Bimekizumab Efficacy and Safety Through 3 Years in Patients with Hidradenitis Suppurativa: Results from the Phase 3 BE HEARD I&II Trials and Their Open-Label Extension BE HEARD EXT

Main Article Content

John R. Ingram
Alexa B. Kimball
Amit Garg
Falk G. Bechara
Brian Kirby
Akimichi Morita
Wayne Gulliver
Bartosz Lukowski
Delphine Deherder
Jérémy Lambert
Christina Crater
Tom Vaux
Christopher J. Sayed

Keywords

Hidradenitis Suppurativa

Abstract

Introduction Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is a chronic, relapsing skin disease characterized by painful inflammatory nodules, abscesses and draining tunnels that causes disability and reduces patients’ health-related quality of life (HRQoL).1–3 Long-term disease control is essential to prevent irreversible damage and disease progression.4 Bimekizumab (BKZ) is a humanized IgG1 monoclonal antibody that selectively inhibits IL-17F in addition to IL-17A and has demonstrated clinically meaningful improvements in patients with HS over 2 years of treatment.5–7 Here, the efficacy and safety of BKZ in patients with moderate to severe HS are reported up to 3 years (efficacy: 148 weeks; safety: 144 weeks) of treatment.


Procedure Data were pooled from BE HEARD I&II (BHIⅈ NCT04242446/NCT04242498) and BE HEARD EXTENSION (BHEXT; NCT04901195). We report HS Clinical Response (HiSCR)50/75/90/100 rates, absolute change from baseline (CfB) in draining tunnel (DT) count, and Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI) 0/1 achievement at Week 48 and Week 148, plus a safety overview up to 3 years. For efficacy outcomes, we report data for patients who were randomized to BKZ from baseline in BHI&II who entered BHEXT (BKZ Total group; data reported as observed case [OC]). For safety outcomes, we report data for patients who received ≥1 dose of BKZ across BHI&II/BHEXT.


Results Of 1,014 total patients, 556 patients randomized to BKZ at baseline in BHI&II completed Week 48 and entered BHEXT; of these, 367 completed Week 148.


At Week 48, HiSCR50/75/90/100 responses were 79.9%/64.0%/42.3%/30.2%; responses were maintained to Week 148 at 90.2%/81.2%/64.3%/50.1%. At Week 48, from a baseline mean (standard deviation [SD]) of 3.8 (4.3), the mean absolute CfB (SD) in DTs was −2.4 (3.4); responses were sustained to Week 148 at −3.1 (3.9). The proportion of patients who reported DLQI 0/1 was 27.4% (151/551) at Week 48 and 38.1% (137/360) at Week 148. Up to 3 years, the exposure-adjusted incidence rate (EAIR) for any treatment-emergent adverse event (TEAE) was 226.8/100 participant-years (PY). The EAIRs/100 PY for serious TEAEs and TEAEs leading to discontinuation were 7.2 and 6.0, respectively. The most common TEAEs were hidradenitis (20.7/100 PY), coronavirus infection (15.3/100 PY), and oral candidiasis 10.4/100 PY). Serious infection TEAEs occurred in 37 patients (2.0/100 PY). Safety data were consistent with previous observations and with 2-year data from BHI&II/BHEXT.7


Conclusion Efficacy and HRQoL outcomes observed in the bimekizumab HS phase 3 trials were maintained through 3 years of treatment. Bimekizumab was well-tolerated and no new safety signals were identified up to 3 years of treatment. These data highlight the depth and durability of response to bimekizumab treatment in patients with moderate to severe HS.

References

1. Kimball AB et al. Lancet 2024;403:2504–19

2. BE HEARD EXT: https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT04901195

3. Garg A et al. J Am Acad Dermatol 2020;82:366–76

4. Kaur AP et al. Skin Health Dis 2023;3:e214

5. Montero-Vilchez T et al. Int J Environ Res Public Health 2021;18:6709

6. Ramos FJM et al. ACTAS Dermosifiliogr 2024;115:213–14

7. Adams R et al. Front Immunol 2020;11:1894

8. Zouboulis CC. EADV 2024; Presentation 7925

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