Long-term safety profile and secondary effectiveness of Canakinumab in Pediatric Rheumatic diseases: a single-center experience.

Anti IL-1 Canakinumab Colchicine Event rate Safety

Journal

Expert opinion on drug safety
ISSN: 1744-764X
Titre abrégé: Expert Opin Drug Saf
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101163027

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
29 Jul 2024
Historique:
medline: 29 7 2024
pubmed: 29 7 2024
entrez: 29 7 2024
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

To demonstrate the long-term safety profile of canakinumab over a nine-year period by documenting adverse events in patients with various pediatric rheumatic diseases. This retrospective observational study was conducted at the Pediatric Rheumatology Department of Istanbul University Cerrahpasa between 2015 and 2023. The analysis concerned individuals who had been administered canakinumab treatment for at least six months. The exposure-adjusted event rates were calculated as adverse events per 100 patient days and were compared among three groups based on the cumulative canakinumab dose of <35 mg/kg, 35-70 mg/kg, and >70 mg/kg. Among 189 patients, the median exposure time to canakinumab was 2.9 (1.5-4.1) years, corresponding to 573.4 patient years. The median cumulative dose of canakinumab was 2205 (1312-3600) mg. The most common adverse event was upper respiratory tract infection (0.76), followed by urinary tract infection (0.02), pneumonia (0.009), latent tuberculosis (0.009) and lymphadenitis (0.004). A total of 55 serious adverse events (0.025) were reported, 12 (0.006) of which led to drug discontinuation. The event rate of macrophage activation syndrome and disease exacerbation was statistically higher in patients receiving <35 mg/kg cumulative canakinumab dose ( An increase in side effect was not observed with the increasing cumulative doses of canakinumab. Canakinumab demonstrated long-term safety with appropriate indication and monitoring.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND UNASSIGNED
To demonstrate the long-term safety profile of canakinumab over a nine-year period by documenting adverse events in patients with various pediatric rheumatic diseases.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS UNASSIGNED
This retrospective observational study was conducted at the Pediatric Rheumatology Department of Istanbul University Cerrahpasa between 2015 and 2023. The analysis concerned individuals who had been administered canakinumab treatment for at least six months. The exposure-adjusted event rates were calculated as adverse events per 100 patient days and were compared among three groups based on the cumulative canakinumab dose of <35 mg/kg, 35-70 mg/kg, and >70 mg/kg.
RESULTS UNASSIGNED
Among 189 patients, the median exposure time to canakinumab was 2.9 (1.5-4.1) years, corresponding to 573.4 patient years. The median cumulative dose of canakinumab was 2205 (1312-3600) mg. The most common adverse event was upper respiratory tract infection (0.76), followed by urinary tract infection (0.02), pneumonia (0.009), latent tuberculosis (0.009) and lymphadenitis (0.004). A total of 55 serious adverse events (0.025) were reported, 12 (0.006) of which led to drug discontinuation. The event rate of macrophage activation syndrome and disease exacerbation was statistically higher in patients receiving <35 mg/kg cumulative canakinumab dose (
CONCLUSIONS UNASSIGNED
An increase in side effect was not observed with the increasing cumulative doses of canakinumab. Canakinumab demonstrated long-term safety with appropriate indication and monitoring.

Identifiants

pubmed: 39069814
doi: 10.1080/14740338.2024.2386370
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Auteurs

Elif Kilic Konte (E)

Department of Child Health and Diseases, Istanbul University-Cerrahpasa Cerrahpasa Medical School.

Nergis Akay (N)

Department of Child Health and Diseases, Istanbul University-Cerrahpasa Cerrahpasa Medical School.

Umit Gul (U)

Department of Child Health and Diseases, Istanbul University-Cerrahpasa Cerrahpasa Medical School.

Kubra Ucak (K)

Department of Child Health and Diseases, Kocaeli University Medical School.

Ecenur Izzete Derelioglu (EI)

Department of Child Health and Diseases, Istanbul University-Cerrahpasa Cerrahpasa Medical School.

Damla Gurleyik (D)

Department of Child Health and Diseases, Istanbul University-Cerrahpasa Cerrahpasa Medical School.

Esma Aslan (E)

Department of Child Health and Diseases, Istanbul University-Cerrahpasa Cerrahpasa Medical School.

Aybuke Gunalp (A)

Department of Child Health and Diseases, Istanbul University-Cerrahpasa Cerrahpasa Medical School.

Fatih Haslak (F)

Department of Child Health and Diseases, Istanbul University-Cerrahpasa Cerrahpasa Medical School.

Mehmet Yildiz (M)

Department of Child Health and Diseases, Istanbul University-Cerrahpasa Cerrahpasa Medical School.

Amra Adrovic (A)

Department of Child Health and Diseases, Istanbul University-Cerrahpasa Cerrahpasa Medical School.

Sezgin Sahin (S)

Department of Child Health and Diseases, Istanbul University-Cerrahpasa Cerrahpasa Medical School.

Kenan Barut (K)

Department of Child Health and Diseases, Istanbul University-Cerrahpasa Cerrahpasa Medical School.

Ozgur Kasapcopur (O)

Department of Child Health and Diseases, Istanbul University-Cerrahpasa Cerrahpasa Medical School.

Classifications MeSH