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"Harrison, Pille"
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Clinical remission in patients with moderate-to-severe Crohn's disease treated with filgotinib (the FITZROY study): results from a phase 2, double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trial
2017
Filgotinib (GLPG0634, GS-6034) is a once-daily, orally administered, Janus kinase 1 (JAK1)-selective inhibitor. The FITZROY study examined the efficacy and safety of filgotinib for the treatment of moderate-to-severe Crohn's disease.
We did a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 2 study, which recruited patients from 52 centres in nine European countries. We enrolled eligible patients aged 18–75 years with a documented history of ileal, colonic, or ileocolonic Crohn's disease for 3 months or more before screening, as assessed by colonoscopy and supported by histology, and a Crohn's Disease Activity Index (CDAI) score during screening between 220 and 450 inclusive. Patients were randomly assigned (3:1) to receive filgotinib 200 mg once a day or placebo for 10 weeks. Patients were stratified according to previous anti-tumour necrosis factor alpha exposure, C-reactive protein concentration at screening (≤10 mg/L or >10 mg/L), and oral corticosteroid use at baseline, using an interactive web-based response system. The primary endpoint was clinical remission, defined as CDAI less than 150 at week 10. After week 10, patients were assigned based on responder status to filgotinib 100 mg once a day, filgotinib 200 mg once a day, or placebo for an observational period lasting a further 10 weeks. The filgotinib and placebo treatment groups were compared using ANCOVA models and logistic regression models containing baseline values and randomisation stratification factors as fixed effects. Analyses were done on the intention-to-treat non-responder imputation set. The trial was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02048618.
Between Feb 3, 2014, and July 10, 2015, we enrolled 174 patients with active Crohn's disease confirmed by centrally read endoscopy (130 in the filgotinib 200 mg group and 44 in the placebo group). In the intention-to-treat population, 60 (47%) of 128 patients treated with filgotinib 200 mg achieved clinical remission at week 10 versus ten (23%) of 44 patients treated with placebo (difference 24 percentage points [95% CI 9–39], p=0·0077). In a pooled analysis of all periods of filgotinib and placebo exposure over 20 weeks, serious treatment-emergent adverse effects were reported in 14 (9%) of 152 patients treated with filgotinib and three (4%) of 67 patients treated with placebo.
Filgotinib induced clinical remission in significantly more patients with active Crohn's disease compared with placebo, and had an acceptable safety profile.
Galapagos.
Journal Article
Effect of filgotinib, a selective JAK 1 inhibitor, with and without methotrexate in patients with rheumatoid arthritis: patient-reported outcomes
by
Meuleners, Luc
,
Harrison, Pille
,
Genovese, Mark
in
Antirheumatic Agents - administration & dosage
,
Arthritis, Rheumatoid - diagnosis
,
Arthritis, Rheumatoid - drug therapy
2018
Background
The aim was to assess patient-reported outcomes (PROs) in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) treated with filgotinib during two phase 2b, 24-week, randomized, placebo-controlled studies.
Methods
Patients with moderate-to-severe active RA and an inadequate response to methotrexate (MTX) were randomized to daily placebo or filgotinib 50 mg, 100 mg, or 200 mg as add-on therapy to MTX (NCT01888874) or as monotherapy (NCT01894516). At week 12, nonresponders receiving filgotinib 50 mg in both studies or placebo in the add-on study, and all patients receiving placebo as monotherapy, were re-assigned to filgotinib 100 mg. PROs were measured using the Health Assessment Questionnaire - Disability Index (HAQ-DI) including Patient Pain assessed by visual analog scale, and the Patient Global Assessment of Disease Activity (Patient Global), the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy (FACIT)-Fatigue Scale (Version 4), and the 36-Item Short Form Health Survey (SF-36).
Results
At week 12, improvements in all PROs, apart from the SF-36 mental component in the add-on study, were statistically better with filgotinib than placebo; some improvements were noted as early as the first assessment time point (week 1 or week 4). Filgotinib improved HAQ-DI by 0.58–0.84 points, FACIT-Fatigue by 6.9–11.4 points, Patient Global by 25.2–35.6 mm, and Pain by 24.2–37.9 mm; scores were maintained or improved to week 24. Across all PROs, more patients achieved minimal clinically important differences and normative values with filgotinib 200 mg than placebo. Patients re-assigned to filgotinib 100 mg at week 12 experienced improvements in PROs between weeks 12 to 24.
Conclusions
Filgotinib as MTX add-on therapy or as monotherapy demonstrated rapid and sustained (to 24 weeks) improvements in health-related quality of life and functional status in patients with active RA.
Trial registration
MTX add-on study:
ClinicalTrials.gov
,
NCT01888874
. Registered on 28 June 2013. Monotherapy study:
ClinicalTrials.gov
,
NCT01894516
. Registered on 10 July 2013.
