Conference Coverage

JAK inhibitors have top risk for herpes zoster among newer RA DMARDs


 

FROM EULAR 2020 E-CONGRESS

Patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) who are treated with Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors had the highest risk of developing herpes zoster among newer disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs), according to data released from the German biologics registry.

Dr. Anja Strangfeld of the German Rheumatism Research Center, Berlin

Dr. Anja Strangfeld

These are believed to be the first European data on the risk of herpes zoster with JAK inhibitors and showed that the crude incidence rate of herpes zoster per 1,000 patient-years was 24.9 with JAK inhibitors, compared with just 5.8 for controls taking conventional synthetic (cs) DMARDs.

The risk of herpes zoster was also increased with other biologic (b) and targeted synthetic (ts) DMARDs that were assessed, with crude rates per 1,000 patient-years of 10.4 for monoclonal tumor necrosis factor inhibitors (TNFi), 10.5 for B-cell targeted therapies, 9.4 for T-cell costimulation modulators, 9.0 for soluble TNF receptors, and 8.5 for interleukin (IL)-6 inhibitors.

Overall, JAK inhibitor treatment was associated with a fivefold higher risk of herpes zoster (hazard ratio, 5.0; P < .0001), compared with the control csDMARD population after adjustment using an inverse probability weights (IPW) method.

“The general risk of herpes zoster is [twofold] higher in patients with rheumatoid arthritis when you compare it with the general population,” said Anja Strangfeld, MD of the German Research Center, Berlin, and one of the three RABBIT [Rheumatoide Arthritis: Biobachtung der Biologika-Therapie] principal investigators.

“If you think of all the treatments that RA patients get, then the risk is further increased with bDMARD and [JAK inhibitor] treatments,” she added in an interview. While the risk was highest with JAK inhibitors, “we also saw that monoclonal TNF antibodies as well as all the other biologic DMARD treatments have a higher risk of herpes zoster in RA patients, compared to csDMARD therapy,” Dr. Strangfeld said.

Adjusted IPW HR for the other RA treatments showed an increased herpes zoster risk for all but the soluble TNF receptor agents, at 1.6 for IL-6 inhibitors (P = .0045) and monoclonal TNFi antibodies (P = .0003), and 1.7 for B-cell targeted therapies (P = .00026) and T-cell costimulation modulators (P = .0048).

Dr. Strangfeld presented these data during the annual European Congress of Rheumatology, held online this year due to COVID-19. The analysis included 12,470 patients with RA enrolled in RABBIT from 2007 onward and who had been treated with monoclonal TNF inhibitor antibodies, cell-targeted therapies, and tsDMARDs such as JAK inhibitors. In all, at the data cutoff at the end of April 2019, 452 cases of herpes zoster were recorded in 433 patients, of which 52 cases were serious.

“The reactivation of the varicella zoster virus causing the herpes zoster is triggered by a decline of cellular immunity. This can be due to aging or immune suppression of any kind,” Dr. Strangfeld said in her presentation.

“The Cox regression [analysis] revealed that higher age and intake of glucocorticoids were associated with an increased risk of herpes zoster,” she reported, with a dose dependent increase with glucocorticoids. IPW HR for age per 10 years was 1.3 (P < .0001) and 1.9 (P = .0022) for higher doses of glucocorticoids (>10 vs. 0 mg/day).

Loreto Carmona, who works at the Instituto de Salud Musculoesquelética in Madrid

Dr. Loreto Carmona

Commenting on the study, rheumatologist and epidemiologist Loreto Carmona, MD, PhD, said: “This is a very interesting study. The results are confident and precise. The frequency of herpes zoster infection [based on crude incidence rate estimates] is very high. However, we must focus on the [multivariable with IPW] analysis after taking into account baseline risk.”

Dr. Carmona, who is the chair of the congress’s Abstract Selection Committee and is the scientific director of the Instituto de Salud Musculoesquelética in Madrid, added: “Having a disease with high levels of activity or a disease refractory to treatments [both of which were very likely used in creating the IPW] levels off the risk a bit. Also, because RA by itself, glucocorticoids, and age all increase the risk. Still, jakinibs [JAK inhibitors] stand out as the treatment related to higher risk of herpes zoster infection.”

Dr. Strangfeld and fellow RABBIT investigators have previously looked at the risk of herpes zoster in patients treated with anti–TNF-alpha agents (JAMA. 2009;301[7]:737-44). They found that monoclonal anti–TNF-alpha agents may be associated with increased risk of herpes zoster, which is now confirmed by the current analysis. The reason for looking at herpes zoster risk again is that since that first analysis, many more therapies have become available for RA during the past 10 years, notably the tsDMARDs.

Herpes zoster may not always be a serious event, Dr. Strangfeld said in the interview, “but it diminishes your quality of life; it can also be associated with pain and may be followed by postherpetic neuralgia, which is very painful.” With new herpes zoster vaccinations available, it is now possible to vaccinate patients more easily. “This is advisable for all kinds of treatments,” she said.

“What we found was quite in agreement with the data that we know from the U.S., from the observational studies, for example from the Corrona database,” Dr. Strangfeld stated. The key finding is that the risk of herpes zoster is increased to some level, almost regardless of which drug is chosen, she said. “This gives a clear message that systematic herpes zoster vaccination should be done in patients with RA,” she suggested.

The German biologics registry RABBIT is supported by a joint unconditional grant from AbbVie, Amgen, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Celltrion, Hexal, Lilly, Merck Sharp & Dohme, Mylan, Pfizer, Roche, Samsung Bioepis, Sanofi-Aventis, and UCB. Dr. Strangfeld has received speaker fees from AbbVie, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Merck Sharp & Dohme, Pfizer, Roche, Sanofi-Aventis, and UCB. Dr. Carmona had no relevant conflicts of interest to disclose.

SOURCE: Strangfeld A et al. Ann Rheum Dis. 2020;79[suppl 1]:150. Abstract OP0238.

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