MEDICATIONS: LONG-TERM ETANERCEPT
TREATMENT REDUCES PSORIASIS SEVERITY WITHOUT INCREASED ADVERSE EVENTS
June 25, 2007 — Extended exposure to the psoriasis medication etanercept does
not appear to cause more infections or adverse events than placebo, and
improvements in several measures of disease severity were observed for up to 96
weeks of therapy, according to a study in the June issue of Archives of
Dermatology, a journal of the American Medical Association.
Psoriasis, a chronic inflammatory skin disorder, usually requires long-term
therapy, according to background information in the article. "Serum and affected
tissue levels of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) are elevated in patients with
psoriasis compared with levels in uninvolved skin of patients with psoriasis and
in healthy individuals, suggesting that TNF plays an important role in the
pathogenesis of the disease," the authors write. Etanercept, which binds with
TNF, has been approved to treat several inflammatory diseases, including
psoriasis.
Stephen Tyring, M.D., Ph.D., The University of Texas Health Science Center at
Houston, and colleagues conducted a phase three randomized, double-blind trial
with an open-label extension (during which all patients were aware that they
were taking the active drug) from May 23, 2003, through June 22, 2005. After a
12-week period during which 618 patients with moderate to severe psoriasis were
randomly assigned to receive either placebo or 50 milligrams of etanercept twice
weekly (the current recommended dosage for psoriasis) for 12 weeks, all 591
continuing patients (average age 45.7) received etanercept for up to 84 weeks.
During this open-label period, safety and efficacy evaluations were completed
every 12 weeks. Psoriasis severity was measured using the Psoriasis Area and
Severity Index (PASI) score, where zero means no disease and 72 is the most
severe disease.
"Exposure-adjusted rates of adverse events, serious adverse events,
infections and serious infections were similar for placebo and etanercept
treatments," the authors write. "Patients responded within two weeks to
etanercept, with statistically significant differences in the Psoriasis Area and
Severity Index and Dermatology Life Quality Index between the etanercept and
placebo groups at week 12. At week 24, after 12 weeks of open-label etanercept
treatment, patients in the original placebo group had clinical benefits
comparable to those of patients in the original etanercept group."
Improvements in PASI scores peaked at week 48, and at the end of the study,
51.6 percent of the original placebo group and 51.1 percent of the original
etanercept group improved by at least 75 percent. A total of 18.3 percent of
patients developed antibodies to etanercept during the study, but these
antibodies did not appear to cause adverse events or reduce the drug's
effectiveness.
"In conclusion, this study represents, to our knowledge, the longest
continuous exposure of patients with psoriasis to 50 milligrams of etanercept
biweekly and provides further insights into the safety and efficacy of high-dose
etanercept therapy for the management of moderate to severe psoriasis," the
authors conclude.
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