Safety and Efficacy of Ianalumab in Patients With Sjögren's Disease: 52-Week Results From a Randomized, Placebo-Controlled, Phase 2b Dose-Ranging Study

Arthritis Rheumatol. 2024 Nov 18. doi: 10.1002/art.43059. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Objective: To report 52-week safety and efficacy of ianalumab from phase 2b dose-finding study in patients with Sjögren's disease (SjD).

Methods: Patients randomly received (1:1:1:1) ianalumab (5, 50, or 300 mg) or placebo subcutaneously every 4 weeks till week 24 (treatment period [TP]1). At week 24, patients on 300 mg were re-randomized to continue 300 mg or receive placebo till week 52 (TP2), patients on placebo were switched to ianalumab 150 mg, while patients on 5 and 50 mg directly entered post treatment safety follow-up. Patients who discontinued treatment early or completed treatment entered safety follow-up (≥20 weeks).

Results: During TP1, 190 patients were randomized (placebo=49, 5 mg=47, 50 mg=47, 300 mg=47). Of these 190 patients, 90 (47.4 %; 43 continued 300 mg and 47 received placebo) entered TP2, and 81/90 (90.0%) completed the study treatment. By week 52, efficacy was sustained in patients who continued 300 mg in TP2 (ESSDAI, ESSPRI, PaGA, PhGA change from week 24: -1.45, -0.46, -4.69, -6.86, respectively). Stimulated salivary flow rates and autoantibody levels numerically improved in the 300 mg group. Treatment-emergent adverse events were not dose-dependent, except for injection-site reactions. Cases of decreased neutrophil counts (CTCAE v4.03 grade 3 according to laboratory listings) were observed in 3 patients during the post-treatment follow-up, occurring at 3.5, 5.5, and 3 months, after the last ianalumab administration. None were associated with infection except one incidental finding of asymptomatic cytomegalovirus infection (IgM+).

Conclusion: In patients with SjD, ianalumab 300 mg demonstrated sustained efficacy through week 52 and a favorable safety profile up to two years of follow-up.