FormalPara Key Summary Points

Why carry out this study?

Adult patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis who have failed to respond to systemic therapies or phototherapies may respond to brodalumab, a treatment option that has been shown to be efficacious in this patient population.

Because psoriasis is a chronic disease that requires long-term treatment, it is important to assess long-term data regarding common adverse events and events of special interest in a real-world setting, including suicidal ideation and behavior (which occurred in patients treated with brodalumab during pivotal trials, although no causal association was established).

Focusing on the most common adverse events listed in the brodalumab package insert and adverse events of special interest, this analysis summarizes brodalumab pharmacovigilance data reported to Ortho Dermatologics by US patients and healthcare providers from August 15, 2017, through August 14, 2019, to provide a clear safety profile of brodalumab.

What was learned from the study?

The most commonly reported adverse event was arthralgia, there were 46 serious infections and no serious fungal infections, and there were 13 reports of malignancies that occurred in 10 patients (none of which were deemed related to brodalumab); notably, there were no reports of suicide attempts or completed suicides.

This 2-year US pharmacovigilance report supports the safety profile of brodalumab previously reported in long-term analyses of clinical trials and 1-year pharmacovigilance data and may assist healthcare providers when choosing the best treatment option for patients with psoriasis.

Digital Features

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Introduction

Brodalumab is a human interleukin (IL)-17 receptor A antagonist indicated for treatment of moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis in adult patients who are candidates for systemic therapy or phototherapy and have failed to respond or have lost response to other systemic therapies. The safety profile has been described in one phase 2 and three phase 3 trials (AMAGINE-1/-2/-3) [1,2,3,4]. Although US prescribing information for brodalumab carries a boxed warning about suicides, causal association between brodalumab and suicides reported during pivotal trials has not been established [1].

In long-term analyses of the AMAGINE-1 and AMAGINE-2 studies, arthralgia, headache, diarrhea, oropharyngeal pain, and Candida infections were among the most frequent adverse events (AEs) with brodalumab treatment over 120 weeks [5, 6]. We previously reported 1-year US pharmacovigilance AE data of brodalumab [7]. In the 1-year analysis, there were no completed suicides, suicide attempts, or serious fungal infections. The most commonly reported AEs were psoriasis flare, drug ineffectiveness, arthralgia, depression, diarrhea, and pain. In the current analysis, we review 2-year brodalumab pharmacovigilance data in the United States.

Methods

We summarize AEs reported to Ortho Dermatologics between August 15, 2017, and August 14, 2019, which were collected from 2677 US patients who took brodalumab. Adverse events were reported through pharmacovigilance channels for patients and healthcare providers (HCPs). This analysis focuses on the real-world occurrence of the most common AEs listed in the brodalumab package insert (incidence ≥ 1%) including arthralgia, headache, fatigue, diarrhea, oropharyngeal pain, nausea, myalgia, injection-site reactions, influenza, neutropenia, and tinea infections [1]. Additionally, AEs of special interest are summarized with descriptive statistics and as exposure-adjusted rates per patient-year (PY).

Brodalumab exposure was conservatively estimated as 1656 PY in the United States by calculating the first shipment date to last dosing date plus 55 days, equating to 5 half-lives of brodalumab. This calculation most likely represents an underestimation as these data were derived from a subset of 13 contracted pharmacies and noncontracted pharmacies that filled brodalumab prescriptions using a copay reimbursement card. Therefore, exposure rates do not include individuals who were treated at noncontracted pharmacies that did not use a copay reimbursement card. Additionally, pharmacovigilance reports did not typically describe medications from which patients were transitioning, provide detailed medical histories of patients, or specify duration of time from last therapy to brodalumab initiation.

The postmarketing data used in this analysis were noninterventional and were not collected as part of a clinical study; therefore, ethics approval was not required. This article is based on previously conducted studies and does not contain any new studies with human participants or animals performed by any of the authors.

Results

Real-World Occurrence of AEs Listed in Prescribing Information

In this 2-year analysis, 15.1% of AEs were reported by HCPs, whereas 84.9% were reported by patients or non-HCPs. Common AEs from the brodalumab package insert that were assessed are listed in Table 1. Arthralgia was the most common AE listed in the package insert for patients receiving brodalumab for 12 weeks in clinical trials (n = 71; 4.7%) [1]. It was also among the most frequently reported AEs in long-term analyses of AMAGINE-1 (n = 100; 7.5 events per 100 PY) [5] and AMAGINE-2 (n = 295; 9.1 events per 100 PY) [6] and in the 1-year pharmacovigilance analysis (n = 16; 0.07 events per PY) [7]. In this 2-year analysis, there were 73 reports of arthralgia (0.04 events per PY; Table 1). At the time of this analysis, it was reported that of these 73 patients, 30 continued and 20 discontinued brodalumab treatment; 23 actions were unknown. Arthralgia was most frequently reported for patients aged 40 to 50 years (n = 33), followed by patients aged 60 to 90 years (n = 19). Of 73 patients with arthralgia, 9 had concomitant myalgia and 19 had associated comorbid conditions (psoriatic arthritis, prior joint pain, possible arthritis, or other autoimmune conditions).

