Amgen And AstraZeneca Announce Positive Results From Second Pivotal Phase III Study Of Brodalumab
Amgen and AstraZeneca have announced that AMAGINE-3, a pivotal, multi-arm Phase III trial evaluating two doses of brodalumab in more than 1800 patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis, met its primary endpoints when compared with both Stelara (ustekinumab) and placebo at week 12.
Brodalumab was shown to be superior to Stelara on the primary endpoint of achieving total clearance of skin disease, as measured by the Psoriasis Area Severity Index (PASI 100). When compared with placebo, a significantly greater proportion of patients treated with brodalumab achieved at least a 75% improvement from baseline in disease severity at week 12, as measured by the Psoriasis Area Severity Index (PASI 75). A significantly greater proportion of patients treated with brodalumab also achieved clear or almost clear skin at week 12 compared with placebo, according to the static Physician Global Assessment (sPGA 0 or 1). All key secondary endpoints comparing brodalumab with Stelara and placebo were also met.
Results showed that 36.7% of patients in the brodalumab 210 mg group, 27.0% of patients in the brodalumab 140 mg group, 18.5% of patients in the Stelara group and 0.3% of patients in the placebo group achieved total clearance of skin disease (PASI 100). In addition, 85.1% of patients in the brodalumab 210 mg group, 69.2% of patients in the brodalumab 140 mg group, 69.3% of patients in the Stelara group and 6.0% of patients in the placebo group achieved PASI 75.
"Despite a variety of treatment options available for psoriasis, many patients still do not meet skin clearance goals," said Sean E. Harper, Executive Vice President of R&D at Amgen. "These results are of particular importance as they are the first to demonstrate superiority to Stelara in achieving total skin clearance, and the second positive pivotal Phase III study evaluating brodalumab in patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis."
The most common adverse events that occurred in the brodalumab arms (more than 5% of patients in either group) were common cold, joint pain, upper respiratory tract infection and headache. Serious adverse events occurred in 1.4% of patients in the 210 mg group and 1.6% of patients in the 140 mg group compared with 0.6% for Stelara and 1.0% for placebo during the placebo-controlled period.
Brodalumab is the only investigational treatment in development that binds to the interleukin-17 (IL-17) receptor and inhibits inflammatory signaling by blocking the binding of several IL-17 cytokines (A, F, A/F and C) to the receptor. The IL-17 receptor and cytokine family play a central role in development and clinical manifestation of plaque psoriasis.
"These results add to the growing body of evidence supporting the potential value that brodalumab may bring to the treatment of psoriasis by targeting the IL-17 receptor," said Briggs W. Morrison, Executive Vice President of Global Medicines Development at AstraZeneca. "We look forward to sharing results later this year from AMAGINE-2TM, our remaining head-to-head study evaluating brodalumab versus Stelara."
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