greater BSA who were treated with ustekinumab.9 By their 6-month follow-up visit, 55.6% of participants achieved adequate treatment response (BSA improving to <3% or 75% from enrollment). Increasing patient age was significantly associated with decreased likelihood of achieving a response (odds ratio, 0.981 [95% confidence interval, 0.962-0.999]; P=.049). Ustekinumab is a practical option for psoriasis treatment that seems to yield better results in younger patients.9 This evidence reveals that increased patient age is a characteristic that may contribute to poor treatment response and should be considered when choosing the best fit for biologic therapy.

Final Thoughts

Using evidence-based interventions to treat patients is the cornerstone of ethical and high-quality medical care. This guide sought to provide relevant updates in a variety of both comparator and pivotal trials, with the goal of summarizing clinically relevant information that may be extracted from these trials to guide patient care. It is not an exhaustive review but may be utilized as a reference tool to fine-tune selection criteria in choosing 1 of 11 biologics for the treatment of psoriasis.

The advent of biologic therapy over the last 2 decades has transformed the treatment of psoriasis; patients who either are not good candidates for or have an inadequate response to traditional treatments (topicals and/or phototherapy) now have numerous options for treatment.1 Patients burdened by extensive disease, recurrent flares, and stubborn treatment areas are ideal candidates for biologics. There are 11 biologics approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)(Table) for treating moderate to severe plaque psoriasis as supported by grade A evidence. The FDA has authorized 1 new biologic—risankizumab—since the joint guidelines from the American Academy of Dermatology and National Psoriasis Foundation were released for the treatment of psoriasis with biologics.2 This article aims to address updates on recent clinical trial findings (April 2019 to April 2020) regarding biologic therapy initiation and maintenance for adult patients. Prescribers should use this update as guidance for determining the appropriate biologic class based on patient characteristics and for approaching biologic-experienced patients with refractory psoriasis. This update also may serve as a reference for the recommended dosing regimens of the 11 approved biologics.

Using Risankizumab

Risankizumab is a new biologic that selectively targets the IL-23 pathway by binding the p19 subunit of IL-23. It was approved by the FDA in April 2019. Two recent studies have demonstrated the efficacy of risankizumab in disease management.3,4

IMMvent was a double-blind, 2-part, phase 3, randomized controlled trial (RCT) of participants 18 years and older (N=605) with moderate to severe psoriasis (with or without psoriatic arthritis) across 11 countries.3 Inclusion criteria consisted of psoriasis involving at least 10% of the body surface area (BSA), absolute psoriasis area and severity index (PASI) score of 12 or higher, and static physician global assessment (sPGA) score of 3 or higher. Prior biologic treatment did not preclude study entry (excluding risankizumab or adalimumab), and nearly 40% of participants previously had been on a different biologic. Notably, this trial allowed for inclusion of patients with prior malignancy (>5 years prior) and patients who tested positive for exposure to tuberculosis (TB) but were not shown to have active TB (provided appropriate treatment for latent TB was started). Study participants identified as white (81%), Asian (14%), black/African American (4%), or other ethnicity (1%). Part A involved administration of 150 mg risankizumab (n=301) at weeks 0 and 4 or 80 mg adalimumab (n=304) loading dose at week 0 followed by 40 mg at week 1 and 40 mg every other week thereafter until the end of week 15. At week 16 there was a significant difference in proportion of participants achieving 90% or more improvement (PASI-90) with risankizumab (72%) vs adalimumab (47%)(P<.0001) and achieving an sPGA score of 0 or 1 (clear or almost clear) with risankizumab (84%) vs adalimumab (60%)(P<.0001). In part B (weeks 16–44), adalimumab immediate responder (PASI ≥50 to PASI <90) participants were re-randomized to continue adalimumab 40 mg every other week (starting from week 17 and stopping at week 44) or switch to 150 mg risankizumab administered at weeks 16, 20, and 32. Patients taking risankizumab in part A continued the drug, administered at weeks 16 and 28. At week 44, there was a significant difference in percentage of participants achieving PASI-90 with risankizumab (66%) vs adalimumab (21%)(P<.0001).3

