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Tocilizumab in GCA - A Winner!

Dr. Andy Thompson  Featured
November 14 2016 1:00 PM ET via RheumReports RheumReports

At the first plenary session at this year's ACR, John Stone presented the results of the GiACTA trial. The GiACTA trial evaluated the effects of tocilizumab (TCZ) on sustained glucocorticoid-free remission in GCA. GCA is a chronic and often devastating disease that is difficult to manage and difficult to study. Even today, at least 10% of patients lose vision. Glucocorticoids are effective but they are associated with long-term morbidity. For more than 65 years, no true steroid-sparing therapy has been developed. 

Study design

This trial enrolled 251 patients (meeting pre-defined criteria) over 22 months from 14 countries. The patients were randomized to one of four groups: 

  • Group 1: 26 week steroid taper

  • Group 2: 52 week steroid taper

  • Group 3: TCZ weekly and 26 week taper

  • Group 4: TCZ every other week and 26 week taper 

Endpoints

Primary endpoint: Sustained remission from week 12 to week 52 and adherence to the protocol defined prednisone taper.

Flare was defined as recurrence of GCA signs/symptoms or an increase in ESR of > 30 mm/hr that was attributed to GCA. A disease flare had to be accompanied by an increase in the prednisone dose. 

Sustained remission was defined as absence of flare following induction of remission within 12 weeks of baseline and maintained up to week 52.

Other endpoints included: Time to flare, cumulative GC dose, quality of life.

Patients

251 patients were enrolled with an average age of 69, 75% were female, 97% were caucasian, and 47% were newly diagnosed versus 53% of patients with relapsing disease. 

PRIMARY ENDPOINT: Sustained Remission at Week 52

  • Group 1: 26 week steroid taper - 14%

  • Group 2: 52 week steroid taper - 17.6%

  • Group 3: TCZ weekly and 26 week taper - 56%

  • Group 4: TCZ every other week and 26 week taper - 53.1% 

Steroid Sparing Effect

TCZ had a significant steroid sparing effect. The cumulative prednisone dose in the TCZ groups was about 2000 mg while the GC groups alone approached 4000 mg. 

Adverse Events

Adverse events were balanced across groups with no new safety signals. There were no deaths or bowel perforations. Two malignancies were reported in the prednisone only groups. 

Conclusion

  1. There is finally something new in GCA

  2. TCZ has a dramatic steroid sparing effect in GCA

  3. The era of unending GC treatment with no viable alternative is over

Comments

I personally do not believe that GCA or PMR are self-limited diseases. I seem to have acquired a number of patients who cannot seem to reduce prednisone below a maintenance dose (often around 5 mg per day). We also hear reports of patients developing aneurysms despite "doing well." I wholeheartedly agree that the addition of tocilizumab in the treatment of GCA is truly revolutionary. The big issue will be accessing coverage.


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About the Author

Dr. Andy Thompson
Dr. Andy Thompson

Dr. Andy Thompson is an Associate Professor at Western University and founder of Rheuminfo.com, Rheumtalks.com, and RheumReports.com.

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