News from the FDA/CDC

Arcalyst gets FDA nod as first therapy for recurrent pericarditis


 

The Food and Drug Administration has approved rilonacept (Arcalyst) to treat recurrent pericarditis and reduce the risk for recurrence in adults and children 12 years and older.

Approval of the weekly subcutaneous injection offers patients the first and only FDA-approved therapy for recurrent pericarditis, the agency said in a release.

Recurrent pericarditis is characterized by a remitting relapsing inflammation of the pericardium, and therapeutic options have been limited to NSAIDs, colchicine, and corticosteroids.

Rilonacept is a recombinant fusion protein that blocks interleukin-1 alpha and interleukin-1 beta signaling. It is already approved by the FDA to treat a group of rare inherited inflammatory diseases called cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes.

The new indication is based on the pivotal phase 3 RHAPSODY trial in 86 patients with acute symptoms of recurrent pericarditis and systemic inflammation. After randomization, pericarditis recurred in 2 of 30 patients (7%) treated with rilonacept and in 23 of 31 patients (74%) treated with placebo, representing a 96% reduction in the relative risk for recurrence with rilonacept.

Patients who received rilonacept were also pain free or had minimal pain on 98% of trial days, whereas those who received placebo had minimal or no pain on 46% of trial days.

The most common adverse effects of rilonacept are injection-site reactions and upper-respiratory tract infections.

Serious, life-threatening infections have been reported in patients taking rilonacept, according to the FDA. Patients with active or chronic infections should not take the drug.

The FDA label also advises that patients should avoid live vaccines while taking rilonacept and that it should be discontinued if a hypersensitivity reaction occurs.

The commercial launch is expected in April, according to the company.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Recommended Reading

Women and ACS: Focus on typical symptoms to improve outcomes
MDedge Cardiology
New light cast on type 2 MI aims to sharpen diagnosis, therapy
MDedge Cardiology
Study: Central sleep apnea is common in ticagrelor users post ACS
MDedge Cardiology
Myocardial injury seen on MRI in 54% of recovered COVID-19 patients
MDedge Cardiology
Eating fish tied to fewer CVD events in high-risk people
MDedge Cardiology
Target-lesion failure reduced 2 years after MI with biodegradable stent
MDedge Cardiology
Colchicine before PCI for acute MI fails to improve major outcomes
MDedge Cardiology
Ultraprocessed foods, many marketed as healthy, raise CVD risk
MDedge Cardiology
ApoB may better predict mortality risk in statin-treated patients
MDedge Cardiology
Low concordance between troponin assays for ACS
MDedge Cardiology