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Featured researches published by J. Bukowski.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2014

Sustained Remission with Etanercept Tapering in Early Rheumatoid Arthritis

Abstr Act; Paul Emery; Mohammed Hammoudeh; Oliver FitzGerald; Bernard Combe; Emilio Martín-Mola; Maya H Buch; Marek Krogulec; Theresa Williams; Stefanie Gaylord; R. Pedersen; J. Bukowski; Bonnie Vlahos

BACKGROUND We assessed the effects of reduction and withdrawal of treatment in patients with rheumatoid arthritis who had a remission while receiving etanercept-plus-methotrexate therapy. METHODS Patients with early active disease who had not previously received methotrexate or biologic therapy received 50 mg of etanercept plus methotrexate weekly for 52 weeks (open-label phase). We then randomly assigned patients who had qualifying responses at weeks 39 and 52 to receive 25 mg of etanercept plus methotrexate (combination-therapy group), methotrexate alone, or placebo for 39 weeks (double-blind phase). Patients who had qualifying responses at week 39 of the double-blind phase had all treatment withdrawn at that time and were followed to week 65 (treatment-withdrawal phase). The primary end point was the proportion of patients with sustained remission in the double-blind phase. RESULTS Of 306 patients enrolled, 193 underwent randomization in the double-blind phase; 131 qualified for the treatment-withdrawal phase. More patients in the combination-therapy group than in the methotrexate-alone group or the placebo group met the criterion for the primary end point (40 of 63 [63%] vs. 26 of 65 [40%] and 15 of 65 [23%], respectively; P=0.009 for combination therapy vs. methotrexate alone; P<0.001 for combination therapy vs. placebo). At 65 weeks, 28 patients (44%) who had received combination therapy, 19 (29%) who had received methotrexate alone, and 15 (23%) who had received placebo were in remission (P=0.10 for combination therapy vs. methotrexate alone; P=0.02 for combination therapy vs. placebo; P=0.55 for methotrexate alone vs. placebo). No significant between-group differences were observed in radiographic progression of disease. Serious adverse events were reported in 3 patients (5%) in the combination-therapy group, 2 (3%) in the methotrexate-alone group, and 2 (3%) in the placebo group. CONCLUSIONS In patients with early rheumatoid arthritis who had a remission while receiving full-dose etanercept-plus-methotrexate therapy, continuing combination therapy at a reduced dose resulted in better disease control than switching to methotrexate alone or placebo, but no significant difference was observed in radiographic progression. (Funded by Pfizer; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00913458.).


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2014

Symptomatic Efficacy of Etanercept and Its Effects on Objective Signs of Inflammation in Early Nonradiographic Axial Spondyloarthritis: A Multicenter, Randomized, Double‐Blind, Placebo‐Controlled Trial

M. Dougados; Désirée van der Heijde; Joachim Sieper; Jürgen Braun; Walter P. Maksymowych; Gustavo Citera; Corinne Miceli-Richard; James Cheng-Chung Wei; Ron Pedersen; Randi Bonin; Mahboob Rahman; I. Logeart; Joseph Wajdula; Andrew S. Koenig; Bonnie Vlahos; Daniel Alvarez; J. Bukowski

To assess the efficacy of etanercept in the treatment of early active nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug (NSAID)–refractory nonradiographic axial spondyloarthritis (SpA).


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2016

Clinical and MRI responses to etanercept in early non-radiographic axial spondyloarthritis: 48-week results from the EMBARK study

Walter P. Maksymowych; Maxime Dougados; Désirée van der Heijde; Joachim Sieper; Jürgen Braun; Gustavo Citera; Filip Van den Bosch; I. Logeart; Joseph Wajdula; H. Jones; L. Marshall; Randi Bonin; Ron Pedersen; Bonnie Vlahos; Sameer Kotak; J. Bukowski