Table 1 US pharmacovigilance monitoring of brodalumab through 2 years (August 15, 2017–August 14, 2019)

Other common AEs listed in the brodalumab package insert include headache, fatigue, diarrhea, oropharyngeal pain, nausea, myalgia, injection-site reactions, influenza, neutropenia, and tinea infections. In this analysis, there were no reports of neutropenia or tinea infections (Table 1). Of 25 patients experiencing injection-site reactions, 15 maintained brodalumab treatment and 1 discontinued. All injection-site reactions were reported by patients or non-HCPs. Most patients experiencing headache (16/28) and fatigue (17/23) were female, and there were 5 and 4 known cases of patients discontinuing brodalumab owing to headache and fatigue, respectively. Four patients experiencing headache also reported fatigue. Most patients who experienced fatigue were aged 40–70 years. Most patients who experienced fatigue also had or potentially had an underlying comorbid condition [anemia, arthritis, or hypothyroidism (16/23)], and 7 were also receiving concomitant medications associated with fatigue (including central nervous system depressants and antihistamines). Of 13 influenza cases, 8 occurred during months associated with flu season (October to May [8]). Most influenza accounts (12/13) were reported by patients or non-HCPs. For most AEs, reporters often provided no medical history or medication list, limiting a full understanding of potential underlying conditions.

Adverse Events of Special Interest

Adverse events of special interest included suicide, depression, serious infections, fungal infections, Crohn’s disease, and malignancy (Fig. 1). There were no reports of suicide attempts or completed suicides. There were 25 reports of depression (0.015 events per PY); of these patients, 6 had a history of depression, 2 reported no history of depression, and 17 did not provide any details as to their mental health history. There were 46 reports of serious infections (0.028 events per PY), with 36 possibly related and 6 unlikely related to brodalumab (4 were nonassessable). Of patients with serious infections, 18 continued and 15 discontinued brodalumab; 13 actions were unknown. There were no reported serious fungal infections; 4 AEs of nonserious fungal infections led to brodalumab discontinuation (2 oral fungal infections [1 yeast infection of mouth], 1 fungal infection of fingernail, and 1 unclassified fungal infection). There were 2 oral candidiasis reports, for which 1 patient continued treatment and 1 action was unknown. One patient-reported AE of Crohn’s disease (0.001 events per PY), leading to discontinuation, occurred in a patient with a 2-year history of unexplained anemia.

Fig. 1
figure 1

Exposure-adjusted AEs of special interest per PY. The exposure-adjusted event rate per PY is the number of events per 1656 PY of exposure. AE adverse event; PY patient-year

Malignancy rates reported in a combined 1-year analysis of AMAGINE-1/-2/-3 and in a 1-year US pharmacovigilance analysis were 0.9 events per 100 PY and 0.01 events per PY, respectively [7, 9]. In this 2-year analysis, there were 13 malignancy reports that occurred in 10 patients (0.008 events per PY), which included 3 cases previously reported in the 1-year analysis [7]. Reported malignancies included ovarian, hepatic, lung, prostate, renal, gallbladder, skin cancer, squamous cell carcinoma of the skin after plaque improvement, keratoacanthoma-type squamous cell carcinoma, carcinoma in leg, and 3 neoplasms (tumor in neck, benign growth on leg, and malignant tumor removed from arm). Ovarian, hepatic, and lung malignancies were reported in the previous 1-year pharmacovigilance analysis [7]. No malignancies were deemed related to brodalumab. Of the 13 malignancy cases, 7 and 5 were associated with continued and discontinued treatment, respectively (action was unknown for 1 case).

Discussion

This US pharmacovigilance report on brodalumab summarizes the most common AEs from the brodalumab package insert and AEs of special interest reported from August 15, 2017, through August 14, 2019. There were no reports of suicide attempts or completed suicides. There were 46 serious infections and no serious fungal infections.

Previously, a 1-year report of pharmacovigilance data of brodalumab found that the most commonly reported AE was psoriasis flare [7]. Similar to this 2-year update, there were no reports of suicide attempts or completed suicides. This 2-year analysis investigated the most common AEs from the brodalumab package insert because many of the “most common” AEs listed in the 1-year report did not include detailed information because of the unsolicited manner of pharmacovigilance reporting.

In this 2-year update, the most commonly reported AE listed in the brodalumab package insert was arthralgia. It is unknown why arthralgia was the most common AE in this analysis. However, rates of arthralgia in the brodalumab AMAGINE-2/-3 clinical trials (4.6% and 5.8%, respectively) were similar to those seen in clinical trials of the IL-17 antagonists secukinumab through 52 weeks (8.1%) and ixekizumab through 24 weeks (4.4%) [2, 10, 11]. Additionally, the rate of arthralgia in the 1-year report was similar to that presented here (0.07 and 0.04 per PY, respectively) [7]. Finally, in a long-term analysis of the AMAGINE-1 trial, rates of arthralgia improved from 11.6% in year 1 to 4.1% in year 3 [5].

This pharmacovigilance report adds to a variety of recent safety meta-analyses for brodalumab and other biologic therapies for psoriasis. For instance, in a 2019 analysis, brodalumab was ranked as favorable regarding treatment discontinuation, but a lack of infection data was noted due to incomplete data [12]. Another meta-analysis that included brodalumab as well as other IL-17, IL-12/23, and IL-23 antagonists reported that brodalumab 210 mg ranked fourth out of 13 dosage options for short-term risk of AEs and eleventh out of 13 dosage options for short-term risk of serious AEs [13]. An analysis of brodalumab relative to placebo showed a small increase in overall AEs in the brodalumab group, with no significant differences between groups for serious AEs, nasopharyngitis, or upper respiratory tract infections [14]. The current report adds to these findings by reporting real-world pharmacovigilance data through 2 years, including serious infection data.

A potential limitation of this analysis is that only AEs reported to Ortho Dermatologics were documented. Additionally, reported patient-exposure estimates, which were derived from 13 specialty pharmacies and noncontracted pharmacies that filled brodalumab prescriptions using a copay reimbursement card, do not account for patients’ time on medication when treated outside of these pharmacies.

Conclusion

Many factors must be considered when selecting the optimal therapy for patients with psoriasis [15,16,17]. The consistent safety profile of brodalumab reported in pivotal trials and through long-term data is supported by this pharmacovigilance report. Furthermore, the absence of suicides or suicide attempts is notable.