Filgotinib studied in psoriatic arthritis
The separate, phase 2 study of filgotinib in patients with psoriatic arthritis (PsA) reported during the meeting showed safety “in line with previous reports without new safety signals” in a multicenter trial with 131 patients randomized to receive oral filgotinib 200 mg daily for 16 weeks or placebo, Philip J. Mease, MD, reported in a talk at the meeting. For the primary endpoint of achievement of ACR20 response after 16 weeks, the rate was 80% of the filgotinib-treated patients and 33% of patients in the placebo group, a statistically significant difference, said Dr. Mease, a rheumatologist at Swedish Medical Center in Seattle.
EQUATOR (A Study to Assess Efficacy and Safety of Filgotinib in Active Psoriatic Arthritis) enrolled patients at sites in seven European countries who had “very active” PsA and either a history of or current plaque psoriasis. All patients had to have a history of either insufficient response to or intolerance of at least one conventional synthetic DMARD. The enrollment criteria had no specifications for prior use of an anti–tumor necrosis factor drug, and about 15% of patients had used least one of these drugs. At entry, about three-quarters of patients were on treatment with a conventional synthetic DMARD and about a quarter received treatment with a glucocorticoid.
The results showed statistically significant benefits from filgotinib, compared with placebo, for several other measures of arthritis activity, as well as measures of psoriasis, enthesitis, and pain, Dr. Mease reported. He also highlighted a “lack of meaningful changes in hemoglobin” or other laboratory measures that, along with the efficacy findings, make filgotinib “a promising first step” for patients with PsA. Dr. Mease also noted that roughly concurrently with his report, a separate group of researchers published results from a phase 2 study of filgotinib in patients with ankylosing spondylitis that also found evidence for efficacy and safety during 12 weeks of treating 116 randomized patients (Lancet. 2018 Oct 22. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736[18]32463-2).
FINCH 2 was sponsored by Galapagos and Gilead, the two companies developing filgotinib. Dr. Genovese has had financial relationships with Galapagos and Gilead and also with AbbVie, Lilly, and Pfizer. Dr. Mease has had financial relationships with Galapagos and Gilead and a dozen other companies.
SOURCES: Genovese M et al. Arthritis Rheumatol. 2018;70(Suppl 10), Abstract L06; Mease P et al. Arthritis Rheumatol. 2018;70(Suppl 10), Abstract 1821.