Patients
A total of 125 unique patients in the ITT/AT populations received 15,013 weekly infusions; treatment characteristics are presented in Table 1. Across studies, a total of 43 patients discontinued SCIG for numerous reasons, the most common being withdrawal of consent (n = 20), AEs (n = 12) and “other” reasons, such as loss to follow-up, termination of study site, non-compliance etc. (n = 11).
Table 1 Treatment characteristics In Japan, Europe, and the US, patients were enrolled for up to 183, 208, and 168 consecutive weeks, respectively (Table 1, Fig. 1). The populations testing efficacy included 108 unique patients; who were treated for a total of 91,567 days (250.9 years). Across the PPS populations, 84 unique patients received Hizentra® for a treatment period ≥1 year.
Baseline patient characteristics for each study are presented in Table 2. There were 11, 23, and 10 children and adolescents in the Japanese, European, and US pivotal studies, respectively. There were six patients aged ≥65 years amongst pivotal trials, all from the US pivotal trial.
Table 2 Baseline patient characteristics In the Japanese and European pivotal studies, the proportion of patients with XLA was relatively high; therefore, male participants outnumbered females. The Japanese pivotal study included a female patient with a rare extremely skewed X-chromosome inactivation leading to XLA whose diagnosis had been previously confirmed [21]. Most patients in the US pivotal study had CVID, and the ratio of men to women was more equal.
Study Drug Administration
Mean weekly doses of Hizentra® ranged from 83.22 mg/kg (standard deviation [SD], 33.15) in the Japanese pivotal study to 221.3 mg/kg (SD, 73.38) in the US extension study (Table 1). Mean infusion rates within studies ranged from 25.2 mL/h in the Japanese pivotal study to 49.3 mL/h in the US extension study (Table 1), while mean (SD) infusion duration ranged from 0.98 (0.50) h in the Japanese follow-up study to 2.31 (1.20) h in the US pivotal study (Table 1).
Efficacy
Overall, there were seven SBIs in the combined studies, and the annualized rate of SBIs in the combined studies was 0.03 (upper 99% CI limit 0.064, Table S3). There were no SBIs in the Japanese studies, the European pivotal study, and the US pivotal study (annualized rates 0). For the US pivotal study, this meant that its primary objective of an annualized SBI rate of <1 per patient was met. A total of 778 infections were reported in the combined studies, with an annualized rate of 3.10 (upper 99% CI limit 3.37) events per patient (Table S3). The annualized rate of infections in individual studies ranged from 1.91 to 5.18 (Fig. 2).
There were significantly more infections starting in January, March, October, November, and December compared with May and July (p < 0.05). The LOESS regression revealed a smooth parabolic curve; therefore, a generalized model with a linear and quadratic term for calendar month was used to determine statistical significance. Both terms were significant (p = 0.0014 and p = 0.0004, respectively), indicating a significant drop in the frequency of infections during the middle of the calendar year (Fig. 3). Only one of seven SBIs started in a summer month. The number of days hospitalized due to infection was 238 days in the combined studies, with an annualized rate of 0.95 (upper 99% CI limit 1.10) days per patient (Table S3). The annualized rate of days hospitalized due to infection in individual studies ranged from 0.00 to 3.48 (Fig. 2).
In total across all studies, there were 1292 days out of work/school rendering annualized rates of 2.06–8.00 events per patient across individual studies (Table S3).
Overall, there were 9226 days of antibiotic treatment used for infection prophylaxis in all seven studies combined, with an annualized rate of 36.78 (upper 99% CI limit 37.68) days per patient (Table S3). Antibiotic use was much higher in the Japanese study compared with the European and US studies (Fig. 2).
In the Japanese, European, and US pivotal studies, switching to weekly Hizentra® SCIG resulted in an increase in serum IgG trough levels. Patients who received IVIG prior to Hizentra® (including 19 patients in the European pivotal study who received SCIG therapy other than Hizentra®) had median (range) baseline serum IgG trough levels of 5.90 (4.67–10.01), 6.48 (5.26–11.71), and 10.47 (6.54–19.0) g/L, respectively. Median (range) serum IgG trough levels at follow-up studies were 6.64 (5.20–10.43), 8.09 (5.2–11.2), and 11.43 (7.24–22.04) g/L in the Japanese, European, and US pivotal studies, respectively with dose adjustment in the US study (Table 3). Those who switched to Hizentra® SCIG from a previous SCIG had median (range) IgG trough levels in the European pivotal study of 8.73 (5.22–10.15) g/L on Hizentra® vs 8.57 (5.36–10.30) on previous SCIG.
