Patients, Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
Male and female outpatients 75 years of age or younger with PID requiring IgG replacement therapy were eligible for the study. The PID diagnosis was based on the diagnostic criteria defined by the Pan-American Group for Immunodeficiency and the European Society for Immunodeficiencies [15]. Only patients who had received at least three doses of IVIG at regular 3- or 4-week intervals at a stable dose (variations of ±10 % were allowed) prior to enrollment were eligible. For inclusion in the SCIG period, the patient’s IgG trough levels between screening (or first mandatory IVIG infusion) and third mandatory IVIG infusion should have remained above or equal to 4 g/L, with at least one measurement above or equal to 5 g/L.
Patients who developed a serious bacterial infection (SBI) at the time of screening or during the mandatory IVIG treatment period were to be excluded from the study. Other exclusion criteria included lymphoid system malignancy, hyperprolinemia, known allergies or severe reactions to immunoglobulins or other blood products, hypoalbuminemia, protein-losing enteropathies, proteinuria (total urine protein concentration above 0.2 g/L), known hemophilia, or thrombocytopenia (platelet count below or equal to 50 × 109/L). Oral or parenteral steroids were allowed at doses less than 0.15 mg of prednisone equivalent/kg/day. Women who were pregnant, breastfeeding, not using appropriate contraception, or planning a pregnancy during the course of the study were also excluded.
This study was conducted in accordance with the International Conference on Harmonisation Good Clinical Practice guidelines, and the Declaration of Helsinki (2008 version). The study protocol and all other study documents were approved by the relevant independent Ethics Committees. Signed written informed consent (written assent for patients 7 years of age or younger at the time of obtaining the assent) was obtained from the patients or their parents or legally acceptable representatives prior to any study-related activities. This study was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (study identifier NCT01199705).
Study Design
This prospective, multicenter, open-label, single-arm Phase III study was designed to evaluate the efficacy, tolerability, and safety of IgPro20 in Japanese patients with PID requiring IgG replacement therapy. The primary objective of the study was to assess whether total serum IgG trough levels achieved with preceding IVIG treatment could be sustained upon a dose-equivalent switch to IgPro20.
The study consisted of a screening period, a mandatory IVIG treatment period with three planned infusions at 3- or 4-week intervals at the same dose as the one administered prior to the study, a 12-week SCIG wash-in/wash-out period, and a 12-week SCIG efficacy period with weekly infusions followed by a completion or discontinuation visit (Fig. 1). For all patients, a viral safety follow-up visit was performed 12–17 weeks after the last SCIG infusion.
Weekly SCIG infusions were allowed to be done at home, except for the first 3 to 8 infusions conducted at the study site. These supervised SCIG infusions were provided to train the patient or their parent or legally acceptable representative who performed the rest of home-based SCIG infusions.
IgPro20 was infused at predefined injection sites on the upper arms, abdomen, thighs, and/or lateral hip recommended by the investigator. The maximum volume per injection site was 25 mL. The actual point(s) of injection could be changed, if needed, with each weekly administration. In case of injection-related local reactions, it was not recommended to use a certain injection site until the local reaction from the previous injection had completely resolved.
To provide a dose-equivalent switch to IgPro20, the initial weekly dose of IgPro20 during the wash-in/wash-out period was calculated as the previous IVIG dose divided by the IVIG dosing interval in weeks. If the IVIG dose had been adjusted during the mandatory IVIG treatment period, the average of the three actual doses was used for calculations. The initial IgPro20 dose could be adjusted, if necessary, based on the IgG trough levels measured during the wash-in/wash-out period, to achieve IgG trough levels of no less than 5 g/L.
The allowed IgPro20 maximal infusion rate for all simultaneously used injection sites during the wash-in/wash-out period (Weeks 1–12) was 25 mL/h or lower. A stepwise increase up to 35 mL/h was allowed for the subsequent infusions at the investigator’s discretion, depending on tolerability by the patient.
The main differences between this and the previous two Hizentra® licensing studies [6, 7] were the inclusion of a dedicated IVIG treatment period of 3 months and a pharmacoeconomics analysis.
Efficacy and Safety Assessments
The primary efficacy endpoint was the geometric mean ratio (GMR) of total serum IgG trough levels on IgPro20 therapy versus that achieved during the mandatory IVIG treatment period. Total serum IgG concentration was measured prior to each IVIG infusion and prior to the IgPro20 infusions at Week 1 and every fourth week thereafter. Comparable trough levels were indicated by a GMR close to 1.
Secondary efficacy endpoints included the annualized rates of SBI (according to the pre-specified US Food and Drug Administration [FDA] criteria [16]) and both serious and non-serious infections during the SCIG efficacy period. Patients were required to keep patient diaries, from which the investigators extracted the information necessary to evaluate the number of days missed from work/school or unable to perform normal daily activities due to infections and duration of hospitalization due to infections. Duration of antibiotics use for infection prophylaxis and treatment was assessed from concomitant medications documented in the Case Report Form.
Safety endpoints were the number, rate, severity, and relatedness of any AEs per infusion and patient, local tolerability of subcutaneous infusions, and changes in vital signs (diastolic and systolic blood pressure, heart rate, and body temperature) before and after infusions at the study site. Local tolerability was assessed by patients between 24 and 72 h after the end of infusion and was analyzed descriptively by calculating frequency distributions of assessment categories (“very good”, “good”, “fair”, or “poor”).
Changes in blood chemistry (albumin, total bilirubin, creatinine, total protein, lactate dehydrogenase, blood urea nitrogen, alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase, and alkaline phosphatase), hematology, and urinalysis and changes in viral safety markers for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1 and HIV-2), hepatitis C virus (HCV), and hepatitis B virus (HBV), as compared with baseline assessments, were also recorded.
Statistical Methods
Sample size calculation to assess the GMR of total serum IgG trough levels during IVIG versus SCIG treatment (primary efficacy endpoint) was based upon an assumed residual standard deviation (SD) of 10 %. A 2-sided 90 % confidence interval (CI) was estimated to extend from 0.93 to 1.07 times the GMR if 15 patients were evaluable for the primary analysis. To account for discontinuations, a total of 25 patients were planned for enrollment in the study.
The intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis included data from all patients treated with IgPro20 during the efficacy period. The per-protocol data set (PPS) included all patients who had received at least six doses of IVIG at 3- to 4-week intervals (pre-study and during the IVIG study period) followed by uniform weekly SCIG infusions until at least Week 16 (Fig. 1), with at least one documented total serum IgG trough level in the efficacy period. The safety analysis was based on the “all treated” (AT) data set comprised of all patients who received at least one IgG (IVIG or IgPro20) dose during any study period.
To ensure correct assessment of the GMR, the primary efficacy analysis was based on the PPS, thus excluding patients with dose deviations of >10 %. The GMR (SCIG efficacy period versus mandatory IVIG treatment) with a 2-sided 90 % CI was calculated using mean log-transformed IgG trough levels averaged by patient and treatment period. Additionally, descriptive statistics were calculated for all IgG trough levels by visit and by treatment period. Analyses of secondary efficacy variables were based on the data set used for ITT analysis and the PPS.
Analyses of safety endpoints were based on the AT set. Baseline measurements refer to the sample taken prior to first mandatory IVIG infusion.