Journal Article
Rheumatoid arthritis susceptibility loci at chromosomes 10p15, 12q13 and 22q13
by
Steer, Sophia
,
Harrison, Pille
,
Wordsworth, Paul
in
Agriculture
,
Animal Genetics and Genomics
,
Arthritis, Rheumatoid - genetics
2008
Jane Worthington and colleagues report that three SNPs, located on chromosomes 10p15, 12q13 and 22q13, are associated with susceptibility to rheumatoid arthritis. These SNPs had previously been putatively associated with rheumatoid arthritis in the genome-wide association study conducted by the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium.
The WTCCC study identified 49 SNPs putatively associated with rheumatoid arthritis at
P
= 1 × 10
−4
− 1 × 10
−5
(tier 3). Here we show that three of these SNPs, mapping to chromosome 10p15 (rs4750316), 12q13 (rs1678542) and 22q13 (rs3218253), are also associated (trend
P
= 4 × 10
−5
,
P
= 4 × 10
−4
and
P
= 4 × 10
−4
, respectively) in a validation study of 4,106 individuals with rheumatoid arthritis and an expanded reference group of 11,238 subjects, confirming them as true susceptibility loci in individuals of European ancestry.
Journal Article
Efficacy and safety of filgotinib, a selective Janus kinase 1 inhibitor, in patients with active psoriatic arthritis (EQUATOR): results from a randomised, placebo-controlled, phase 2 trial
by
Abi-Saab, Walid
,
Stanislavchuk, Mykola
,
Harrison, Pille
in
Accidental Falls
,
Adults
,
Antirheumatic Agents - adverse effects
2018
The Janus kinase 1 (JAK1) pathway has been implicated in the pathogenesis of psoriatic arthritis. We aimed to investigate the efficacy and safety of filgotinib, a selective JAK1 inhibitor, for the treatment of psoriatic arthritis.
The EQUATOR trial was a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 2 trial that enrolled adults from 25 sites in seven countries (Belgium, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Estonia, Poland, Spain, and Ukraine). Patients (aged ≥18 years) had active moderate-to-severe psoriatic arthritis (defined as at least five swollen joints and at least five tender joints) fulfilling Classification for psoriatic arthritis (CASPAR) criteria, active or a documented history of plaque psoriasis, and an insufficient response or intolerance to at least one conventional synthetic disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug (csDMARD). Patients continued to take csDMARDs during the study if they had received this treatment for at least 12 weeks before screening and were on a stable dose for at least 4 weeks before baseline. Using an interactive web-based system, we randomly allocated patients (1:1) to filgotinib 200 mg or placebo orally once daily for 16 weeks (stratified by current use of csDMARDs and previous use of anti-tumour necrosis factor). Patients, study team, and sponsor were masked to treatment assignment. The primary endpoint was proportion of patients achieving 20% improvement in American College of Rheumatology response criteria (ACR20) at week 16 in the full analysis set (patients who received at least one dose of study drug), which was compared between groups with the Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel test and non-responder imputation method. This trial is registered with ClincalTrials.gov, number NCT03101670.
Between March 9, and Sept 27, 2017, 191 patients were screened and 131 were randomly allocated to treatment (65 to filgotinib and 66 to placebo). 60 (92%) patients in the filgotinib group and 64 (97%) patients in the placebo group completed the study; five patients (8%) in the filgotinib group and two patients (3%) in the placebo group discontinued treatment. 52 (80%) of 65 patients in the filgotinib group and 22 (33%) of 66 in the placebo group achieved ACR20 at week 16 (treatment difference 47% [95% CI 30·2–59·6], p<0·0001). 37 (57%) patients who received filgotinib and 39 (59%) patients who received placebo had at least one treatment-emergent adverse event. Six participants had an event that was grade 3 or worse. The most common events were nasopharyngitis and headache, occurring at similar proportions in each group. One serious treatment-emergent adverse event was reported in each group (pneumonia and hip fracture after a fall), one of which (pneumonia) was fatal in the filgotinib group.
Filgotinib is efficacious for the treatment of active psoriatic arthritis, and no new safety signals were identified.
Galapagos and Gilead Sciences.