IMMhance was another double-blind phase 3 RCT with 2 parts that assessed the clinical efficacy of risankizumab compared to placebo in patients 18 years or older (N=507) across 9 countries with the same inclusion criteria for patients as IMMvent.4 Part A involved administration of 150 mg risankizumab (n=407) or placebo (n=100) at weeks 0 and 4 using a 4:1 random allocation ratio. At week 16, regardless of initial treatment, all participants received 150 mg risankizumab. Treatment results at week 16 showed a significant difference in percentage of participants achieving PASI-90 with risankizumab (73.2%) vs placebo (2.0%)(P<.001) and sPGA score of 0 or 1 with risankizumab (83.5%) vs placebo (7.0%)(P<.001). Furthermore, in part B (weeks 16–104), at week 28 participants on risankizumab with an sPGA score of 0 or 1 were randomized with a 1:2 allocation ratio to continue 150 mg risankizumab or switch to placebo to produce a treatment withdrawal effect. Part B results showed a significant difference in the proportion of participants achieving an sPGA score of 0 or 1 with risankizumab (87.4%) vs placebo (61.3%)(P<.001) at week 52 and at week 104 with risankizumab (81.1%) vs placebo (7.1%)(P<.001). Risankizumab was well tolerated, with the most common adverse events (AEs) being nasopharyngitis (23.4%), upper respiratory tract infection (15.4%), and headache (6.8%). Serious AEs included cancer (2.6%; 2.2 events per 100 patient-years), hepatic events (4.6%) including hepatic cirrhosis (0.2%), and serious infections (1.8%; 1.4 events per 100 patient-years).4



Overall, the strengths of risankizumab with regard to its clinical efficacy and utility in biologic-experienced patients were confirmed in these studies. The inclusion of patients with prior treated malignancy and positive TB tests also was more in line with what one might encounter with real-world practice and, as such, provided valuable data to help aid treatment decisions. These 2 studies provided valuable evidence for the therapeutic benefit and relatively mild safety profile of risankizumab in treatment of moderate to severe psoriasis for patients with and without prior biologic therapy.

 

 

Choosing a Biologic

Refractory psoriasis involves nonresponse (primary failure) or return of disease symptoms after initial improvement (secondary failure) with a biologic. Selecting a biologic for patients who have experienced prior biologic failure is difficult. It is still unknown whether it is more efficacious for patients to try a same-class drug or a biologic targeting a different inflammatory pathway or cytokine. Studies have shown mixed results regarding how to manage patients with biologic failure, with both approaches demonstrating positive outcomes.

One analysis of the Corrona Psoriasis Registry included 144 patients, the majority of whom (89.8%) were biologic experienced, who began secukinumab treatment and returned for a 6-month follow-up (5–9 months).5 Patients enrolled in the registry were 18 years or older, had been diagnosed with psoriasis by a dermatologist, and initiated or switched an FDA-approved systemic agent or biologic within the last 12 months. Of biologic-experienced participants, 37.7% had used 3 or more biologics. More than half of included participants were either male (55%) or obese (53.4%). Comorbidities included hypertension (43.2%), hyperlipidemia (33.9%), anxiety (20.3%), diabetes mellitus (15.3%), cardiovascular disease (14.4%), and depression (13.6%). After 6 months of treatment, there was significant improvement in the involvement of BSA (mean difference, 12.1), investigator global assessment score (1.5), dermatology life quality index (DLQI)(4.8), pain (23.2), itch (−30.8), fatigue (8.8), and work productivity (9.2)(P<.01). Secukinumab therapy displayed notable reduction in symptom severity in this population with difficult-to-treat psoriasis. Its relative success in this cohort provides support for its use in treating patients who have failed other classes of biologics.5

Evidence supporting reduction of pruritus and pain with secukinumab also was notable. The CLEAR phase 3 RCT involved participants treated with 300 mg secukinumab every week for the first 4 weeks and then every 4 weeks thereafter for 48 weeks (n=312), up to 100 weeks (n=277).6 Participants had complete relief of pain (score 0), itching, and scaling at week 16 (69.4%, 49.7%, and 61.2%, respectively), week 52 (67.1%, 48.9%, and 53.3%, respectively), and week 104 (70.9%, 47.4%, and 54.8%, respectively). Reported AEs included candida infections (7.2%), malignant or unspecified tumors (1.5%), and neutropenia (<1%).6