Table 3 Serum IgG concentrations In the European pivotal study, the primary objective of sustained serum IgG levels with Hizentra® similar to the patients’ previous IgG treatment was clearly met. The mean of individual median IgG trough values with Hizentra® treatment was slightly higher in patients with CVID (8.37 g/L during infusions 12 to 17) than in patients with XLA (7.61 g/L during infusions 12 to 17); however, the increase was comparable (6.9% in CVID compared to 8.7% in XLA). The primary objective of the Japanese pivotal study was also met, as the GMR of serum IgG trough levels was similar to those of the preceding IVIG treatment period (GMR = 1.09; 90% CI 1.06–1.14). All three pivotal studies, therefore, met their respective primary objectives.
There were no clinically relevant differences between median serum IgG trough concentrations at baseline and during SCIG maintenance dosing in the follow-up and extension studies (Table 3).
Pharmacokinetics
The final structural population PK (pharmacometric) model was a two-compartment model with inter-individual variability on CL and V2 on all patients. The median values of all non-covariate parameters from bootstrap resampling were consistent with the original population PK estimates (Table S4). The effect of body weight on CL and V2 was within the 90% CI but was more variable, and the CIs for these parameters were relatively wide (Table S4).
Analysis of pooled data revealed no differences in IgG metabolism between ethnic groups despite the numerically different results. The effect of the Japanese population was also tested in various sensitivity models, results from which showed that there was no significant race-related covariate effect from the inclusion of Japanese patients (Fig. S2). After adjustment for average body weight, major PK variables affecting IgG half-life, such as CL and V2, were the same in the Caucasian and Asian patient populations (unpublished data).
Safety
There were 5039 AEs in total across all studies. Overall, there were no relevant differences in the frequency of AEs between the different age groups receiving Hizentra® in any of the studies, and there was no increase in the rate of AEs with increasing age, as might be expected. The rates of AEs per infusion were also similar in male and female patients. The incidence of patients with AEs at least possibly related to the study medication in the European pivotal study appeared higher in patients with CVID compared with patients with XLA (23 [76.7%] vs. 8 [40.0%], respectively).
Events per infusion ranged from 0.094 in the European extension study to 0.773 in the US pivotal study (Fig. 4a). While most patients experienced ≥1 AE, most were mild/moderate. There was a single reaction that required infusion interruption during treatment.
In total, 3197 treatment-related AEs were reported (0.003–0.634 AEs per infusion in the combined studies; Table S5). As expected for subcutaneous administration, the most common treatment-related AEs were ISRs (2919 events; 0.001–0.592 AEs per infusion in the combined studies; Table S5). The rate of ISRs was variable amongst the studies, a phenomenon that may reflect the differences in assessment.
Systemic AEs were uncommon. Of 45 serious AEs (SAEs) reported (0.001–0.004 SAEs per infusion in the combined studies; Fig. 4b), two were considered possibly related to the study medication (one case of encephalitis in the Japanese follow-up study and one case of asthma in the Japanese extension study); however, viral infection was considered a plausible alternative explanation for the episode of encephalitis. In the European extension study, one patient with a known ongoing history of recurrent severe pneumonia developed an acute exacerbation and subsequently died of respiratory failure. This death was thought to be related to underlying disease and not to the study medication.
The incidence of AEs leading to discontinuation was low in all studies. No patients in the Japanese pivotal study and one patient each in the Japanese follow-up study (encephalitis) and Japanese extension study (local ISRs) discontinued the study due to AEs. In the European studies, 6 patients (11.8%) in the pivotal study discontinued due to AEs (at least possibly related to study drug in 3 patients) and 1 patient died (due to AE unrelated to study drug) in the extension study. In the US studies, 2 patients (4.1%) in the pivotal study discontinued due to AEs (one of which was deemed at least possibly related to study drug), and 1 patient (4.8%) in the US extension study discontinued due to an AE, which was not considered related to study drug.
Comparison of Privigen® and Hizentra®
ISRs were more common with Hizentra® than with Privigen® (ratio 90.8; 95% CI 35.27–233.51; Table S6), although only occurring with a rate of approximately 0.2 per infusion. However, systemic AEs such as fatigue, headache, vomiting, nausea, and pyrexia were more common with Privigen® (≤0.22 events/infusion) than with Hizentra® (≤0.00915 events/infusion). Ratios were ≤0.0981, indicating an approximately 10-fold lower incidence of these events in patients receiving Hizentra®. These results underline the expected outcome that ISRs are more common with SCIG than IVIG, while systemic reactions are, conversely, less common with SCIG than with IVIG.