Objective To evaluate the efficacy and safety of etanercept (ETN) after 48 weeks in patients with early active non-radiographic axial spondyloarthritis (nr-axSpA). Methods Patients meeting Assessment of SpondyloArthritis international Society (ASAS) classification criteria for axSpA, but not modified New York radiographic criteria, received double-blind ETN 50 mg/week or placebo (PBO) for 12 weeks, then open-label ETN (ETN/ETN or PBO/ETN). Clinical, health, productivity, MRI and safety outcomes were assessed and the 48-week data are presented here. Results 208/225 patients (92%) entered the open-label phase at week 12 (ETN, n=102; PBO, n=106). The percentage of patients achieving ASAS40 increased from 33% to 52% between weeks 12 and 48 for ETN/ETN and from 15% to 53% for PBO/ETN (within-group p value <0.001 for both). For ETN/ETN and PBO/ETN, the EuroQol 5 Dimensions utility score improved by 0.14 and 0.08, respectively, between baseline and week 12 and by 0.23 and 0.22 between baseline and week 48. Between weeks 12 and 48, MRI Spondyloarthritis Research Consortium of Canada sacroiliac joint (SIJ) scores decreased by −1.1 for ETN/ETN and by −3.0 for PBO/ETN, p<0.001 for both. Decreases in MRI SIJ inflammation and C-reactive protein correlated with several clinical outcomes at weeks 12 and 48. Conclusions Patients with early active nr-axSpA demonstrated improvement from week 12 in clinical, health, productivity and MRI outcomes that was sustained to 48 weeks. Trial registration number NCT01258738.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2013

FRI0089 Assessing maintenance of remission with reduced dose etanercept plus methotrexate, methotrexate alone, or placebo in patients with early rheumatoid arthritis who achieved remission with etanercept and methotrextate: the prize study

Paul Emery; M. Hammoudeh; O. FitzGerald; B. Combe; E. Martín Mola; J. Bukowski; R. Pedersen; T. Williams; S. Gaylord; Bonnie Vlahos

Background During Phase 1 of the 52 wk open-label PRIZE study treatment of patients (pts) with early (mean 6 mos.) moderate-severe rheumatoid arthritis (RA), who were methotrexate (MTX)/biologic naïve, with 50 mg etanercept (ETN) + 10-25 mg MTX yielded a 70% remission rate with no significant radiographic progression.1 Pts achieving remission in Phase I were randomized to a double-blind 39-wk period of reduced (25mg) ETN + MTX or withdrawn (MTX alone or placebo, PBO) therapy (PRIZE Phase 2). Objectives To assess sustained remission (DAS28 and ACR/EULAR Boolean [AEB]), other clinical, radiographic, and safety outcomes in pts subsequently treated with reduced dose ETN or PBO after remission induction during PRIZE Phase 1. Methods Pts achieving DAS28 remission by wk 52 (≤3.2 at wk 39, <2.6 at wk 52) in Phase 1 (n=193) were randomized 1:1:1 to ETN25/MTX: MTX + PBO injection: PBO capsules + PBO injection at wk 52. Pts with DAS28>3.2 (> low disease activity, LDA) received corticosteroid boosts at wks 56 or 64; pts not achieving LDA at the next visit withdrew. Remission and other standard clinical outcomes were assessed. Odds ratios and significance were determined by logistic regression models. Results ETN/MTX resulted in a significantly higher proportion of pts in sustained and AEB remission than MTX alone or PBO. More ETN/MTX treated pts achieved DAS28 LDA than PBO. Over Phase 2 radiographic progression (mTSS >0.5) occurred in <12% of pts, with no significant difference between treatment arms; at Phase 1 baseline the mTSS scores were 8.06, 8.46 and 7.59 for ETN25/MTX, MTX and PBO, with changes of 0.44, -0.5 and 1.41 by last observations in Phase 2 (LOCF), indicating no clinically relevant radiographic progression in any of these treatment groups ETN/MTX treatment resulted in more pts achieving ACR50 and 70 than PBO. There were no unexpected safety findings. Conclusions Of the moderate-severe early RA pts achieving DAS28 remission during a 52 wk induction (50 mg ETN/MTX in PRIZE Phase 1), 63.5% maintained remission (DAS28<2.6 at wk 76 & 91 visits) with ETN25/MTX, 38.5% with MTX and 23% with PBO over 39 subsequent wks. There was no significant radiographic progression in any treatment group. There were no unexpected safety findings. References Emery P et al. American College of Rheumatology/ARHP Annual Scientific Meeting – 2012;64(10):S160; Abstract 368. Acknowledgements The PRIZE study was funded by Pfizer Inc. Disclosure of Interest P. Emery Consultant for: Abbott, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Merck, Novartis, Pfizer Inc, Roche-Chugai, UCB Pharma Ltd, M. Hammoudeh Consultant for: Pfizer Inc, Roche, Abbott Laboratories, O. FitzGerald Consultant for: Bristol-Myers Squibb, Roche, Abbott Laboratories, Pfizer Inc, UCB Pharma Ltd, B. Combe Consultant for: Bristol-Myers Squibb, Merck, Pfizer Inc, Roche-Chugai, UCB Pharma Ltd, E. Martin Mola Consultant for: Pfizer Inc, Roche, Celgene Ltd, UCB Pharma Ltd, Speakers bureau: Pfizer Inc, Roche, UCB Pharma Ltd, J. Bukowski Employee of: Pfizer Inc, R. Pedersen Employee of: Pfizer Inc, T. Williams Employee of: Pfizer Inc, S. Gaylord Employee of: Pfizer Inc, B. Vlahos: None Declared