Researchers investigated intraclass switching to brodalumab with prior failure of IL-17 inhibitors. An open-label study involved participants (n=39) with prior failure with secukinumab or ixekizumab therapy.7 Participants were administered 210 mg brodalumab with standard dosing at weeks 0, 1, and 2, and then every 2 weeks thereafter. At week 16, 69% of participants achieved PASI-75, 44% achieved PASI-90, 28% achieved PASI-100, and 62% achieved an sPGA score of 0 or 1. The authors attributed the relative success of brodalumab compared to prior anti–IL-17 agents to inhibition of the IL-17 receptor with brodalumab rather than the IL-17A ligand.7 Brodalumab may be a useful alternative biologic for patients with nonresponse to and secondary failure with biologics, including the IL-17A inhibitors.

Recent findings support effective skin clearance and improved symptom management with ixekizumab and ustekinumab. Of note, ixekizumab was reported to provide rapid improvement in skin lesions and quality of life to a greater extent than guselkumab.

The IXORA-R double-blinded RCT compared the clinical benefit of participants 18 years and older taking standard approved dosages of ixekizumab (n=520) or guselkumab (n=507).8 Patients were included if they had plaque psoriasis for at least 6 months before baseline, an sPGA score of at least 3, PASI score of 12 or higher, 10% or greater BSA, no prior IL-17 inhibitor failure, no use of IL-23 p19 inhibitors, and no use of any biologic within the specified period prior to baseline. At week 12, ixekizumab showed superior clinical improvement measured by the proportion of participants achieving complete skin clearance (ie, PASI-100)(41%) compared to guselkumab (25%)(P<.001). There were more participants taking ixekizumab who reported DLQI of 0 or 1 (no impact of disease on quality of life)(34%) compared to guselkumab (21%)(P<.001) as early on as week 4. The most common AE was upper respiratory tract infection (7%) in both groups. The risk of treatment-emergent AEs (56%), discontinuation because of AEs (2%), and serious AEs (3%) were comparable in both groups. The number of injection-site reactions was higher with ixekizumab (13%) vs guselkumab (3%). The authors concluded that ixekizumab offers the ability to provide rapid relief of symptoms, which is associated with improved DLQI.8



Response to ustekinumab therapy was assessed in a patient cohort enrolled in the Corrona Psoriasis Registry. This study involved 178 participants 18 years and older with psoriasis involvement of 3% or greater BSA who were treated with ustekinumab.9 By their 6-month follow-up visit, 55.6% of participants achieved adequate treatment response (BSA improving to <3% or 75% from enrollment). Increasing patient age was significantly associated with decreased likelihood of achieving a response (odds ratio, 0.981 [95% confidence interval, 0.962-0.999]; P=.049). Ustekinumab is a practical option for psoriasis treatment that seems to yield better results in younger patients.9 This evidence reveals that increased patient age is a characteristic that may contribute to poor treatment response and should be considered when choosing the best fit for biologic therapy.

Final Thoughts

Using evidence-based interventions to treat patients is the cornerstone of ethical and high-quality medical care. This guide sought to provide relevant updates in a variety of both comparator and pivotal trials, with the goal of summarizing clinically relevant information that may be extracted from these trials to guide patient care. It is not an exhaustive review but may be utilized as a reference tool to fine-tune selection criteria in choosing 1 of 11 biologics for the treatment of psoriasis.

