Current Medical Research and Opinion | 2019

Safety and efficacy of fulranumab in osteoarthritis of the hip and knee: results from four early terminated phase III randomized studies

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract Objective: To evaluate the safety and efficacy of fulranumab as adjunct or monotherapy in patients with knee or hip pain related to moderate-to-severe osteoarthritis. Methods: Osteoarthritic patients (aged ≥18\u2009years) from four phase 3 randomized, double-blind (DB), placebo-controlled studies were randomized to receive placebo, fulranumab 1\u2009mg every 4\u2009weeks (Q4wk), or 3\u2009mg Q4wk in 16-week DB phase, followed by a 52-week post-treatment follow-up phase. Safety assessments included treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs), and neurological, sympathetic, and joint-related events of interest. Efficacy assessments included pain and physical function sub-scales of Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) scores. Results: Of 245 patients from the ITT set (median age\u2009=\u200964\u2009years; 62% women), 84 (34%) completed the DB phase; the majority of discontinuations (57%) were due to early study termination. In the DB phase, the incidence of TEAEs in fulranumab 3\u2009mg (57.8%) and 1\u2009mg (56.8%) was similar to placebo (56.8%). Two events adjudicated as joint-related events of interest include rapidly progressive osteoarthritis and fracture of unknown etiology. There were no new neurological TEAEs. Fulranumab showed evidence of efficacy in improving pain and physical function based on WOMAC sub-scale scores. Due to premature study termination, the number of patients enrolled were too small to make any definitive efficacy claims. Conclusions: Treatment with fulranumab was generally tolerated with no new safety signals. Within the limited sample analyzed, fulranumab showed evidence of improvement of pain and function in patients with moderate-to-severe osteoarthritis who had failed prior therapy and were candidates for joint replacement surgery. Clinical trial registration numbers: NCT02336685; NCT02336698; NCT02289716; NCT02301234 KEY POINTS Fulranumab as adjuvant or monotherapy was well tolerated with no new safety signals Fulranumab demonstrated evidence suggestive of efficacy in osteoarthritic pain of hip and knee Fulranumab demonstrated evidence suggestive of improvement of pain and physical function in osteoarthritis

Volume 35
Pages 2117 - 2127
DOI 10.1080/03007995.2019.1653068
Language English
Journal Current Medical Research and Opinion

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