Safety And Effectiveness Of Adalimumab In Japanese Patients With Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis: Results From A Real-World Postmarketing Study

MODERN RHEUMATOLOGY(2021)

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Abstract
Objectives: This study was conducted to assess the real-world safety and effectiveness of adalimumab in patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). Methods: In this all-case, postmarketing surveillance study (NCT01412021) conducted in Japan, patients receiving adalimumab for JIA affecting multiple joints were observed for 24 weeks. The safety (adverse drug reactions [ADRs]/serious ADRs) and effectiveness (4-variable Disease Activity Score in 28 joints using erythrocyte sedimentation rate [DAS28-4/ESR] remission rate) were assessed. Results: In the safety population (n = 356), 90.3% (65/72; weight, >= 15-<30 kg) of patients received adalimumab 20 mg every 2 weeks (q2w) and 98.3% (236/240; weight >= 30 kg) received 40 mg q2w. Incidence of ADRs and serious ADRs was 29.8% (106/356) and 3.4% (12/356), respectively. Incidence of ADRs was significantly higher in patients aged <15 years vs. >= 15 years (34.6% vs. 21.1%, p = .0072), those with comorbidities vs. without (38.3% vs. 25.7%, p = .0155), and those receiving dose <40 mg q2w vs. >= 40 mg q2w (38.8% vs. 26.9%, p = .0418). DAS28-4/ESR remission rate improved from 21.7% (36/166) at baseline to 74.7% (112/150) at week 24. Conclusions: Adalimumab was well tolerated and had acceptable safety and effectiveness in patients with JIA in the real-world setting.
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Key words
Adalimumab, anti-TNF therapy, Japanese, juvenile idiopathic arthritis, postmarketing surveillance
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