The Journal of Rheumatology | 2016

The Effect of Reduced or Withdrawn Etanercept-methotrexate Therapy on Patient-reported Outcomes in Patients with Early Rheumatoid Arthritis

Piotr Wiland; Jean Dudler; Douglas J. Veale; Hasan Tahir; Ron Pedersen; J. Bukowski; Bonnie Vlahos; Theresa Williams; Stefanie Gaylord; Sameer Kotak

Objective. An analysis of a clinical trial to assess the effects of treatment reduction and withdrawal on patient-reported outcomes (PRO) in patients with early, moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis (RA) who achieved 28-joint Disease Activity Score (DAS28) low disease activity (LDA) or remission with etanercept (ETN) plus methotrexate (MTX) therapy. Methods. During treatment induction, patients received open-label ETN 50 mg weekly plus MTX for 52 weeks. In the reduced-treatment phase, patients with DAS28-erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) ≤ 3.2 at Week 39 and DAS28-ESR < 2.6 at Week 52 in the open-label phase were randomized to double-blind treatment with ETN 25 mg plus MTX, MTX, or placebo (PBO) for 39 weeks (weeks 0–39). In the third phase, patients who achieved DAS28 remission (DAS28-ESR < 2.6) or LDA (2.6 ≤ DAS28-ESR ≤ 3.2) at Week 39 in the double-blind phase had all treatment withdrawn and were observed for an additional 26 weeks (weeks 39–65). Results. Of the 306 patients enrolled, 193 were randomized in the double-blind phase and 131 participated in the treatment-withdrawal phase. After reduction or withdrawal of ETN 50 mg/MTX, patients reduced to ETN 25 mg/MTX experienced slight, nonsignificant declines in the majority of PRO measures, whereas switching to PBO or MTX alone caused significant declines. Presenteeism and activity impairment scores were significantly better in the ETN reduced-dose group versus MTX monotherapy and PBO at Week 39 (p ≤ 0.05). Conclusion. In patients with early RA who achieved remission while receiving full-dose ETN/MTX, continuing combination therapy at a lower dose did not cause a significant worsening of PRO response, but switching to MTX alone or PBO did. ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00913458.


The Journal of Rheumatology | 2015

Evaluation of Health Outcomes with Etanercept Treatment in Patients with Early Nonradiographic Axial Spondyloarthritis

Maxime Dougados; Wen-Chan Tsai; Diego Luis Saaibi; Randi Bonin; J. Bukowski; Ron Pedersen; Bonnie Vlahos; Sameer Kotak

Objective. Analyses were conducted to examine the baseline burden of illness and compare the effect of etanercept (ETN) versus placebo (PBO) on quality of life (QOL) in patients with nonradiographic axial spondyloarthritis (nr-axSpA) who failed nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAID). Methods. Patients fulfilling the Assessment of Spondyloarthritis International Society axSpA criteria, not meeting the modified New York criteria for ankylosing spondylitis (AS), who were symptomatic 3 months to 5 years, with a Bath AS Disease Activity Index score ≥ 4, and failed ≥ 2 NSAID were randomized to ETN 50 mg weekly or PBO (double-blind) for 12 weeks, followed by open-label ETN 50 mg for 92 weeks. Stable NSAID were allowed throughout our study. QOL outcomes over 24 weeks were analyzed using ANCOVA models. Results. At baseline, Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory (MFI; ETN mean 14.7, PBO mean 15.0), EQ-5D utility (0.52, 0.57), EQ-5D visual analog scale (56.5, 56.4), and Medical Outcomes Study (MOS) Sleep Index II (45.5, 48.1) were worse than population norms (6.6–8.0, 0.86, 82.5, and 25.8, respectively). At Week 12, Bath AS Patient Global Score, nocturnal and average back pain, MOS Short Form-36 (SF-36) physical component, and Work Productivity and Activity Index (WPAI) presenteeism and activity impairment favored ETN (p < 0.05). Nonsignificant improvements for ETN were seen in other WPAI domains, MFI, MOS-Sleep Index I and II, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, EQ-5D utility score, and SF-36 mental component (p > 0.05). At Week 24, patients in the PBO group who had switched to ETN at Week 12 showed improvement in most QOL assessments, similar to that seen in patients receiving ETN for 24 weeks. Conclusion. Improvements favored ETN in QOL and productivity measures, with limited improvement on general QOL measures. Short disease duration, a short PBO-controlled period, and a wide range of QOL scores at baseline may have influenced improvements.


