Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is the most common inflammatory rheumatoid disease in France, affecting 0.3% of the general population. Without effective treatment, the persistent inflammation causes invalidating pain and joint destruction, leading to major functional disability. Biological agents have been proposed for patients with RA who have the most severe form of the disease and that are inadequate responder patients to conventional synthetic Disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (csDMARDs). TNF inhibitors (TNFi) are historically proposed as the first biological DAMRD for inadequate responder patients to csDMARDs. A diverse therapeutic arsenal has become available in recent years with the development of non-anti-TNFα drugs whose mechanisms of action are different from the classical TNFi. This new biotherapy class includes tocilizumab and abatacept, two drugs recently available for subcutaneous administration that enables ambulatory care for patients who would otherwise require repeated in-hospital care. The role of these new treatments in the therapeutic strategy has been emphasized by studies that demonstrated their efficacy as first-line treatments. However, in clinical practice, TNFi remain the most common first-line treatment for the majority of patients, non-anti-TNFα biological agents being reserved for inadequate responder patients. In second line, several studies have investigated therapeutic strategies for inadequate responder patients to TNFi. Current data suggest that it could be wise to change the therapeutic target after failure of a first-line treatment with TNFi. Data about the comparative efficacy of different biologics proposed after failure of a first-line treatment with TNFi are in progress. Meta-analyses from registries and academic trials conducted in France and The Netherlands suggest that non-anti-TNFα agents would have equivalent or superior efficacy compared with a second TNFi. This finding suggests clinicians to switch for an alternate therapeutic target after failure of a first-line TNFi. Data comparing different non-anti-TNFα biologics in inadequate responder patients to TNFi are scare. Industrial trials have demonstrated sustained biological efficacy of non-anti-TNFα biologics after failure of a TNFi. However, there is very little solid data on the direct comparison between them.
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is the most common inflammatory rheumatoid disease in France, affecting 0.3% of the general population. Without effective treatment, the persistent inflammation causes invalidating pain and joint destruction, leading to major functional disability as well as progressive structural damage resulting in major joint deformity. Biologic agents are taking on an increasingly important role in the management of patients with an inadequate response to conventional synthetic disease modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (csDMARDs). Biological DMARD (bDMARD) therapy consists in the use of monoclonal antibodies or fusion proteins, administered intravenously or subcutaneously. The earliest developed biologic agents have been available for more than 15 years. Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα), a pro-inflammatory cytokine, was the first cytokine successfully targeted by a biologic agent for RA treatment. TNF inhibitors (TNFi) are historically proposed as the first bDAMRD for inadequate responder patients to csDMARDs. More recently non-anti-TNFα drugs have emerged, with other biological targets such as interleukin-6 receptor (tocilizumab) or B- (rituximab) and T-lymphocytes (abatacept) that are implicated in the inflammatory response. Initially administered strictly intravenously, these drugs are now available in formulations adapted to subcutaneous administration, which allows ambulatory care for patients who otherwise would require repeated in-hospital care. National and international guidelines, especially those issued in 2013 by the European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR) and also in 2013 by the French Society of Rheumatology now recommend first-line treatment not only with TNFi but also with non-anti-TNFα biologic agents. However, in routine practice, most clinicians preferably prescribe TNFi for the first-line regimen, reserving non-anti-TNFα drugs to TNFi inadequate responder patients. There is a growing body of research focusing on first-line biologic agents but there is very little solid data on the direct randomized comparison between them. Actually, all three of the published studies have systematically compared a non-anti-TNFα biomedication versus TNFi (one study with a blinded design and two open studies). The therapeutic strategy that should be adapted after failure of a TNFi regimen has also been investigated. Those studies favor non-anti-TNF drugs over an alternate TNFi. There is adequate evidence of the efficacy of the different non-anti-TNFα biologic agents versus placebo after TNFi failure. In other hands, industrial trials have not provided any comparative data between drugs. An academic