This is a Phase 3, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, multicenter study to determine the efficacy and safety of luspatercept (ACE-536) plus Best supportive care (BSC) versus placebo plus BSC in adults who require regular red blood cell transfusion due to (β)-thalassemia. The study is divided into the following periods: * Historical Period, * Screening/Run-in Period, * Double-blind Treatment Period (48 weeks), * Double-blind Long-term Treatment Period, (at the investigator's discretion an additional 48 weeks), * Open-Label Phase post unblinding and upon Data Monitoring Committee positive recommendation * Post-treatment Follow-up Period
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
336
Subjects will start with luspatercept at 1 mg/kg dose level.
Placebo, Subcutaneous, every 21 days.
Children's Hospital of Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California, United States
Children's Hospital and Research Center at Oakland
Oakland, California, United States
Ann and Robert H Lurie Childrens Hospital of Chicago
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Boston Children's Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Weill Cornell Medical College
New York, New York, United States
Percentage of Participants Who Achieved Erythroid Response - Week 13 to Week 24
Erythroid Response was defined as red blood cell (RBC) transfusion burden reduction from baseline ≥ 33% with a reduction of at least 2 units during Week 13 - 24 compared to the 12-week interval on or prior to Dose 1 Day 1.
Time frame: Baseline: Day -83 to Day 1; Treatment: Weeks 13 to Week 24
Percentage Of Participants Who Achieved ≥ 33% Reduction From Baseline in Transfusion Burden - Week 37 to Week 48
Percentage of participants who achieved a red blood cell (RBC) transfusion burden reduction from baseline ≥ 33% with a reduction of at least 2 units during Weeks 37 - 48 compared to the 12-week interval on or prior to Dose 1 Day 1.
Time frame: Baseline: Day -83 to Day 1; Treatment: Weeks 37 to Week 48
Percentage Of Participants Who Achieve ≥ 50% Reduction From Baseline in Transfusion Burden - Week 13 to Week 24
Percentage of participants who achieved a red blood cell (RBC) transfusion burden reduction from baseline ≥ 50% with a reduction of at least 2 units during Weeks 13 - 24 compared to the 12-week interval on or prior to Dose 1 Day 1.
Time frame: Baseline: Day -83 to Day 1; Treatment: Weeks 13 to Week 24
Percentage Of Participants Who Achieve ≥ 50% Reduction From Baseline in Transfusion Burden - Week 37 to Week 48
Percentage of participants who achieved a red blood cell (RBC) transfusion burden reduction from baseline ≥ 50% with a reduction of at least 2 units during Week 37 to Week 48 compared to the 12-week interval on or prior to Dose 1 Day 1.
Time frame: Baseline: Day -83 to Day 1; Treatment: Week 37 to Week 48
Mean Change From Baseline in Transfusion Burden - Week 13 to Week 24
Baseline was defined as the total number of Red Blood Cells (RBC) units transfused during the 12-week interval on or prior to Dose 1 Day 1. This is compared to the total number of RBC units transfused during the 12-week interval from treatment weeks 13-24.
Time frame: Baseline: Day -83 to Day 1; Treatment: Weeks 13 to Week 24
Mean Change From Baseline In Liver Iron Concentration (LIC) At Week 48
Baseline was defined as the last value on or before the first dose of study drug was administered; if multiple values were present for the same date, the average of these values was used. If a participant had 1 postbaseline assessment, it was used as the Week 48 value. If a participant had multiple postbaseline assessments, the last one was used as the Week 48 value. The value of LIC was collected by magnetic resonance imaging. Participants with a LIC value \> 43 mg/g were not included in the analysis.
Time frame: Baseline: Week -12 to Day -1; Treatment: Week 48
Mean Change From Baseline In Mean Daily Dose Of Iron Chelation Therapies (ICT) At Week 48
Three different types of Iron Chelation Therapy (ICT) were analyzed: 1. Deferasirox 2. Deferiprone 3. Deferoxamine Mesilate/Deferoxamine The baseline mean daily dose was calculated using the ICT dosage during the 12 weeks prior to first study drug administration and the postbaseline mean daily dose was calculated during the last 12 weeks of the 48-week double-blind Treatment Period or the last 12 weeks of the study treatment for early discontinued participants.
