Secukinumab 150 mg has demonstrated significant improvement in signs and symptoms of ankylosing spondylitis (AS), with response rates sustained for up to 5 years. Here, we report end-of-study 3-year efficacy and safety results of secukinumab 150 and 300 mg from the MEASURE 3 study.
A total of 226 patients was randomized to intravenous secukinumab 10 mg/kg (baseline, weeks 2 and 4) followed by subcutaneous (s.c.) secukinumab 300/150 mg every 4 weeks or a matched placebo. At week 16, placebo patients were re-randomized to s.c. secukinumab 300/150 mg.
Analysis at week 156 included patients initially randomized to secukinumab and those who switched from placebo to secukinumab at week 16 (any secukinumab 300/150 mg). Outcome measures at week 156 included Assessment of Spondyloarthritis International Society (ASAS) 20/40, Bath Ankylosing Spondylitis Disease Activity Index, ASAS partial remission (PR), ASAS 5/6, and Ankylosing Spondylitis Disease Activity Score-C-reactive protein inactive disease.
The retention rates from weeks 16 to 156 were 80.5% and 80.9% in secukinumab 300 and 150 mg, respectively. ASAS 20/40 response rates at week 156 were 75.0%/56.5% and 68.2%/47.7% for secukinumab 300 and 150 mg, respectively.
At week 156, response rates on more stringent clinical end points (eg, ASAS 40, ASAS-PR) were higher with the 300-mg dose, particularly in tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-inadequate responder (IR) patients. No new safety findings were observed.
Secukinumab (300 and 150 mg) provided sustained improvements through 3 years in the signs and symptoms of active AS. Improvements with secukinumab 300 mg were numerically higher compared with the 150-mg dose for some higher hurdle end points and in TNF-IR patients.
The safety profile of secukinumab was consistent with previous reports.