Key clinical point: Upadacitinib led to early, clinically meaningful, and sustained improvements in pain in patients with psoriatic arthritis (PsA) and an inadequate response to prior biological or nonbiological disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (b/nbDMARD).
Major finding: A significantly higher proportion of patients receiving 15 mg upadacitinib vs. placebo achieved ≥30%, ≥50%, and ≥70% reductions in pain as early as at 2 weeks ( P < .05), with improvements sustained till week 56.
Study details: Findings are from an analysis of 2 phase 3 trials, SELECT-PsA 1 and SELECT-PsA 2 , including 1113 patients with active PsA and an inadequate response to ≥1 nb/bDMARD who were randomly assigned to receive 15 mg upadacitinib once daily, placebo, or adalimumab (only in the SELECT-PsA 1 study).
Disclosures: This study was sponsored by AbbVie. Eight authors declared serving as employees or owning stock/stock options in AbbVie and other authors reported ties with several sources, including AbbVie.
Source: McInnes IB et al. Effect of upadacitinib on reducing pain in patients with active psoriatic arthritis or ankylosing spondylitis: Post hoc analysis of three randomised clinical trials. RMD Open. 2022;8:e002049 (Mar 24). Doi: 10.1136/rmdopen-2021-002049