Arthritis Research & Therapy | 2017

MRI evidence of structural changes in the sacroiliac joints of patients with non-radiographic axial spondyloarthritis even in the absence of MRI inflammation

Walter P. Maksymowych; S. Wichuk; Maxime Dougados; H. Jones; A. Szumski; J. Bukowski; L. Marshall; R.G. Lambert

BackgroundStudies have shown that structural lesions may be present in patients with non-radiographic axial spondyloarthritis (nr-axSpA). However, the relevance of structural lesions in these patients is unclear, particularly without signs of inflammation on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). We assessed the presence of structural lesions at baseline on MRI in the sacroiliac joints (SIJ) of patients with nr-axSpA with and without SIJ inflammation on MRI.MethodsBone marrow edema (BME) was assessed on short tau inversion recovery (STIR) scans from 185 patients with nr-axSpA, by two independent readers at baseline using the Spondyloarthritis Research Consortium of Canada (SPARCC) score. Structural lesions were evaluated on T1 weighted spin echo scans, with readers blinded to STIR scans, using the SPARCC MRI SIJ structural score. Disease characteristics and structural lesions were compared in patients with SIJ BME (score ≥2) and without SIJ BME (score <2).ResultsBoth SIJ BME and structural lesions scores were available for 183 patients; 128/183 (69.9%) patients had SIJ BME scores ≥2 and 55/183 (30.1%) had scores <2. Frequencies of MRI structural lesions in patients with vs without SIJ BME were: erosions (45.3% vs 10.9%, P < 0.001), backfill (20.3% vs 0%, P < 0.001), fat metaplasia (10.9% vs 1.8%, P = 0.04), and ankylosis (2.3% vs 1.8%, P = ns). Significantly more patients with both SIJ BME and structural lesions were male and/or HLA-B27 positive than patients with only SIJ BME. Mean (SD) spinal scores (23 discovertebral units) were significantly higher in patients with SIJ structural lesions than without: 6.5 (11.5) vs 3.3 (5.1), respectively, P = 0.01.ConclusionsIn patients with nr-axSpA, SIJ structural lesions, particularly erosions, may be present on MRI when radiographs are normal or inconclusive, even in patients negative for MRI SIJ inflammation. They may reflect more severe disease with greater spinal inflammation.Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01258738. Registered on 9 December 2010.


The Journal of Rheumatology | 2016

Two-year Efficacy and Safety of Etanercept in Pediatric Patients with Extended Oligoarthritis, Enthesitis-related Arthritis, or Psoriatic Arthritis

Tamás Constantin; Ivan Foeldvari; Jelena Vojinovic; Gerd Horneff; Ruben Burgos-Vargas; Irina Nikishina; Jonathan D. Akikusa; Tadej Avcin; Jeffrey Chaitow; Elena Košková; Bernard Lauwerys; Inmaculada Calvo Penades; Berit Flatø; Maria Luz Gamir; Hans-Iko Huppertz; Juan Jose Jaller Raad; Katerina Jarosova; Jordi Anton; Marie Macku; William Jose Otero Escalante; Lidia Rutkowska-Sak; Ralf Trauzeddel; Patricia J. Velez-Sanchez; Carine Wouters; Joseph Wajdula; Chuanbo Zang; J. Bukowski; Deborah A Woodworth; Bonnie Vlahos; Alberto Martini

