Update on Alefacept Safety

Author:

Wexler Denise1,Searles Gordon1,Landells Ian1,Shear Neil H.1,Bissonnette Robert1,Papp Kim1,Poulin Yves1,Langley Richard1,Gulliver Wayne P.S.1

Affiliation:

1. From Wellington Dermatology, London, ON; Keystone Dermatology Institute, Edmonton, AB; Nexus Clinical Research, St. John's, NL; Department of Medicine, Division of Dermatology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON; Innovaderm Research, Montreal, QC; Probity Medical Research, Waterloo, ON; Centre Dermatologique du Québec Métropolitain, Québec, QC; Dermatology Associates, Halifax, NS; and NewLab Clinical Research, St. John's, NL

Abstract

Background: Alefacept has been demonstrated in clinical trials to be an effective, safe, and well-tolerated treatment strategy when used alone or in combination with other antipsoriatic therapies in patients with chronic plaque psoriasis. Objective: AWARE (Amevive Wisdom Acquired from Real-World Evidence) is a multicenter, observational, Canadian phase IV registry evaluating the efficacy and safety of alefacept, alone or in combination with other antipsoriatic therapies, in patients with psoriasis. Methods: Patients with chronic plaque psoriasis were treated with at least one course of alefacept followed by an off-treatment period, typically lasting 12 or more weeks. Prospective follow-up was at least 60 weeks, depending on when patients presented for retreatment. Safety data collected throughout the study included the incidence of serious adverse events (SAEs), dosing suspensions, and withdrawals owing to adverse events. Results: Twelve SAEs were reported in psoriasis patients treated with at least one course of alefacept, with only one considered to be possibly related to the study drug. Approximately one-quarter of patients missed at least one dose of alefacept during the course of the study. A total of 291 doses of alefacept were missed, representing almost 4% of the total doses administered in this group of patients. Low CD4+ count was the most frequent reason for missed doses; however, no patient had persistently low CD4+ counts requiring permanent discontinuation of alefacept treatment. Seven patients in the AWARE registry discontinued treatment with alefacept, with the most common reason being patient request. Conclusion: The AWARE study supports the safety of alefacept used alone or in combination with other antipsoriatic therapies, in a broad population of real-world chronic plaque psoriasis patients in Canada.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Dermatology,Surgery

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