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Safety and effectiveness of adalimumab in Japanese patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis: Results from a real-world postmarketing study

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posted on 2020-05-18, 11:34 authored by Syuji Takei, Naomi Iwata, Ichiro Kobayashi, Toru Igarashi, Yoko Yoshinaga, Naoko Matsubara, Naomi Sunaga, Ayumi Ito, Shumpei Yokota

This study was conducted to assess the real-world safety and effectiveness of adalimumab in patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA).

In this all-case, postmarketing surveillance study (NCT01412021) conducted in Japan, patients receiving adalimumab for JIA affecting multiple joints were observed for 24 weeks. The safety (adverse drug reactions [ADRs]/serious ADRs) and effectiveness (4-variable Disease Activity Score in 28 joints using erythrocyte sedimentation rate [DAS28-4/ESR] remission rate) were assessed.

In the safety population (n = 356), 90.3% (65/72; weight, ≥15–<30 kg) of patients received adalimumab 20 mg every 2 weeks (q2w) and 98.3% (236/240; weight ≥30 kg) received 40 mg q2w. Incidence of ADRs and serious ADRs was 29.8% (106/356) and 3.4% (12/356), respectively. Incidence of ADRs was significantly higher in patients aged <15 years vs. ≥15 years (34.6% vs. 21.1%, p = .0072), those with comorbidities vs. without (38.3% vs. 25.7%, p = .0155), and those receiving dose <40 mg q2w vs. ≥40 mg q2w (38.8% vs. 26.9%, p = .0418). DAS28-4/ESR remission rate improved from 21.7% (36/166) at baseline to 74.7% (112/150) at week 24.

Adalimumab was well tolerated and had acceptable safety and effectiveness in patients with JIA in the real-world setting.

Funding

This work was funded by AbbVie Inc. AbbVie participated in the study design, research, data collection, and analysis and interpretation of data, as well as in the writing, review, and approval of the publication. Medical writing support was provided by Deepali Garg, MBBS, PGDHA, and Maribeth Bogush, PhD, of Cactus Communications and funded by AbbVie GK.

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