Objective. The main objective was to determine the 2-year clinical benefit and safety of etanercept (ETN) in children with the juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) categories of extended oligoarthritis (eoJIA), enthesitis-related arthritis (ERA), or psoriatic arthritis (PsA). Methods. CLIPPER was a 96-week, phase IIIb, open-label, multicenter study. Patients with eoJIA, ERA, or PsA received ETN 0.8 mg/kg once weekly (50 mg max) for up to 96 weeks. The proportions of patients reaching the JIA American College of Rheumatology (ACR) 30/50/70/90/100 and inactive disease responses at Week 96 were calculated. Adverse events (AE) were collected throughout the study (intention-to-treat sample). Results. There were 127 patients (eoJIA n = 60, ERA n = 38, PsA n = 29) who received ≥ 1 dose of ETN. The mean disease duration was 31.6 (eoJIA), 23.0 (ERA), and 21.8 (PsA) months. At Week 96, JIA ACR 30/50/70/90/100/inactive disease responses (95% CI) were achieved by 84.3% (76.7, 90.1), 83.5% (75.8, 89.5), 78.7% (70.6, 85.5), 55.1% (46.0, 63.9), 45.7% (36.8, 54.7), and 27.6% (20.0, 36.2) of patients, respectively. The most common AE (no. events, events per 100 patient-yrs) overall were headache (23, 10.7), pyrexia (12, 5.6), and diarrhea (10, 4.6). The most common infections were upper respiratory tract infection (83, 38.6), pharyngitis (50, 23.2), gastroenteritis (22, 10.2), bronchitis (19, 8.8), and rhinitis (17, 7.9). No cases of malignancy, active tuberculosis, demyelinating disorders, or death were reported. Conclusion. Over 96 weeks of therapy, ETN demonstrated sustained efficacy at treating the clinical symptoms of all 3 JIA categories, with no major safety issues.


Arthritis Care and Research | 2017

Effects of Long‐Term Etanercept Treatment on Clinical Outcomes and Objective Signs of Inflammation in Early Nonradiographic Axial Spondyloarthritis: 104‐Week Results From a Randomized, Placebo‐Controlled Study

Maxime Dougados; Désirée van der Heijde; Joachim Sieper; Jürgen Braun; Gustavo Citera; Jan Lenaerts; Filip Van den Bosch; James Cheng-Chung Wei; Ron Pedersen; Randi Bonin; H. Jones; L. Marshall; I. Logeart; Bonnie Vlahos; J. Bukowski; Walter P. Maksymowych

To evaluate the long‐term clinical and imaging efficacy of etanercept in patients with early, active nonradiographic axial spondyloarthritis (SpA).


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2018

Modification of structural lesions on MRI of the sacroiliac joints by etanercept in the EMBARK trial: a 12-week randomised placebo-controlled trial in patients with non-radiographic axial spondyloarthritis

Walter P. Maksymowych; S. Wichuk; Maxime Dougados; H. Jones; Ron Pedersen; A. Szumski; L. Marshall; J. Bukowski; R.G. Lambert

Objective To evaluate the impact on structural lesions observed on MRI in the sacroiliac joints (SIJ) at 12 weeks in patients with non-radiographic axial spondyloarthritis (nr-axSpA) receiving etanercept or placebo in EMBARK (Effect of Etanercept on Symptoms and Objective Inflammation in nr-axSpA, a 104 week study). Methods Patients were randomised to double-blind etanercept 50 mg/week or placebo for 12 weeks. Structural lesions at baseline and 12 weeks were scored by two independent readers using the Spondyloarthritis Research Consortium of Canada (SPARCC) SIJ structural score (SSS) on T1-weighted MRI. Change in SPARCC SSS and correlation with improvement in clinical outcomes was evaluated. Results MRI scans from 185 patients (etanercept, n=88; placebo, n=97) were reviewed. At baseline, there were no significant differences in mean SPARCC SSS between etanercept and placebo. From baseline to 12 weeks, change in mean SPARCC SSS was significantly greater for etanercept than placebo for erosion (–0.57 vs –0.08, respectively, adjusted p value=0.017) and backfill (0.36 vs 0.06, adjusted p value=0.022). A treatment difference was also present for the subgroup of patients with SIJ inflammation on MRI (SPARCC bone marrow oedema ≥2): erosion: –0.81 versus –0.13 for etanercept versus placebo, respectively, p=0.007; backfill: 0.48 versus 0.08, respectively, p=0.032. Decrease in erosion and increase in backfill correlated with improvement in more clinical outcomes for etanercept than placebo. Conclusion Treatment with etanercept was associated with significantly greater reduction in erosions and increase in backfill at 12 weeks compared with placebo, consistent with a very early reparative response to antitumour necrosis factor therapy. The impact on disease progression in spondyloarthritis should be studied further. Trial registration number NCT01258738; Post-results.

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Maxime Dougados

Paris Descartes University

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