Four-weekly dosing intervals with subcutaneous spesolimab appear to be required for optimal prevention of generalized pustular psoriasis flares: Data from the EFFISAYIL® 2 and EFFISAYIL® ON trials

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Diamant Thaci
Akimichi Morita
Bruce Strober
Tiago Torres
Andreas Pinter
Angelo Marzano
James Krueger
Ming Tang
Patrick Hofmann
Christian Thoma
Mark Lebwohl

Keywords

spesolimab, generalized pustular psoriasis, dosing

Abstract

Generalized pustular psoriasis (GPP) is a rare chronic skin disease characterized by recurrent, acute, and often life-threatening flares of widespread neutrophilic sterile pustules and systemic inflammation. Spesolimab, an anti-interleukin-36 receptor antibody, is approved in adults and adults and pediatric patients 12 years of age and older and weighing at least 40 kg, as a subcutaneous dosage for treatment of GPP when not experiencing a flare, and as an intravenous dosage for GPP flare treatment. In Effisayil 2, a randomized, placebo-controlled trial (NCT04399837), subcutaneous spesolimab was superior to placebo and well tolerated for flare prevention when administered as a 600-mg subcutaneous loading dose followed by 300 mg every 4 weeks (q4w) over 48 weeks. In Effisayil 2, 3/30 (10.0%) patients receiving subcutaneous spesolimab 300 mg q4w had flares, and there were no flares after Week 4 until the end of the study. We assessed the effect on flare recurrence of a longer (q12w) interval between subcutaneous spesolimab doses in Effisayil 2 and Effisayil ON (NCT03886246), an ongoing open-label extension trial. Flares were defined as a ≥2-point increase in GPP Physician Global Assessment total score with pustulation subscore of ≥2, or intravenous spesolimab or standard of care treatment due to GPP worsening.


In Effisayil 2, 9/31 (29.0%) patients who received subcutaneous spesolimab 300 mg q12w had a flare; of those, 7/9 (77.8%) experienced a flare before their second subcutaneous dose (Week 12), and 5/7 (71.4%) flares occurred during Weeks 4–12, indicating the need for q4w dosing. In Effisayil ON, 36/108 (33.3%) patients who started q12w dosing were either escalated to a q4w regimen (n=24) or experienced a flare (n=12).


These observations suggest that subcutaneous spesolimab 300 mg q4w is the optimal dosing regimen for prevention of GPP flares.

References

1. Morita A, et al. Lancet. 2023;402:1541–51.

2. SPEVIGO® prescribing information. Available at: https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2024/761244s003lbl.pdf (accessed May 24, 2024).

3. ClinicalTrials.gov. https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT04399837 (accessed Sept 11, 2024).

4. ClinicalTrials.gov. https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT03886246 (accessed Sept 11, 2024).

5. ClinicalTrials.gov. https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT03782792 (accessed Sept 11, 2024).

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