Johnson
& Johnson's Stelara succeeds in Phase III Crohn's
disease trial
Send a link to a friend
[October 20, 2015]
By Bill Berkrot
(Reuters) - Johnson & Johnson's Stelara was
significantly better than placebo at inducing clinical response and
remissions in patients with moderate to severe Crohn's disease,
according to data from a late stage trial, providing ammunition for a
potential expanded approval of the medicine.
|
Stelara, a biotech medicine that blocks inflammation, is approved to
treat the skin condition scaly plaque psoriasis and a type of
arthritis associated with psoriasis.
J&J reported $613 million in third-quarter Stelara sales. The
company said it was on track for global approval filings for Crohn's
this year.
Subjects in the 628-patient trial presented on Monday received
either a single infusion of 130 milligrams of Stelara, a Stelara
infusion of 6 mg per kilogram of weight or a placebo.
After six weeks, 52 percent of those in the 130 mg group and 56
percent in the 6mg/kg group experienced a clinical response, defined
as a reduction from baseline of at least 100 points in the Crohn's
Disease Activity Index score. That compared with 29 percent in the
placebo group.
In addition, 31 percent of the Stelara 130 mg group and 40 percent
in the other dosing arm achieved clinical remission by week 8 of the
study, versus 20 percent for placebo.
The results were deemed to be statistically significant.
"I think this is an approvable drug," said Dr. Brian Feagan, co-lead
investigator of the study presented at the American College of
Gastroenterology meeting in Honolulu.
"We need drugs that are alternatives to TNF blockers," he said of
widely used biologic medicines such as AbbVie's Humira. "This drug
can be a first-line biologic therapy."
Patients in the study had previously failed to be helped by steroids
or immunomodulator drugs, such as methotrexate. Another study is
testing Stelara in those who failed anti-TNF therapy.
[to top of second column] |
Crohn's disease is a chronic inflammatory condition of the
gastrointestinal tract that affects about 700,000 Americans and
250,000 Europeans. Symptoms can include frequent diarrhea, abdominal
pain and rectal bleeding.
In addition to reductions in signs and symptoms of disease, Stelara
patients reported significant improvements in the Inflammatory Bowel
Disease Questionnaire, a health-related quality of life measure,
researchers said.
The rate of serious side effects, including infections, was similar
for Stelara and placebo.
"Serious infection is really the thing that clinicians worry about
and there was not a signal here, which is surprisingly great news,"
Feagan said.
(Reporting by Bill Berkrot; Editing by Nick Zieminski)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|