Journal Article
Study of the common genetic background for rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus
by
Steer, Sophia
,
Wordsworth, Paul
,
Worthington, Jane
in
Arthritis, Rheumatoid - genetics
,
Autoimmune diseases
,
Biological and medical sciences
2011
Background Evidence is beginning to emerge that there may be susceptibility loci for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) that are common to both diseases. Objective To investigate single nucleotide polymorphisms that have been reported to be associated with SLE in a UK cohort of patients with RA and controls. Methods 3962 patients with RA and 9275 controls were included in the study. Eleven SNPs mapping to confirmed SLE loci were investigated. These mapped to the TNFSF4, BANK1, TNIP1, PTTG1, UHRF1BP1, ATG5, JAZF1, BLK, KIAA1542, ITGAM and UBE2L3 loci. Genotype frequencies were compared between patients with RA and controls using the trend test. Results The SNPs mapping to the BLK and UBE2L3 loci showed significant evidence for association with RA. Two other SNPs, mapping to ATG5 and KIAA1542, showed nominal evidence for association with RA (p=0.02 and p=0.02, respectively) but these were not significant after applying a Bonferroni correction. Additionally, a significant global enrichment in carriage of SLE alleles in patients with RA compared with controls (p=9.1×10−7) was found. Meta-analysis of this and previous studies confirmed the association of the BLK and UBE2L3 gene with RA at genome-wide significance levels (p<5×10−8). Together, the authors estimate that the SLE and RA overlapping loci, excluding HLA-DRB1 alleles, identified so far explain ∼5.8% of the genetic susceptibility to RA as a whole. Conclusion The findings confirm the association of the BLK and UBE2L3 loci with RA, thus adding to the list of loci showing overlap between RA and SLE.
Journal Article
PADI4 genotype is not associated with rheumatoid arthritis in a large UK Caucasian Population
by
Naseem, Haris
,
Steer, Sophia
,
Harrison, Pille
in
Arthritis, Rheumatoid - genetics
,
Arthritis, Rheumatoid - immunology
,
Autoantibodies - analysis
2010
Background Polymorphisms of the peptidylarginine deiminase type 4 (PADI4) gene confer susceptibility to rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in East Asian people. However, studies in European populations have produced conflicting results. This study explored the association of the PADI4 genotype with RA in a large UK Caucasian population. Methods The PADI4_94 (rs2240340) single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) was directly genotyped in a cohort of unrelated UK Caucasian patients with RA (n=3732) and population controls (n=3039). Imputed data from the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium (WTCCC) was used to investigate the association of PADI4_94 with RA in an independent group of RA cases (n=1859) and controls (n=10 599). A further 56 SNPs spanning the PADI4 gene were investigated for association with RA using data from the WTCCC study. Results The PADI4_94 genotype was not associated with RA in either the present cohort or the WTCCC cohort. Combined analysis of all the cases of RA (n=5591) and controls (n=13 638) gave an overall OR of 1.01 (95% CI 0.96 to 1.05, p=0.72). No association with anti-CCP antibodies and no interaction with either shared epitope or PTPN22 was detected. No evidence for association with RA was identified for any of the PADI4 SNPs investigated. Meta-analysis of previously published studies and our data confirmed no significant association between the PADI4_94 genotype and RA in people of European descent (OR 1.06, 95% CI 0.99 to 1.13, p=0.12). Conclusion In the largest study performed to date, the PADI4 genotype was not a significant risk factor for RA in people of European ancestry, in contrast to Asian populations.
Journal Article
Association of CD40 with rheumatoid arthritis confirmed in a large UK case-control study
by
Steer, Sophia
,
Harrison, Pille
,
Wordsworth, Paul
in
Arthritis, Rheumatoid - genetics
,
Arthritis, Rheumatoid - immunology
,
Biological and medical sciences
2010
Objective A recent meta-analysis of published genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in populations of European descent reported novel associations of markers mapping to the CD40, CCL21 and CDK6 genes with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) susceptibility while a large-scale, case-control association study in a Japanese population identified association with multiple single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the CD244 gene. The aim of the current study was to validate these potential RA susceptibility markers in a UK population. Methods A total of 4 SNPs (rs4810485 in CD40, rs2812378 in CCL21, rs42041 in CDK6 and rs6682654 in CD244) were genotyped in a UK cohort comprising 3962 UK patients with RA and 3531 healthy controls using the Sequenom iPlex platform. Genotype counts in patients and controls were analysed with the χ2 test using Stata. Results Association to the CD40 gene was robustly replicated (p=2×10−4, OR 0.86, 95% CI 0.79 to 0.93) and modest evidence was found for association with the CCL21 locus (p=0.04, OR 1.08, 95% CI 1.01 to 1.16). However, there was no evidence for association of rs42041 (CDK6) and rs6682654 (CD244) with RA susceptibility in this UK population. Following a meta-analysis including the original data, association to CD40 was confirmed (p=7.8×10−8, OR 0.87 (95% CI 0.83 to 0.92). Conclusion In this large UK cohort, strong association of the CD40 gene with susceptibility to RA was found, and weaker evidence for association with RA in the CCL21 locus.