Time frame: Baseline: Day -83 to Day 1; Treatment: Week 37 to Week 48
Mean Change From Baseline In Mean Serum Ferritin At Week 48
For each participant, the baseline mean serum ferritin level was calculated during the 12 weeks prior to first study drug administration. The postbaseline mean serum ferritin level was calculated during the last 12 weeks of the 48-week double-blind Treatment Period or last 12 weeks of study treatment, if discontinued early. The change was calculated as the difference of post baseline mean serum ferritin level and baseline mean serum ferritin level.
Time frame: Baseline: Day -83 to Day 1; Treatment: Week 37 to Week 48
Mean Change From Baseline In Total Hip And Lumbar Spine Bone Mineral Density (BMD) At Week 48
For BMD, the lumbar spine and total hip were measured at baseline and 48 weeks by dual energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA). Baseline was defined as the last value on or before the first dose of study drug is administered; if multiple values are present for the same date, the average of these values was used. If during the 48 week double-blinded treatment period, a participant has only one assessment, it is counted as 'Week 48' visit; if a participant has multiple assessments, the last one is used as 'Week 48' visit. The analysis was done on the population that had at least 2 measurements.
Time frame: Baseline: Day 1; Treatment: Week 48
Mean Change From Baseline In Myocardial Iron At Week 48
Myocardial Iron levels were measured by Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), using MRI parameter T2\* (Unit: ms). T2\* values correlates with heart failure (HF) risk (e.g. T2\*\<6ms: high HF risk).
Time frame: Baseline: Day 1; Treatment: Week 48
Mean Change From Baseline in the Transfusion-dependent Quality of Life (TranQol) Questionnaire At Week 24
The TranQol is a self-administered quality of life tool developed for beta-thalassemia patients. The adult self-report version used in this study, includes 36 questions assessed on a 5-point response, that are grouped into 5 domains (Physical Health, Emotional Health, Sexual Health, Family Functioning, School/Career Functioning). Scores are calculated according to specific scoring algorithms developed by the authors. Both individual domains score and the total score range from 0 (worst) to 100 (best). Total Score and Physical Health domain score are reported. Positive change from baseline values indicate improvement.
Time frame: Baseline: 4 weeks prior to Day 1; Treatment: Week 24
Mean Change From Baseline in the 36-item Short Form Health Survey (SF-36) Questionnaire At Weeks 24
The SF-36 (version 2) is a generic, self-administered instrument consisting of 8 multi-item scales that assess 8 health domains. The raw score for each health domain is transformed into a 0 (worst) to 100 (best) domain score. The 0-100 scale score for each health domain is further converted to normbased scores using a T-score transformation, with a mean of 50 and a standard deviation (SD) of 10. Higher norm-based T-scores indicate better heath/QoL. The domains/summaries reported are: 1. Physical Functioning (Range of possible T-scores is 19.26 - 57.54) 2. General Health (Range of possible T-scores is 18.95 - 66.50) 3. Physical Component summary (PCS) (Range of possible T-scores is 5.02 - 79.78). Positive change from baseline values indicate improvement.
Time frame: Baseline: 4 weeks prior to Day 1; Treatment: Weeks 24
Number of Participants Who Utilized Healthcare Resources During Study
Number of participants who had any of the following types of Healthcare Resource Utilization (HRU): - a doctor office visit (non-study scheduled) - an emergency department visit - a hospitalization
Time frame: From informed consent signing (up to 12 weeks before start of treatment) to end of treatment (up to approximately 227 weeks)
Number of Days Spent in Higher Care Hospital Units
Types of hospitals units considered to be 'higher care' are: - Intensive Care Unit - Coronary Care Unit
Time frame: From informed consent signing (up to 12 weeks before start of treatment) to end of treatment (up to approximately 227 weeks)
Percentage Of Participants Who Were Transfusion Independent For ≥ 8 Weeks During Treatment
Transfusion independence was defined as the absence of any transfusion during any consecutive "rolling" 8-week time interval within the treatment period, i.e, Days 1 to 56, Days 2 to 57 and so on.
Time frame: From first dose through 3 weeks post last dose (up to approximately 218 weeks)
Duration of Reduction in Transfusion Burden
Responders were defined as subjects who achieved ≥ 33% reduction or ≥ 50% reduction in Red Blood Cells Transfusion (RBC-T) burden from baseline with a reduction of at least 2 RBC units during any rolling 12-week interval. The duration of reduction is calculated as Last Day of Response - First day of response +1
Time frame: From first dose to end of study treatment (up to approximately 215 weeks)
Longest Duration of Transfusion Independence
Transfusion independence was defined as the absence of any transfusion during any consecutive "rolling" 8-week time interval within the treatment period, ie, Days 1 to 56, Days 2 to 57 and so on. Longest duration of transfusion independence was estimated based on Kaplan-Meier model.