References
  1. Pithadia DJ, Reynolds KA, Lee EB, et al. Translating the 2019 AAD-NPF Guidelines of Care for the Management of Psoriasis With Biologics to clinical practice. Cutis. 2019;104(suppl 2):12-16.
  2. Menter A, Strober BE, Kaplan DH, et al. Joint AAD-NPF guidelines of care for the management and treatment of psoriasis with biologics [published online February 13, 2019]. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2019;80:1029-1072.
  3. Reich K, Gooderham M, Thaçi D, et al. Risankizumab compared with adalimumab in patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis (IMMvent): a randomised, double-blind, active-comparator-controlled phase 3 trial. Lancet. 2019;394:576-586.
  4. Blauvelt A, Leonardi CL, Gooderham M, et al. Efficacy and safety of continuous risankizumab therapy vs treatment withdrawal in patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis: a phase 3 randomized clinical trial. JAMA Dermatol. 2020;156:649-658.
  5. Strober BE, Germino R, Guana A, et al. US real-world effectiveness of secukinumab for the treatment of psoriasis: 6-month analysis from the Corrona Psoriasis Registry. J Dermatolog Treat. 2020;31:333-341.
  6. Thaçi D, Puig L, Reich K, et al. Secukinumab demonstrates sustained efficacy in clearing skin and improving patient-reported outcomes in patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis through 2 years of treatment: results from the CLEAR study. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2019;81:1405-1409.
  7. Kimmel G, Chima M, Kim HJ, et al. Brodalumab in the treatment of moderate to severe psoriasis in patients when previous anti-interleukin 17A therapies have failed. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2019;81:857-859.
  8. Blauvelt A, Papp K, Gottlieb A, et al. A head‐to‐head comparison of ixekizumab vs. guselkumab in patients with moderate‐to‐severe plaque psoriasis: 12‐week efficacy, safety and speed of response from a randomized, double‐blinded trial. Br J Dermatol. 2020;182:1348-1358.
  9. Van Voorhees AS, Mason MA, Harrold LR, et al. Characterization of insufficient responders to ustekinumab in patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis in the US Corrona Psoriasis Registry [published online February 27, 2020]. J Dermatolog Treat. doi:10.1080/09546634.2020.1720586.
References
  1. Pithadia DJ, Reynolds KA, Lee EB, et al. Translating the 2019 AAD-NPF Guidelines of Care for the Management of Psoriasis With Biologics to clinical practice. Cutis. 2019;104(suppl 2):12-16.
  2. Menter A, Strober BE, Kaplan DH, et al. Joint AAD-NPF guidelines of care for the management and treatment of psoriasis with biologics [published online February 13, 2019]. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2019;80:1029-1072.
  3. Reich K, Gooderham M, Thaçi D, et al. Risankizumab compared with adalimumab in patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis (IMMvent): a randomised, double-blind, active-comparator-controlled phase 3 trial. Lancet. 2019;394:576-586.
  4. Blauvelt A, Leonardi CL, Gooderham M, et al. Efficacy and safety of continuous risankizumab therapy vs treatment withdrawal in patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis: a phase 3 randomized clinical trial. JAMA Dermatol. 2020;156:649-658.
  5. Strober BE, Germino R, Guana A, et al. US real-world effectiveness of secukinumab for the treatment of psoriasis: 6-month analysis from the Corrona Psoriasis Registry. J Dermatolog Treat. 2020;31:333-341.
  6. Thaçi D, Puig L, Reich K, et al. Secukinumab demonstrates sustained efficacy in clearing skin and improving patient-reported outcomes in patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis through 2 years of treatment: results from the CLEAR study. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2019;81:1405-1409.
  7. Kimmel G, Chima M, Kim HJ, et al. Brodalumab in the treatment of moderate to severe psoriasis in patients when previous anti-interleukin 17A therapies have failed. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2019;81:857-859.
  8. Blauvelt A, Papp K, Gottlieb A, et al. A head‐to‐head comparison of ixekizumab vs. guselkumab in patients with moderate‐to‐severe plaque psoriasis: 12‐week efficacy, safety and speed of response from a randomized, double‐blinded trial. Br J Dermatol. 2020;182:1348-1358.
  9. Van Voorhees AS, Mason MA, Harrold LR, et al. Characterization of insufficient responders to ustekinumab in patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis in the US Corrona Psoriasis Registry [published online February 27, 2020]. J Dermatolog Treat. doi:10.1080/09546634.2020.1720586.
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Practice Points

  • Inform patients about current data guiding treatment from clinical trials of biologics.
  • Explain to patients that finding the treatment that is the best fit for them may require trial and error, as everyone responds to treatments differently.
  • Consult with patients about misconceptions and potential fears about biologics and what the protocol is for monitoring safety during treatment.
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