“Rheumatologists will finally have available an option for their patients that is going to allow them to discontinue steroids as rapidly as possible,” Christine Birchwood, PhD, senior medical science director from Genentech, told Healio Rheumatology. “It is the first new therapy these patients will have had in more than 50 years.”
Christine Birchwood
Sandra Horning
“Today’s FDA decision means people living with giant cell arteritis will, for the first time, have an FDA-approved treatment option for this debilitating disease,” Sandra Horning, MD, chief medical officer and head of Global Product Development, said in a company press release.
According to the release, tocilizumab (Actemra, Roche and Genentech) is the first FDA-approved therapy for the treatment of adults with giant cell arteritis (GCA). To make its decision, the FDA used data from the phase 3 GiACTA study of 251 patients with GCA. The results showed patients treated with tocilizumab plus a 6-month glucocorticoid regimen more effectively sustained remission through 52 weeks (56% for weekly tocilizumab and 53.1% for bi-weekly tocilizumab) compared with patients who took placebo plus with a 26-week steroid taper (14%) and with patients who took placebo plus a 52-week steroid taper (17.6%). The safety findings were consistent with its known profile, which is an increased risk for serious infection.
John H. Stone
“The results of the GiACTA study mark a huge step forward for patients with GCA. For more than 65 years, no medication besides glucocorticoids has been proven in a convincing way to be effective,” John H. Stone, MD, MPH, GiACTA’s lead investigator, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, director of Clinical Rheumatology and Edward Fox Chair in Medicine at the Massachusetts General Hospital, said. “This rigorous, randomized and carefully blinded study addresses one of the greatest needs of physicians who treat GCA – finding an alternative to prolonged periods of steroid therapy.”
The FDA previously granted breakthrough therapy designation for this application, as well as a priority review.
In the FDA press release, Badrul Chowdhury, MD, PhD, director of the Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, and Rheumatology Products in the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said, “We expedited the development and review of this application because this drug fulfills a critical need for patients with this serious disease who had limited treatment options.”
“The rheumatology community has shown a lot of enthusiasm about these data,” Birchwood told Healio Rheumatology. “I think they are excited to have an alternative treatment for their patients.”