Real-World Treatment Patterns for Golimumab and Concomitant Medications in Japanese Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients

Introduction The aim of this study was to investigate real-world treatment patterns for use of golimumab and concomitant medications in Japanese patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Methods This study was a post hoc retrospective analysis from post-marketing surveillance data on 2350 Japanese patient...

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Veröffentlicht in:Rheumatology and therapy. 2018-06, Vol.5 (1), p.185-201
Hauptverfasser: Okazaki, Masateru, Kobayashi, Hisanori, Ishii, Yutaka, Kanbori, Masayoshi, Yajima, Tsutomu
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Introduction The aim of this study was to investigate real-world treatment patterns for use of golimumab and concomitant medications in Japanese patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Methods This study was a post hoc retrospective analysis from post-marketing surveillance data on 2350 Japanese patients with moderate/severe rheumatoid arthritis who received golimumab for 24 weeks. The study population was divided based on initiation treatment or dose adjustment patterns with golimumab, methotrexate, or oral glucocorticoids. Results Logistic regression analysis revealed that the baseline factors associated with administration of golimumab (100 mg) were higher body weight, failure of prior biological therapy (bio-failure), no previous methotrexate use, and respiratory disease, while previous methotrexate use and absence of renal impairment or respiratory disease were associated with concomitant methotrexate therapy, and previous glucocorticoid use was associated with concomitant glucocorticoid therapy. The following associations were identified with regard to dose adjustment during treatment: bio-failure, no previous methotrexate use, previous csDMARDs use, presence of respiratory disease, allergy history, and higher CRP for golimumab dose escalation; shorter disease duration, previous GC, and no previous methotrexate use for methotrexate dose escalation; no prior biological therapy and renal impairment for methotrexate dose reduction; no previous GC use for glucocorticoid dose escalation; and absence of Steinbrocker’s stage II/III/IV, absence of Steinbrocker’s class II, no bio-failure, and no previous csDMARDs use for glucocorticoid dose reduction. Conclusions This study revealed that various baseline factors were associated with initiation of treatment and dose adjustment of golimumab, methotrexate, or oral glucocorticoids, reflecting both the treatment strategies of physicians for improving RA symptoms and/or reducing adverse events. Funding Janssen Pharmaceutical K.K. and Mitsubishi Tanabe Pharma Corporation.
ISSN:2198-6576
2198-6584
DOI:10.1007/s40744-018-0095-5