TY - JOUR
T1 - Teprotumumab Efficacy, Safety, and Durability in Longer-Duration Thyroid Eye Disease and Re-treatment
T2 - OPTIC-X Study
AU - Douglas, Raymond S.
AU - Kahaly, George J.
AU - Ugradar, Shoaib
AU - Elflein, Heike
AU - Ponto, Katharina A.
AU - Fowler, Brian T.
AU - Dailey, Roger
AU - Harris, Gerald J.
AU - Schiffman, Jade
AU - Tang, Rosa
AU - Wester, Sara
AU - Jain, Amy Patel
AU - Marcocci, Claudio
AU - Marinò, Michele
AU - Antonelli, Alessandro
AU - Eckstein, Anja
AU - Führer-Sakel, Dagmar
AU - Salvi, Mario
AU - Sile, Saba
AU - Francis-Sedlak, Megan
AU - Holt, Robert J.
AU - Smith, Terry J.
N1 - Funding Information:
Supported by Horizon Therapeutics plc, Deerfield, Illinois; the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (grant no.: BMBF 01E01003 [K.A.P.]); the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland (grant no.: UL1TR002369 [R.D.]). Horizon Therapeutics sponsored the OPTIC and OPTIC-X trials; designed the trials with input from a steering committee of investigators; contributed to data collection, analysis, and interpretation; contributed to manuscript writing and reviewing; and approved the final version. The author(s) have made the following disclosure(s): R.S.D.: Financial support – Horizon Therapeutics, Immunovant G.J.K.: Financial support – Horizon Therapeutics B.T.F.: Financial and Nonfinancial support – Horizon Therapeutics R.D.: Financial support – Horizon Therapeutics G.J.H.: Financial support – Horizon Therapeutics J.S.: Financial support – Horizon Therapeutics R.T.: Financial support – Horizon Therapeutics S.W.: Financial support – Horizon Therapeutics C.M.: Financial support – Horizon Therapeutics D.F.-S.: Financial support – Horizon Therapeutics M.S.: Financial support – Valenza Bio, Inc. S.S.: Financial support – Horizon Therapeutics M.F.-S.: Financial support – Horizon Therapeutics R.J.H.: Financial support – Horizon Therapeutics T.J.S.: Consultant – Immunovant; Financial support – Horizon Therapeutics; Patents – 6936426, 7998681, 8153121, and 8178304, which describe the use of inhibiting the IGF-1 receptor in the treatment of thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy and which are held by UCLA/Los Angeles Biomedical Institute Obtained funding: N/A
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 American Academy of Ophthalmology
PY - 2022/4
Y1 - 2022/4
N2 - Purpose: To evaluate teprotumumab safety/efficacy in patients with thyroid eye disease (TED) who were nonresponsive or who experienced a disease flare. Design: The Treatment of Graves’ Orbitopathy to Reduce Proptosis with Teprotumumab Infusions in an Open-Label Clinical Extension Study (OPTIC-X) is a teprotumumab treatment and re-treatment trial following the placebo-controlled teprotumumab Phase 3 Treatment of Graves’ Orbitopathy (Thyroid Eye Disease) to Reduce Proptosis with Teprotumumab Infusions in a Randomized, Placebo-Controlled, Clinical Study (OPTIC) trial. Participants: Patients who previously received placebo (n = 37) or teprotumumab (n = 14) in OPTIC. Methods: OPTIC nonresponders or those who flared (≥2-mm increase in proptosis, ≥2-point increase in clinical activity score [CAS], or both) during follow-up were treated for the first time (previous placebo patients) or re-treated with teprotumumab in OPTIC-X with 8 infusions over 24 weeks. Main Outcome Measures: Proptosis response and safety. Secondary outcomes included proptosis, CAS, subjective diplopia, and quality-of-life. Results: Thirty-three of 37 placebo-treated OPTIC patients (89.2%) became proptosis responders (mean ± standard deviation, –3.5 ± 1.7 mm) when treated with teprotumumab in OPTIC-X. The responses were equivalent to the OPTIC study. In these responders, proptosis, CAS of 0 or 1, and diplopia responses were maintained in 29 of 32 patients (90.6%), 20 of 21 patients (95.2%), and 12 of 14 patients (85.7%), respectively, at follow-up week 48. The median TED duration was 12.9 months versus 6.3 months in those treated with teprotumumab in the OPTIC study. Of the 5 OPTIC teprotumumab nonresponders re-treated in OPTIC-X, 2 responded, 1 showed a proptosis reduction of 1.5 mm from OPTIC baseline, and 2 discontinued treatment early. Of the OPTIC teprotumumab responders who experienced flare, 5 of 8 patients (62.5%) responded when re-treated (mean proptosis reduction, 1.9 ± 1.2 mm from OPTIC-X baseline and 3.3 ± 0.7 mm from OPTIC baseline). Compared with published double-masked trials and their integrated follow-up, no new safety signals were identified. Mild hearing impairment was reported; 4 events occurred during the first course of treatment, and 2 events reoccurred after re-treatment. Conclusions: Patients with TED of longer disease duration responded similarly to those treated earlier in the disease course. Patients with an insufficient initial response or flare may benefit from additional teprotumumab therapy. No new safety risk was identified; however additional postmarketing pharmacovigilance is ongoing.