Time frame: From first dose through 3 weeks post last dose (up to approximately 218 weeks)
Time to Erythroid Response
Time to erythroid response was defined as the time from first dose of the study drug to first erythroid response. This is reported for participants with a ≥ 33% reduction from baseline in RBC transfusion burden (with a reduction of at least 2 units) for any 12-week interval., as well as participants with a ≥ 50% reduction from baseline in RBC transfusion burden (with a reduction of at least 2 units) for any 12-week interval.
Time frame: From first dose to 48 weeks following first dose
Post-Baseline Transfusion Event Frequency
The number of transfusion events after start of study treatment were evaluated. For the definition of transfusion events, if multiple transfusions happen on the same date, they are counted as one event; if multiple transfusions happen on two consecutive dates, they are counted as one event; if multiple transfusions happen on three consecutive dates, they are counted as two events. Results are presented in 24-week intervals, up to 96 weeks after start of study treatment
Time frame: From first dose through 3 weeks post last dose (up to approximately 218 weeks)
Pharmacokinetic (PK) Parameters: Bayesian Estimate of Apparent Clearance (CL/F)
Time frame: Blood serum samples taken pre-dose and on Days 1, 22, 64, 85, 106, 127, 169, 211, 253, 295, 337
Pharmacokinetic (PK) Parameters: Bayesian Estimate of Apparent Volume of Distribution of the Central Compartment (V1/F)
Time frame: Blood serum samples taken pre-dose and on Days 1, 22, 64, 85, 106, 127, 169, 211, 253, 295, 337
Pharmacokinetic (PK) Parameters: Bayesian Estimate of Elimination Half-life (t1/2)
Time frame: Blood serum samples taken pre-dose and on Days 1, 22, 64, 85, 106, 127, 169, 211, 253, 295, 337
Pharmacokinetic (PK) Parameters: Bayesian Estimate of Time to Reach Maximum Concentration (Tmax)
Time frame: Blood serum samples taken pre-dose and on Days 1, 22, 64, 85, 106, 127, 169, 211, 253, 295, 337
Pharmacokinetic (PK) Parameters: Bayesian Estimate of Maximum Concentration for the Starting Dose (Cmax)
Time frame: Blood serum samples taken pre-dose and on Days 1, 22, 64, 85, 106, 127, 169, 211, 253, 295, 337
Pharmacokinetic (PK) Parameters: Bayesian Estimate of Maximum Concentration at Steady State for the Starting Dose (Cmax,ss)
Time frame: Blood serum samples taken pre-dose and on Days 1, 22, 64, 85, 106, 127, 169, 211, 253, 295, 337
Pharmacokinetic (PK) Parameters: Bayesian Estimate of Area Under the Concentration-Time Curve at Steady State for the Starting Dose (AUCss)
Time frame: Blood serum samples taken pre-dose and on Days 1, 22, 64, 85, 106, 127, 169, 211, 253, 295, 337
Participants With Treatment-Emergent Adverse Events (TEAE)
An AE is any noxious, unintended, or untoward medical occurrence that may appear or worsen during the course of a study. A serious AE is any AE occurring at any dose that - Results in death - Is life-threatening - Requires or prolongs existing inpatient hospitalization - Results in persistent or significant disability/incapacity - Is a congenital anomaly/birth defect - Constitutes an important medical event. The Investigator assessed the relationship of each AE to study drug and graded the severity according to the National Cancer Institute (NCI) Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE, Version 4.03): - Grade 1 = Mild - Grade 2 = Moderate (some limitation in activity; no/minimal medical intervention) - Grade 3 = Severe (limitation in activity; medical intervention required) - Grade 4 = Life-threatening - Grade 5 = Death
Time frame: From first dose to 90 days following last dose (up to approximately 52 months)
Participants With Pre-Existing and/or Treatment-Emergent Antidrug Antibodies (ADA)
Number of participants with positive ADA prior to taking study drug and/or during study. A participant was counted as "treatment-emergent" if there was a positive post-baseline sample while the baseline sample was ADA negative, or there was a positive post-baseline sample with a titer ≥ 4-fold of the baseline titer while the baseline sample was ADA positive. A participant was counted as "preexisting" if the baseline sample was ADA positive and the participant was not qualified for "treatment-emergent."
Time frame: Timeframe: pre-dose, Day 1, Days 22, 64, 106, 148, 232, 316
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