Nintedanib slows loss of lung function in limited cutaneous systemic sclerosis, ILD
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Key takeaways:
- Patients receiving nintedanib demonstrated slowed function deterioration compared with those receiving placebo.
- The researchers said the findings assert the value of prompt diagnoses.
Nintedanib slows the deterioration of lung functionality in patients with limited cutaneous systemic sclerosis and interstitial lung disease, according to data published in Rheumatology.
“Patients with [limited cutaneous SSc (lcSSc)] have been underrepresented in clinical trials, limiting the data available on the clinical course and treatment of these patients,” Yannick Allanore, MD, PhD, of Cochin Hospital, in Paris, and colleagues wrote. “Nintedanib has been licensed for the treatment of SSc-ILD, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) and other chronic fibrosing ILDs with a progressive phenotype.
“In the SENSCIS trial in patients with SSc-ILD, nintedanib reduced the rate of decline in forced vital capacity (FVC) (ml/year) over 52weeks by 44% vs placebo,” they added. “The SENSCIS trial enrolled a broad population of patients with SSc-ILD, including patients with lcSSc. Thus, the SENSCIS trial and its open-label extension, SENSCIS-ON, provide an opportunity to investigate the course of ILD and the effects of treatment specifically among patients with lcSSc.”
To analyze ILD course as well as the impacts of nintedanib (Ofev, Boehringer Ingelheim) in patients with limited cutaneous SSc, Allanore and colleagues conducted the SENCIS and SENCIS-ON trials. In the former trial, patients with SSc who experienced their first non-Raynaud symptom within the prior 7years — and also receiving prednisone 10mg per day or less and/or on stable therapy with mycophenolate or methotrexate for at least 6months — were randomized to receive either nintedanib 150mg twice daily or placebo. These patients remained on blinded treatment for at least 52 weeks but no more than 100 weeks.
Patients who completed SENCIS and completed a follow-up visit 28days later, or who completed a drug-drug interaction study of nintedanib plus oral contraceptive — in female patients with SSc-ILD — in which the drug provided for approximately 14 to 28days, were eligible to enter SENSCIS-ON. In this trial, all patients received open-lable nintedanib. Patients were categorized as having limited cutaneous SSc or diffuse cutaneous SSc prior to participating in one of the precursor trials.
For this analysis, main outcomes included change from baseline in forced vital capacity (FVC) as measured at 52 weeks in all patients with limited cutaneous SSc. In addition, the researchers analyzed the proportion of participants who registered a relative decline of FVC of more than 5% and 10%, as well as which patients were predicted to reach an absolute reduction of more than 5% or 10% by week 52.
A total of 183 patients with limited cutaneous SSc participated in SENCIS-ON and were eligible for analysis due to the availability of their week 52 data. The change in baseline of FVC through week 52 was –41.5 ml in patients who transitioned from placebo to nintedanib at the introduction of SENCIS-ON, and –45.1 ml in those who received nintedanib throughout the original SENCIS and SENCIS-ON trials, according to the researchers.
“These analyses of data from the SENSCIS trial indicate that patients with lcSSc may develop progressive pulmonary fibrosis within a few years of diagnosis of SSc,” Allanore and colleagues wrote. “Over 52 weeks, the rate of decline in FVC in patients with lcSSc and ILD was lower in patients treated with nintedanib than placebo, with adverse events that could be managed by most patients. These findings support the screening of patients with lcSSc for ILD and the importance of prompt initiation of treatment in patients with lcSSc-ILD to preserve lung function.”