Conference Coverage

TULIP trials show clinical benefit of anifrolumab for SLE


 

REPORTING FROM ACR 2019

TULIP-2

BICLA response, the primary endpoint of TULIP-2, was achieved by 47.8% of 180 patients who received anifrolumab, compared with 31.5% of 182 who received placebo, said Dr. Morand, professor and head of the School of Clinical Sciences at Monash University, Melbourne.

“The effect size was 16.3 percentage points with an adjusted p value of 0.001. Therefore, the primary outcome of this trial was attained,” said Dr. Morand, who also is head of the Monash Health Rheumatology Unit. “Separation between the treatment arms occurred early and was maintained across the progression of the trial.”

Anifrolumab was also superior to placebo for key secondary endpoints, including OCS dose reduction to 7.5 mg/day or less (51.5% vs. 30.2%) and CLASI response (49.0% vs. 25.0%).

“Joint responses did not show a significant difference between the anifrolumab and placebo arms,” he said, adding that the annualized flare rate also did not differ significantly between the groups, but was numerically lower in anifrolumab-treated patients (0.43 vs. 0.64; rate ratio, 0.67; P = .081).

Numeric differences also favored anifrolumab for multiple secondary endpoints, including SRI responses, time to onset of BICLA-sustained response, and time to first flare, he noted.

Further, in patients with high baseline IFNGS, anifrolumab induced neutralization of IFNGS by week 12, with a median suppression of 88.0%, which persisted for the duration of the study; no such effect was seen in the placebo arm.

Serum anti–double stranded DNA also trended toward normalization with anifrolumab.

The safety profile of anifrolumab was similar to that seen in previous trials, including TULIP-1, with herpes zoster occurring more often in those receiving anifrolumab (7.2% vs. 1.1% in the placebo group), Dr. Morand said, noting that “all herpes zoster episodes were cutaneous, all responded to antiviral therapy, and none required [treatment] discontinuation.”

Serious adverse events, including pneumonia and SLE worsening, occurred less frequently in the anifrolumab arm (8.3% vs. 17.0%, respectively), as did adverse events leading to treatment discontinuation (2.8% and 7.1%). One death occurred in the anifrolumab group from community-acquired pneumonia, and few patients (0.6%) developed antidrug antibodies.

No new safety signals were identified, he said, noting that “the findings add to cumulative evidence identifying anifrolumab as a potential new treatment option for SLE.”

“In conclusion, TULIP-2 was a positive phase 3 trial in lupus, and there aren’t many times that that sentence has been spoken,” he said.

The TULIP-1 and -2 trials were sponsored by AstraZeneca. Dr. Furie And Dr. Morand both reported grant/research support and consulting fees from AstraZeneca, as well as speaker’s bureau participation for AstraZeneca.

SOURCES: Furie RA et al. Arthritis Rheumatol. 2019;71(suppl 10), Abstract 1763; Morand EF et al. Arthritis Rheumatol. 2019;71(suppl 10), Abstract L17.

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