Shorter infusion time of ocrelizumab: Results from the randomized, double-blind ENSEMBLE PLUS substudy in patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis

•Infusion-related reaction rates were similar in shorter and conventional infusions•The majority of infusion-related reactions were mild to moderate•No infusion-related reactions were serious, life-threatening or fatal•No new safety signals were observed with a shorter infusion time•Shortening the i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Multiple sclerosis and related disorders 2020-11, Vol.46, p.102492-102492, Article 102492
Hauptverfasser: Hartung, H-P, Berger, T, Bermel, RA, Brochet, B, Carroll, WM, Holmøy, T, Karabudak, R, Killestein, J, Nos, C, Patti, F, Ross, A Perrin, Vanopdenbosch, L, Vollmer, T, Buffels, R, Garas, M, Kadner, K, Manfrini, M, Wang, Q, Freedman, MS
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Infusion-related reaction rates were similar in shorter and conventional infusions•The majority of infusion-related reactions were mild to moderate•No infusion-related reactions were serious, life-threatening or fatal•No new safety signals were observed with a shorter infusion time•Shortening the infusion time may lessen the burden on patients and site staff Background: Ocrelizumab is an approved intravenously administered anti-CD20 antibody for multiple sclerosis (MS). Shortening the 600 mg infusion to 2 hours reduces the total site stay from 5.5–6 hours (approved infusion duration including mandatory pre-medication and post-infusion observation) to 4 hours. The safety profile of shorter-duration ocrelizumab infusions was investigated using results from ENSEMBLE PLUS. Methods: ENSEMBLE PLUS is a randomized, double-blind substudy to the single-arm ENSEMBLE study (NCT03085810). In ENSEMBLE, patients with early-stage relapsing-remitting MS received ocrelizumab 600 mg infusions every 24 weeks for 192 weeks. In ENSEMBLE PLUS, ocrelizumab 600 mg administered over the approved 3.5-hour infusion time (conventional duration) is compared with a 2-hour infusion (shorter duration); the durations of the initial infusions (2×300 mg, 14 days apart) were unaffected. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients with infusion-related reactions (IRRs) following the first Randomized Dose. Results: From November 1, 2018, to December 13, 2019, 745 patients were randomized 1:1 to the conventional or shorter infusion group. At the first Randomized Dose, 99/373 patients (26.5%) in the conventional and 107/372 patients (28.8%) in the shorter infusion group experienced IRRs. The majority of IRRs were mild or moderate; >99% of all IRRs resolved without sequelae in both groups (conventional infusion group, 99/99; shorter infusion group, 106/107). No IRRs were serious, life-threatening, or fatal. No IRR-related discontinuations occurred. During the first Randomized Dose, 22/373 (5.9%) and 39/372 (10.5%) patients in the conventional and shorter infusion groups, respectively, had IRRs leading to infusion slowing/interruption. Adverse events were consistent with the known safety profile of ocrelizumab. Conclusion: The rates and severity of IRRs were similar between conventional and shorter infusions. No new safety signals were detected. Shortening the infusion time to 2 hours reduces the total site stay time (including mandatory pre-medication/infusion/observation) from 5.5–6 hou
ISSN:2211-0348
2211-0356
DOI:10.1016/j.msard.2020.102492