AB - Purpose: To evaluate teprotumumab safety/efficacy in patients with thyroid eye disease (TED) who were nonresponsive or who experienced a disease flare. Design: The Treatment of Graves’ Orbitopathy to Reduce Proptosis with Teprotumumab Infusions in an Open-Label Clinical Extension Study (OPTIC-X) is a teprotumumab treatment and re-treatment trial following the placebo-controlled teprotumumab Phase 3 Treatment of Graves’ Orbitopathy (Thyroid Eye Disease) to Reduce Proptosis with Teprotumumab Infusions in a Randomized, Placebo-Controlled, Clinical Study (OPTIC) trial. Participants: Patients who previously received placebo (n = 37) or teprotumumab (n = 14) in OPTIC. Methods: OPTIC nonresponders or those who flared (≥2-mm increase in proptosis, ≥2-point increase in clinical activity score [CAS], or both) during follow-up were treated for the first time (previous placebo patients) or re-treated with teprotumumab in OPTIC-X with 8 infusions over 24 weeks. Main Outcome Measures: Proptosis response and safety. Secondary outcomes included proptosis, CAS, subjective diplopia, and quality-of-life. Results: Thirty-three of 37 placebo-treated OPTIC patients (89.2%) became proptosis responders (mean ± standard deviation, –3.5 ± 1.7 mm) when treated with teprotumumab in OPTIC-X. The responses were equivalent to the OPTIC study. In these responders, proptosis, CAS of 0 or 1, and diplopia responses were maintained in 29 of 32 patients (90.6%), 20 of 21 patients (95.2%), and 12 of 14 patients (85.7%), respectively, at follow-up week 48. The median TED duration was 12.9 months versus 6.3 months in those treated with teprotumumab in the OPTIC study. Of the 5 OPTIC teprotumumab nonresponders re-treated in OPTIC-X, 2 responded, 1 showed a proptosis reduction of 1.5 mm from OPTIC baseline, and 2 discontinued treatment early. Of the OPTIC teprotumumab responders who experienced flare, 5 of 8 patients (62.5%) responded when re-treated (mean proptosis reduction, 1.9 ± 1.2 mm from OPTIC-X baseline and 3.3 ± 0.7 mm from OPTIC baseline). Compared with published double-masked trials and their integrated follow-up, no new safety signals were identified. Mild hearing impairment was reported; 4 events occurred during the first course of treatment, and 2 events reoccurred after re-treatment. Conclusions: Patients with TED of longer disease duration responded similarly to those treated earlier in the disease course. Patients with an insufficient initial response or flare may benefit from additional teprotumumab therapy. No new safety risk was identified; however additional postmarketing pharmacovigilance is ongoing.
KW - Long-term
KW - Proptosis
KW - Re-treatment
KW - Teprotumumab
KW - Thyroid eye disease
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U2 - 10.1016/j.ophtha.2021.10.017
DO - 10.1016/j.ophtha.2021.10.017
M3 - Article
C2 - 34688699
AN - SCOPUS:85120353489
SN - 0161-6420
VL - 129
SP - 438
EP - 449
JO - Ophthalmology
JF - Ophthalmology
IS - 4
ER -