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Tofacitinib rapidly improves RA signs and symptoms

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Reassuring study, but leaves questions

Dr. Kremer and his associates' report is a good study that will reassure rheumatologists that it is possible to use tofacitinib with nonbiologic DMARDs. It also reinforces that the dose of tofacitinib that is approved in North America is too low for many patients. There is a nice dose response for DAS28 remission (placebo, 2.6%; tofacitinib, 5 mg twice daily, 8.5%; tofacitinib 10 mg twice daily, 12.5%) and HAQ-DI (-0.16, -0.44, and -0.53, respectively). This was less the case for the ACR20 responses (30.8%, 52.1%, and 56.6%, respectively), but even here there is some trend toward a dose response.

On the other hand, there are some aspects of this study that could be clearer. The patients themselves had long disease duration and relatively high disease activity, so it is not clear that the results apply to all patients. Furthermore, about 10% of patients were on biologics prior to entering the study, and it is not clear how long those biologics had actually been stopped. (The inclusion criteria were not very clear on this aspect.) The patients were allowed on more than one DMARD, and it would have been good to know the breakdown of responses by the number of concomitant DMARDs. Also, nearly 60% of the patients were on corticosteroids, and there is no discussion of the effect of this drug on response or toxicity. Finally, the breakdown of patients was about 20% on placebo initially, compared with 80% on initial tofacitinib, thus introducing the possibility of an unbalanced early response.

The bottom line is that this article is generally reassuring and allows rheumatologists to use tofacitinib more broadly. It reinforces the need for sufficient data to allow higher doses of drugs to be approved in the United States, but, like many studies, leaves many questions (especially on how to consider combinations and corticosteroids) and does not allow the degree of generalization that would have been ideal.

Daniel E. Furst, M.D., is the Carl M. Pearson Professor of Rheumatology at the at the University of California, Los Angeles. He has been a consultant to Pfizer and has received travel support and meals from the company. He has also been a consultant to or received grant support from other pharmaceutical companies marketing drugs for rheumatoid arthritis, including Abbott, Amgen, and Bristol-Myers Squibb.


 

FROM ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE

The authors reported four treatment-related opportunistic infections: disseminated herpes zoster, cryptococcal pneumonia, and two cases of pulmonary tuberculosis. There were four deaths during the study, but only one, respiratory failure, was deemed to be treatment related.

The trial’s Cardiovascular Safety Endpoint Adjudication Committee determined that three patients had events that were notable: a transient ischemic attack in a patient taking 5 mg, a cerebrovascular accident in a patient taking 5 mg, and heart failure in a patient taking 10 mg who eventually died.

In patients taking tofacitinib, the authors also reported decreases in mean neutrophil counts at 3 months and increases in high- and low-density lipoprotein levels that were sustained at 12 months after baseline.

These results have not impressed the European Medicines Agency. In July, the EMA’s Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) reaffirmed an opinion issued in April that tofacitinib’s benefits did not outweigh its risks. The CHMP recommended against approval of the drug. Pfizer said in a release that it is evaluating the opinion and "will determine next steps to resubmit" its approval application.

Dr. Kremer is the founder and president of the Consortium of Rheumatology Researchers of America (CORRONA) registry, which receives funding from Pfizer. He received a research grant from Pfizer to conduct the study and has been a consultant to Pfizer for the development of tofacitinib. Several other authors reported receiving grants from Pfizer and performing consultant work to Pfizer in relation to the trial. Other authors are Pfizer employees.

aault@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @aliciaault

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