作者
James F. Howard,Richard J. Nowak,Gil I. Wolfe,Miriam Freimer,Tuan Vu,John L. Hinton,Michael Benatar,Petra W. Duda,James E. MacDougall,Ramin Farzaneh‐Far,Henry J. Kaminski,Richard J. Barohn,Mazen M. Dimachkie,Mamatha Pasnoor,Constantine Farmakidis,Tina Liu,Samantha Colgan,Michael Benatar,Tulio E. Bertorini,Rekha Pillai,Robert Henegar,Mark B. Bromberg,Summer Gibson,Teresa Janecki,Miriam Freimer,Bakri Elsheikh,Paige Matisak,Angela Genge,Amanda C. Guidon,William I. F. David,Ali A. Habib,Veena Mathew,Tahseen Mozaffar,John L. Hinton,William L. Hewitt,Deborah Barnett,Patricia Sullivan,Doreen Ho,James F. Howard,Rebecca Traub,Manisha Chopra,Henry J. Kaminski,Radwa Aly,Elham Bayat,Mohammad Abu-Rub,Shaida Khan,Dale J. Lange,Shara Holzberg,Bhupendra Khatri,Emily Lindman,Tayo Olapo,Lisa Sershon,Robert C. Griggs,Evanthia Bernitsas,Kelly Jia,Rabia Malik,Tiffany D. Lewis-Collins,Michael Nicolle,Richard J. Nowak,Aditi Sharma,Bhaskar Roy,Joan Nye,Michael Pulley,Alan Ross Berger,Yasmeen Shabbir,Amit Sachdev,Kimberly Patterson,Zaeem A. Siddiqi,Mark Sivak,Joan Bratton,George A. Small,Anem Kohli,Mary Fetter,Tuan Vu,Lucy Lam,Brittany Harvey,Gil I. Wolfe,Nicholas J. Silvestri,Kara Patrick,Karen Zakalik,Petra W. Duda,James E. MacDougall,Ramin Farzaneh‐Far,Angela Pontius,Michelle D. Hoarty
摘要
Importance
Many patients with generalized myasthenia gravis (gMG) have substantial clinical disability, persistent disease burden, and adverse effects attributable to chronic immunosuppression. Therefore, there is a significant need for targeted, well-tolerated therapies with the potential to improve disease control and enhance quality of life. Objective
To evaluate the clinical effects of zilucoplan, a subcutaneously (SC) self-administered macrocyclic peptide inhibitor of complement component 5, in a broad population of patients with moderate to severe gMG. Design, Setting, and Participants
This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 2 clinical trial at 25 study sites across North America recruited participants between December 2017 and August 2018. Fifty-seven patients were screened, of whom 12 did not meet inclusion criteria and 1 was lost to follow-up after randomization but before receiving study drug, resulting in a total of 44 acetylcholine receptor autoantibody (AChR-Ab)–positive patients with gMG with baseline Quantitative Myasthenia Gravis (QMG) scores of at least 12, regardless of treatment history. Interventions
Patients were randomized 1:1:1 to a daily SC self-injection of placebo, 0.1-mg/kg zilucoplan, or 0.3-mg/kg zilucoplan for 12 weeks. Main Outcomes and Measures
The primary and key secondary end points were the change from baseline to week 12 in QMG and MG Activities of Daily Living scores, respectively. Significance testing was prespecified at a 1-sided α of .10. Safety and tolerability were also assessed. Results
The study of 44 patients was well balanced across the 3 treatment arms with respect to key demographic and disease-specific variables. The mean age of patients across all 3 treatment groups ranged from 45.5 to 54.6 years and most patients were white (average proportions across 3 treatment groups: 78.6%-86.7%). Clinically meaningful and statistically significant improvements in primary and key secondary efficacy end points were observed. Zilucoplan at a dose of 0.3 mg/kg SC daily resulted in a mean reduction from baseline of 6.0 points in the QMG score (placebo-corrected change, –2.8;P = .05) and 3.4 points in the MG Activities of Daily Living score (placebo-corrected change, –2.3;P = .04). Clinically meaningful and statistically significant improvements were also observed in other secondary end points, the MG Composite and MG Quality-of-Life scores. Outcomes for the 0.1-mg/kg SC daily dose were also statistically significant but slower in onset and less pronounced than with the 0.3-mg/kg dose. Rescue therapy (intravenous immunoglobulin or plasma exchange) was required in 3 of 15, 1 of 15, and 0 of 14 participants in the placebo, 0.1-mg/kg zilucoplan, and 0.3-mg/kg zilucoplan arms, respectively. Zilucoplan was observed to have a favorable safety and tolerability profile. Conclusions and Relevance
Zilucoplan yielded rapid, meaningful, and sustained improvements over 12 weeks in a broad population of patients with moderate to severe AChR-Ab–positive gMG. Near-complete complement inhibition appeared superior to submaximal inhibition. The observed safety and tolerability profile of zilucoplan was favorable. Trial Registration
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:NCT03315130.