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Abstract Number: 279

Safety and Effectiveness Of Adalimumab In Children With Polyarticular Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis Aged 2 To <4 Years Or ≥4 Years Weighing <15 Kg

Daniel J. Kingsbury1, Pierre Quartier2, Vipin Arora3, Jasmina Kalabic4, Hartmut Kupper4 and Neelufar Mozaffarian3, 1Randall Children's Hospital at Legacy Emanuel, Portland, OR, 2Pediatria II, Istituto Giannina Gaslini, Genoa, Italy, 3AbbVie, North Chicago, IL, 4AbbVie Deutschland GmbH & Co. KG, Ludwigshafen, Germany

Meeting: 2013 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting

Keywords: Adalimumab and juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA)

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Session Information

Title: Pediatric Rheumatology - Clinical and Therapeutic Aspects I: Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis

Session Type: Abstract Submissions (ACR)

Background/Purpose:

Adalimumab (ADA) is approved for use in moderate to severe juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) in patients (pts) ≥4 years (yrs) old in the US, EU, and Japan. Limited data are available in pts <4 yrs old. The objective of this study was to assess the safety and effectiveness of >1 year of ADA therapy in pts aged 2 to <4 yrs old or ≥4 yrs old weighing <15 kg with moderately to severely active polyarticular JIA.

 

Methods:

JIA pts were treated with ADA 24 mg/m2 (maximum=20 mg/dose) every other week (wk) +/- methotrexate for 96 wks in an ongoing international, multicenter, open-label, phase 3b study until achieving the limit for age (≥4 yrs) and weight (≥15 kg). Adverse events (AEs) were summarized for all visits up to 96 wks. Clinical effectiveness endpoints included American College of Rheumatology pediatric (PedACR) 30/50/70/90 responses through wk 60, and JIA outcome parameters (PhGA, PaGA, DICHAQ, AJC73, LOM69, CRP, TJC, SJC, and POM75).

Results:

32 pts were randomized; through wk 60, two pts withdrew due to AEs (JIA worsening or flare) and 2 withdrew for other reasons. AE incidence rates included: any AEs (91%), serious AEs (16%), infectious AEs (78%), and serious infections (9%). No deaths, malignancies, or opportunistic infections were reported. 90% of pts had achieved PedACR30 at wk 60 (Table 1). High PedACR 50/70/90 response rates were achieved at wk 24 and maintained through wk 60. Statistically significant improvements in other JIA outcomes were also observed (Table 2). Growth was not adversely impacted by ADA treatment; based on CDC growth standards, at baseline, 50%/53% of pts were in the ≥33rd percentile for height and body mass index, respectively; at wk 60, this had increased to 76%/67%.

 

 

 

 

Table 1. PedACR Response Over Time (Observed Case Analysis)

 

Week 24 Response Rate

N=30

n (%)

Week 60 Response Rate

N=20

n (%)

PedACR30

27 (90.0)

18 (90.0)

PedACR50

25 (83.3)

16 (80.0)

PedACR70

22 (73.3)

14 (70.0)

PedACR90

11 (36.7)

10 (50.0)

 

Table 2. JIA Outcomes at Week 60a

 

Mean Change (SD) from Baseline

N=20

PhGA of Disease Activityb (VAS 0–100 mm)

-42.7 (28.2)*

PaGA of Disease Activityb (VAS 0–100 mm)

-34.5 (33.3)*

Child Health Assessment Questionnaireb (DICHAQ)

-0.6 (0.7)**

Active Joint Count (AJC73)

-9.5 (7.5)*

Limitation on Passive Motion (LOM69)

-5.5 (8.3)**

CRP (mg/dL)

-0.3 (1.8)

Tender Joint count (TJC75)

-4.5 (5.9)**

Swollen Joint Count (SJC66)

-8.4 (7.2)*

Pain on Passive Motion (POM75)

-5.9 (5.3)*

PaGA of Painb (VAS 0–100 mm)

-35.2 (34.4)*

aObserved case analysis. bN=21. *P<.001. **P<.05. SD, standard deviation.

 

Conclusion:

In this very young population with polyarticular JIA, primary clinical trial data revealed that the safety profile and effectiveness of ADA were comparable to that observed in older children with JIA. No adverse effects on growth were observed; however, data did reflect improvement in growth through wk 60 of the study.

 


Disclosure:

D. J. Kingsbury,

AbbVie,

2;

P. Quartier,

AbbVie,

2,

Chugai-Roche,

2;

V. Arora,

AbbVie,

3,

AbbVie,

1;

J. Kalabic,

AbbVie,

3,

AbbVie,

1;

H. Kupper,

AbbVie,

3,

AbbVie,

1;

N. Mozaffarian,

AbbVie,

9.

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