Regeneron and Sanofi Announce Topline Results of Phase 3 Monotherapy Study Demonstrating Superiority of Sarilumab vs. Adalimumab in Patients with Active Rheumatoid Arthritis
"In this study, sarilumab monotherapy provided stronger efficacy than adalimumab monotherapy. Adalimumab is one of the most commonly used biologic medicines in RA," said
Janet van Adelsberg, M.D., Senior Director, Clinical Sciences, Immunology and Inflammation, Regeneron. "This is the first time an IL-6 receptor blocker delivered subcutaneously has demonstrated superiority over adalimumab monotherapy in RA."
The SARIL-RA-MONARCH study enrolled 369 adult patients with active RA who were inadequate responders to, intolerant of, or inappropriate candidates for methotrexate (MTX). Patients were randomized to receive either subcutaneous sarilumab monotherapy (200 mg every 2 weeks) or adalimumab monotherapy (40 mg every 2 weeks); patients who did not respond adequately to adalimumab could increase to weekly dosing.
"Despite the availability of a wide range of treatment options, we believe that new therapies are needed to further address unmet needs of RA patients," said Dr.
Simon Cooper, MBBS VP, Global Project Head, Immunology and Inflammation,
The primary endpoint was change from baseline in DAS28-ESR at 24 weeks, which demonstrated a statistically significant difference in favor of sarilumab (-3.25 for sarilumab compared to -2.22 for adalimumab, p less than 0.0001). The study also met clinically important secondary endpoints including improvements in signs and symptoms of RA as measured by patients achieving a 20 percent improvement in the
The incidence of adverse events (64 percent for both groups), serious adverse events (5 percent for sarilumab vs. 7 percent for adalimumab), infections (29 percent for sarilumab vs. 28 percent for adalimumab), and serious infections (1 percent for both groups) were generally similar between groups. Neutropenia, which was not associated with infections, was more common with sarilumab (14 percent for sarilumab vs.1 percent for adalimumab), as has been seen in previous studies with IL-6 inhibitors. Injection site erythema (8 percent sarilumab vs. 3 percent adalimumab) was also more common with sarilumab.
About Sarilumab
Sarilumab is a human monoclonal antibody directed against the IL-6 receptor that inhibits the inflammatory activity in RA mediated by the IL-6 signaling pathway. IL-6 is the most abundant cytokine in the serum and synovial fluid of patients with RA, and levels of IL-6 correlate with both disease activity and joint destruction.
In January, the companies announced that the
The safety and efficacy of sarilumab have not been fully evaluated by any regulatory authority.
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