Drug survival is a key element of therapeutic success in chronic diseases. A cohort study from the BADBIR registry revealed that IL-23p19 inhibitors are associated with the highest drug survival both regarding effectiveness and safety.
“Drug survival acts as a proxy marker for treatment effect and safety,” explained Dr Zenas Yiu (University of Manchester, UK). Only a few small studies reported on real-world drug survival of brodalumab and risankizumab. Therefore, Dr Yiu and his team conducted a cohort study using the BADBIR, a national pharmacovigilance registry including patients with psoriasis from the UK and the Republic of Ireland, with data collected between November 2007 and June 2023.
The analysis included 19,043 treatment courses from 11,877 participants with a median follow-up time of 2.3 years. “There were large cohorts for older biologics but smaller ones for the newer treatments, also the follow-up time is shorter,” Dr Yiu said. Most patients were treated with adalimumab (n=6,815), followed by ustekinumab (n=5,639). A further 832 patients were treated with risankizumab and 1,258 patients with guselkumab.
Therapy with the IL-23p19 inhibitors had the highest survival time with respect to effectiveness (guselkumab adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] 0.28; 95% CI 0.15–0.53; risankizumab 0.38; 95% CI 0.16–0.87), whereas adalimumab showed a lower survival compared with all other biologics (aHR 1.98; 95% CI 1.76–2.23). Biologics targeting IL-17 had similar drug survival earlier and lower drug survival later in follow-up compared with ustekinumab. Regarding safety, the results was similar.
Dr Yiu emphasised that the current study included the largest cohort of psoriasis patients on IL-23p19 inhibitors reported thus far. It showed that people with psoriasis persist with IL-23p19 inhibitors up to an estimated 21 weeks longer for effectiveness and 13 weeks longer for safety compared with other biologics over 2 years on average.
“These results may be valuable when discussing treatment choices where the patients value treatment effect longevity,” Dr Yiu concluded.
- Yiu Z. Drug survival of interleukin-23 p19 inhibitors compared to other biologics for psoriasis: a cohort study from the British Association of Dermatologists Biologics and Immunomodulators Register (BADBIR). Presentation D1T01.1K, EADV Congress 2023, 11–14 October, Berlin, Germany.
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Table of Contents: EADV 2023
Featured articles
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AD and Eczema in 2023
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Severe hand eczema: dupilumab could be a future treatment
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Drug survival of guselkumab and risankizumab seems superior to other biologics
IL-23 blockers may lower the risk of developing inflammatory and psoriatic arthritis
First-in-class oral IL-23 inhibitor safe and effective for moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis
Hidradenitis Suppurativa: End of the Diagnostic and Therapeutic Draught
Skin tape stripping allows a novel precision medicine approach in HS
Nanobodies: A novel way to treat HS
Anti-IL17 blockade leads to maintained pain reduction in patients with HS
Vitiligo: Novel Treatment Options
JAK1 inhibition: a promising forthcoming treatment option in vitiligo
Vitiligo: Continuation of topical ruxolitinib successful in many initial non-responders
Alopecia Areata: Novel Developments
JAK3/TEC inhibition achieves clinically meaningful responses in AA
Alopecia areata: remarkable regrowth rates with deuruxolitinib
Botanical drug solution improves hair regrowth in children and adolescents with AA
What’s New in Other Disease Entities
Nemolizumab shows high success rates in prurigo nodularis
Remibrutinib reduces itch, sleep problems, and activity impairment in patients with CSU
Innovative wound gel reduces frequency of painful dressing changes in epidermolysis bullosa
Best of the Posters
Women with psoriasis face increased adverse effects with systemic therapy
Improved AI tool shows high sensitivity rates in skin cancer detection
Dermoscopy training combined with AI significantly improves skin cancer detection
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