Journal Article
Investigation of rheumatoid arthritis susceptibility loci in juvenile idiopathic arthritis confirms high degree of overlap
by
Martin, Paul
,
Langefeld, Carl D
,
Flynn, Edward
in
Adolescent
,
Arthritis, Juvenile - diagnosis
,
Arthritis, Juvenile - genetics
2012
Objectives Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) shares some similar clinical and pathological features with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA); indeed, the strategy of investigating whether RA susceptibility loci also confer susceptibility to JIA has already proved highly successful in identifying novel JIA loci. A plethora of newly validated RA loci has been reported in the past year. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate these single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) to determine if they were also associated with JIA. Methods Thirty-four SNP that showed validated association with RA and had not been investigated previously in the UK JIA cohort were genotyped in JIA cases (n=1242), healthy controls (n=4281), and data were extracted for approximately 5380 UK Caucasian controls from the Wellcome Trust Case–Control Consortium 2. Genotype and allele frequencies were compared between cases with JIA and controls using PLINK. A replication cohort of 813 JIA cases and 3058 controls from the USA was available for validation of any significant findings. Results Thirteen SNP showed significant association (p<0.05) with JIA and for all but one the direction of association was the same as in RA. Of the eight loci that were tested, three showed significant association in the US cohort. Conclusions A novel JIA susceptibility locus was identified, CD247, which represents another JIA susceptibility gene whose protein product is important in T-cell activation and signalling. The authors have also confirmed association of the PTPN2 and IL2RA genes with JIA, both reaching genome-wide significance in the combined analysis.
Journal Article
P-178 Quality of Life Improvement Correlates with Clinical Remission in Patients with Active Crohn's Disease in Filgotinib Phase 2 FITZROY Study
by
Klopocka, Maria
,
Vermeire, Severine
,
Harrison, Pille
in
Clinical outcomes
,
Crohn's disease
,
Patients
2017
Filgotinib is a once daily, oral, selective Janus kinase 1 (JAK1) inhibitor, which has demonstrated efficacy in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Here we analyse patient reported outcomes in patients with moderate-to-severely active Crohn's disease (CD) from the Fitzroy Ph2 study.MethodsOne hundred seventy-four patients with moderate-to-severely active CD (CDAI: 220–450, evidence of active disease by centrally-read endoscopy) were randomized (3:1 ratio) to receive 200 mg filgotinib (FIL) or placebo (PBO) QD for 10 weeks. Immunosuppressants were discontinued prior to treatment initiation. Based on clinical response at Week 10, patients continued to receive filgotinib (200 or 100 mg QD) or placebo for an additional 10 weeks. Both TNF-antagonist naïves and non-responders were included. Clinical efficacy, safety, and patient reported outcomes (IBDQ and PRO2) data from the first 10-week part are presented.ResultsBaseline characteristics were similar in both groups, including mean disease duration (8.3 yr), mean CDAI score (293), mean SES-CD (14.6), oral corticosteroids (51%, mean daily dose 20.8 mg/d). The primary endpoint of the study was met: FIL induced clinical remission (CDAI < 150) in 47% of the patients, compared to 23% of those assigned to PBO (P = 0.0077). At week 10, quality of life, assessed by patient reported outcome PRO2 (PRO2: 7 × [mean daily number of liquid or very soft stools] + 7 × [mean daily abdominal pain score] [mean change from baseline FIL: −21.9; PBO: −15.6; P = 0.0321]) as well as IBDQ score (mean change from baseline FIL: 33.8; PBO: 17.6; P = 0.0046) improved significantly more in FIL compared to PBO. Effect of FIL on IBDQ was evident in all IBDQ subcomponents (mean change from baseline): bowel symptoms (FIL: 10.0; PBO: 5.6; P = 0.0040), systemic symptoms (FIL: 5.7; PBO: 2.9; P = 0.0044), emotional status (FIL: 12.1; PBO: 6.1; P = 0.0094), and social functioning (FIL: 6.2; PBO: 2.9; P = 0.0202). The IBDQ remission (IBDQ score ≥ 170) (FIL: 45%; PBO: 27%; P = 0.0505) and IBDQ response (change in IBDQ score ≥16) (FIL: 64%; PBO: 41%; P = 0.0137) were higher with FIL compared to PBO. The patient's general well-being (CDAI component, mean change from baseline FIL: −0.98; PBO: −0.65; P = 0.1024) improved more with FIL compared to PBO at week 10, but statistical significance was not reached. Improvements in clinical CDAI responses correlated with improvements in patient reported outcomes. Overall, filgotinib was safe and well tolerated. The rates of early discontinuation, SAEs and TEAEs including infections were similar in the FIL and PBO groups; the majority of the SAEs was related to worsening of CD.ConclusionsFilgotinib is the first JAK inhibitor to show efficacy in moderate-to-severely active CD. JAK1 inhibition with filgotinib induces clinical remission, associated with improved quality of life as demonstrated by patient-reported outcome measures. The efficacy and safety profile of filgotinib demonstrates its potential as an oral treatment with a novel mechanism of action for the treatment of CD.
Journal Article