trial from The Netherlands using medico-economic performance as the primary outcome found no difference in efficacy between abatacept and rituximab (a non-anti-TNFα drug administered exclusively intravenously) after failure of a TNFi. Meta-analyses using data from care networks have not reported any difference between different non-anti-TNFα drugs after failure of a TNFi. Data from national registries have provided interesting complementary information since in everyday practice these agents are generally used after failure of at least one TNFi. The Danish registry thus suggests that the therapeutic response would be better with tocilizumab than with abatacept. This observation was confirmed by an analysis of French registries data presented at the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) congress in November 2016 showing that tocilizumab exhibits superiority for treatment persistence over 2 years. These results were fully in agreement with the findings of the French ROC trial comparing intravenous administration of a second anti-TNFα drug versus a non-anti-TNFα agent after failure of an anti-TNFα drug that suggested a superiority of tocilizumab over abatacept in the subgroup of patients given a non-anti-TNFα agent. A recent Bayesian network meta-analysis showed better efficacy in the non-anti-TNFα groups for ACR20 in patients who responded insufficiently to an anti-TNFα. Subcutaneous formulations have been recently developed for both tocilizumab and abatacept. Subcutaneous administration is important because it enables ambulatory care for a substantial number of patients who to date are recurrently hospitalized in day-care units for their intravenous infusions. Excepting specific situations, the subcutaneous formulation will be favored for a large majority of patients because of economic as well as practical considerations. Phase III trials have demonstrated the equivalence of the intravenous versus subcutaneous routes of administration focusing on efficacy and tolerance. The subcutaneous formulation is now also available for routine administration of both tocilizumab and abatacept. Nevertheless, despite large-scale industrial trials on drug equivalence, data issuing from clinical practice suggest a potential difference in the behavior of these two formulations which needs to be explored. Rituximab is apart in the treatment strategy because of its exclusive intravenous administration at spaced intervals and because it is used for specific patient profiles (extra-articular involvement, history of neoplasia, rheumatoid factor (RF) and anti-citrullinated protein antibody (ACPA) positivity). There is no perspective for the development of a subcutaneous formulation of rituximab for RA patients. Furthermore, the routine treatment schedule for rituximab (one-time injections at a mean interval of 9 months) would compromise comparison, especially short-term comparison, with other subcutaneous treatments. These findings illustrate the need for a new multicentric, prospective, randomized trial designed to demonstrate the superiority of tocilizumab over abatacept in patients exhibiting inadequate response to a first anti-TNFα. A direct comparison of subcutaneous formulation is the need for the promising route of administration for future ambulatory care.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
224
Treatment arm: tocilizumab (RoActemra®): 162 mg weekly a schema for therapeutic adaptation with injection intervals determined according to transaminase levels or blood cell counts (neutropenia, thrombopenia) as recommended by Roche-Chugaï (see table below).
Treatment arm: abatacept (Orencia®) 125 mg weekly after an initial dose of 500 mg (body weight \<60kg), 750 mg (body weight between 60 and 100 kg), or 1000 mg (body weight \>100 mg) 24 hours before the first subcutaneous injection.
Hôpital Saint-Philibert
Lomme, Hauts-de-France, France
RECRUITINGHôpital Avicenne
Bobigny, France
RECRUITINGCHU de Bordeaux
Bordeaux, France
RECRUITINGCH de Boulogne-sur-Mer
Boulogne-sur-Mer, France
RECRUITINGCh Cahors
Cahors, France
RECRUITINGCHU de Clermont-Ferrand
Clermont-Ferrand, France
RECRUITINGCHU de Grenoble Hôpital Sud
Grenoble, France
RECRUITINGCHD Vendée
La Roche-sur-Yon, France
RECRUITINGHôpital Bicêtre
Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, France
RECRUITINGCHRU de Lille
Lille, France
RECRUITING...and 16 more locations
Change from baseline to 6 months of the Clinical Disease Activity Index (CDAI)
The CDAI is a composite score combining clinical items only: Tender 28-joint count, Swollen 28-joint count, Patient Global Disease Activity (PGA), Evaluator"s Global Disease Activity (EGA). This score provides a numerical assessment reflecting disease activity independently of cute phase reactants. It will be measured at baseline and 6 months after inclusion
Time frame: 6 months
Change from baseline of the disease activity score
DAS28-ESR and DAS28-CRP: the disease activity score (DAS) is a composite score providing a numerical assessment based on the tender and swollen joint counts, the PGA VAS and the selected acute phase reactant (ESR or CRP).
