Novel Fluticasone Delivery
In the same session, James A. Helliwell, MD, cofounder, director, and chief executive officer of Eupraxia Pharmaceuticals in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, presented updated data from the SPRINGBOARD phase 2B trial of EP-104IAR, a novel long-acting formulation of the corticosteroid fluticasone propionate.
Dr. Helliwell, a cardiothoracic anesthesiologist, explained that EP-104IAR uses proprietary technology to form fluticasone into a crystal that can then be injected directly into the joint. This then slowly diffuses out to provide a highly localized treatment.
The SPRINGBOARD trial recruited just over 300 individuals with moderate knee OA and moderate to severe WOMAC pain and randomly allocated 164 to a single IA injection of EP-104IAR and 164 to a matching vehicle injection as a placebo. The latter was a slightly viscous substance that behaved like hyaluronic acid, Dr. Helliwell said.
The LSM change in total WOMAC score from baseline to week 12 showed a greater improvement with EP-104IAR than with placebo in a per protocol analysis (−2.79 vs −2.07; P = .002). Similar results were seen for the WOMAC subscales of pain (−2.97 vs −2.24; P = .003), function (−2.64 vs −1.99; P = .005), and stiffness (−2.85 vs −2.05; P = .001).
These differences persisted, Dr. Helliwell reported, out to a 20-week assessment for total WOMAC score, function, and stiffness and out to a 15-week assessment for WOMAC pain.
It’s probably no surprise that a steroid works, Dr. Helliwell said, noting that the safety profile of EP-104IAR may be better than that of regular IA steroid injection because it has “few off-target” effects. He reported that there were “minimal, clinically insignificant, and transient effects” of EP-104IAR on serum cortisol. There was no effect on glucose metabolism, even in patients with diabetes, he said.
“There is a group of our patients that we give long-acting steroids to in the joint, so it looked like [the EP-104IAR] safety profile was really good,” Dr. Lane told this news organization. However, she added: “I’m worried about the price tag associated with it.”
PPS
Although it perhaps can’t be described as a novel injectable per se, Mukesh Ahuja, MBBS, global clinical head of osteoarthritis at Paradigm Biopharmaceuticals, presented results of the novel use of PPS.
“PPS is a non-opioid, semi-synthetic xylose-based polysaccharide that is derived from beechwood trees,” Dr. Ahuja said. “It has a long-track record for treating pain, inflammation, and thrombosis in humans.”
There are currently two approved formulations: Oral capsules used for the treatment of interstitial cystitis in the European Union, United States, and Australia and an injectable form used in Italy for thromboprophylaxis.
Dr. Ahuja presented data from a phase 2 trial that looked at the effect of once- or twice-weekly subcutaneous injections of PPS vs placebo in 61 people with knee OA pain. Assessments were made after 56, 168, and 365 days of treatment.
Results showed PPS injections resulted in significant improvements in total WOMAC score, WOMAC pain, and WOMAC function, with more PPS- than placebo-treated individuals achieving and then maintaining at least a 30% or greater improvement in pain and a 56% improvement in function.
Rescue medication use was lower in the PPS-treated patients, and Patient Global Impression of Change were significantly higher, Dr. Ahuja said.
Exploratory analyses of synovial fluid biomarkers showed PPS could be having a direct inflammatory effect, with reductions in several proinflammatory cytokines, such as IL-6 and tumor necrosis factor alpha.
An assessment of OA disease progression using MRI analysis suggested that there may be an effect on cartilage thickness and volume, as well as bone marrow lesions and overall joint inflammation.