Safety and effectiveness of abatacept in Japanese non-elderly and elderly patients with rheumatoid arthritis in an all-cases post-marketing surveillance

Masayoshi Harigai, Naoki Ishiguro, Shigeko Inokuma, Tsuneyo Mimori, Junnosuke Ryu, Syuji Takei, Tsutomu Takeuchi, Yoshiya Tanaka, Yoshinari Takasaki, Hisashi Yamanaka, Yuri Yoshizawa, Ichino Chinen, Toru Nakao, Takao Koike

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

16 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Objectives: To investigate the safety, effectiveness, and risk-benefit balance of intravenous abatacept (ABA) in non-elderly (<65 years: NEG) and elderly (≥65 years: EG) rheumatoid arthritis patients. Methods: This sub-analysis of an all-cases postmarketing surveillance in Japan assessed safety in all enrolled patients and effectiveness in those with Disease Activity Score 28 based on C-reactive protein (DAS28-CRP) measurements at ≥2 time points including baseline. Risk-benefit was evaluated based on infections and DAS28-CRP improvement >1.2. Results: The NEG and EG of the safety analysis set comprised 2,170 and 1,712 patients, respectively; corresponding 6-month ABA retention rates were 80.2% and 77.1%. The NEG had fewer adverse drug reactions (14.5% vs. 17.2%, p =.021) and infections (4.8% vs. 7.2%, p =.002) than the EG. DAS28-CRP changed similarly between groups. The proportion of patients with low-risk/high-benefit and high-risk/low-benefit were 33.1% and 6.9% (NEG) and 29.7% and 9.0% (EG). Low-risk/high-benefit patients were younger, had shorter disease duration and fewer comorbidities, and were with less use of oral glucocorticoid and prior biologics, more use of methotrexate and higher DAS28-CRP than high-risk/low-benefit patients at baseline. Conclusion: ABA was well tolerated and similarly efficacious in the EG and NEG. Identification of factors related to low-risk/high-benefit may aid appropriate patient selection.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)747-755
Number of pages9
JournalModern rheumatology
Volume29
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2019 Sept 3

Keywords

  • Abatacept
  • elderly
  • non-elderly
  • rheumatoid arthritis
  • risk-benefit balance

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Rheumatology

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