Time frame: 3, 6 and 12 months
Change from baseline of the Clinical Disease Activity Index (CDAI)
The CDAI is a composite score combining clinical items only: Tender 28-joint count, Swollen 28-joint count, Patient Global Disease Activity (PGA), Evaluator"s Global Disease Activity (EGA). This score provides a numerical assessment reflecting disease activity independently of cute phase reactants.
Time frame: 3 and 12 months
Change from baseline of the SDAI
the simple disease activity index (SDAI) is a composite score providing a numerical assessment based on the tender and swollen joint count, the PGAVAS, the EGA VAS, and CRP
Time frame: 3, 6 and 12 months
Change from baseline in HAQ quality-of-life scores
Time frame: 3, 6 and 12 months
Change from baseline in SF-36 quality-of-life scores
Time frame: 3, 6 and 12 months
Change from baseline in disease self assessment
FLARE-RA score
Time frame: 3, 6 and 12 months
Change from baseline in Patient's Pain Assessment (PPA)
Time frame: 3, 6 and 12 months
Change from baseline in PGA visual analogic scale (VAS)
Time frame: 3, 6 and 12 months
Proportion of patients having achieved low disease activity
Low disease activity (LDA) is defined as DAS28-ESR\<3.2 (LDA-DAS28-ESR) and CDAI\<10 (LDA-CDAI)
Time frame: 3, 6 and 12 months
Proportion of patients in good or moderate EULAR therapeutic response
Good or moderate EULAR therapeutic response is defined as at least 0.6-point reduction in DAS28-ESR and final DAS28-ESR\<5.1
Time frame: 3, 6 and 12 months
Proportion of patients achieving ACR20 response
ACR20 response correspond to a 20% improvement in the following parameters: number of tender joints; number of swollen joints; 3/5 complementary items (PPA VAS, PGA VAS, EGA VAS, self-administered functional status questionnaire, acute phase reactant)
Time frame: 3, 6 and 12 months
Proportion of patients achieving ACR50 response
ACR50 responses correspond respectively to a 50% improvement in the following parameters: number of tender joints; number of swollen joints; 3/5 complementary items (PPA VAS, PGA VAS, EGA VAS, self-administered functional status questionnaire, acute phase reactant)
Time frame: 3, 6 and 12 months
Proportion of patients achieving ACR70 response
ACR70 response correspond respectively to a 70% improvement in the following parameters: number of tender joints; number of swollen joints; 3/5 complementary items (PPA VAS, PGA VAS, EGA VAS, self-administered functional status questionnaire, acute phase reactant)
Time frame: 3, 6 and 12 months
Rates of treatment persistence
Time frame: 3, 6 and 12 months
Rates of patients presenting at least one adverse events
Time frame: 3, 6 and 12 months
Rates of treatment withdrawals for intolerance
Time frame: 3, 6 and 12 months
Rates of treatment withdrawals for intolerance requiring in-hospital care
Time frame: 3, 6 and 12 months
Rates of cardiovascular events
Time frame: 3, 6 and 12 months
Rates of perturbation of the lipid profile
Time frame: 3, 6 and 12 months
Rates of severe infection requiring in-hospital care
Time frame: 3, 6 and 12 months
Rate of rescue medication use authorized by the protocol and treatment dose of patients achieving treatment persistence
Time frame: 3, 6 and 12 months
Changes in joint US-Doppler synovitis and Doppler hyperemia grade of the hands and wrists
Time frame: 6 months
Changes in Sharp score in hands, wrists and feet X-Ray
Time frame: 12 months
Change in vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) levels
Time frame: At 3 and 6 months
Changes in immunoglobulin (quantitative assay)
Time frame: 6 months
Changes in interleukin-6 serum levels
Time frame: 6 months
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