Abstract
Objective To assess long-term (2 years) effects of bimagrumab in participants with sporadic inclusion body myositis (sIBM). Methods Participants (aged 36–85 years) who completed the core study (RESILIENT [Efficacy and Safety of Bimagrumab/BYM338 at 52 Weeks on Physical Function, Muscle Strength, Mobility in sIBM Patients]) were invited to join an extension study. Individuals continued on the same treatment as in the core study (10 mg/kg, 3 mg/kg, 1 mg/kg bimagrumab or matching placebo administered as IV infusions every 4 weeks). The co–primary outcome measures were 6-minute walk distance (6MWD) and safety. Results Between November 2015 and February 2017, 211 participants entered double-blind placebo-controlled period of the extension study. Mean change in 6MWD from baseline was highly variable across treatment groups, but indicated progressive deterioration from weeks 24–104 in all treatment groups. Overall, 91.0% (n = 142) of participants in the pooled bimagrumab group and 89.1% (n = 49) in the placebo group had ≥1 treatment-emergent adverse event (AE). Falls were slightly higher in the bimagrumab 3 mg/kg group vs 10 mg/kg, 1 mg/kg, and placebo groups (69.2% [n = 36 of 52] vs 56.6% [n = 30 of 53], 58.8% [n = 30 of 51], and 61.8% [n = 34 of 55], respectively). The most frequently reported AEs in the pooled bimagrumab group were diarrhea 14.7% (n = 23), involuntary muscle contractions 9.6% (n = 15), and rash 5.1% (n = 8). Incidence of serious AEs was comparable between the pooled bimagrumab and the placebo group (18.6% [n = 29] vs 14.5% [n = 8], respectively). Conclusion Extended treatment with bimagrumab up to 2 years produced a good safety profile and was well-tolerated, but did not provide clinical benefits in terms of improvement in mobility. The extension study was terminated early due to core study not meeting its primary endpoint.
Original language | English (US) |
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Pages (from-to) | E1595-E1607 |
Journal | Neurology |
Volume | 96 |
Issue number | 12 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 2021 |
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Clinical Neurology
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In: Neurology, Vol. 96, No. 12, 2021, p. E1595-E1607.
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Efficacy and Safety of Bimagrumab in Sporadic Inclusion Body Myositis Long-term Extension of RESILIENT
AU - RESILIENT Study Extension Group
AU - Amato, Anthony A.
AU - Hanna, Michael G.
AU - Machado, Pedro M.
AU - Badrising, Umesh A.
AU - Chinoy, Hector
AU - Benveniste, Olivier
AU - Karanam, Ananda Krishna
AU - Wu, Min
AU - Tankó, László B.
AU - Schubert-Tennigkeit, Agnes Annette
AU - Papanicolaou, Dimitris A.
AU - Lloyd, Thomas E.
AU - Needham, Merrilee
AU - Liang, Christina
AU - Reardon, Katrina A.
AU - de Visser, Marianne
AU - Ascherman, Dana P.
AU - Barohn, Richard J.
AU - Dimachkie, Mazen M.
AU - Miller, James A.L.
AU - Kissel, John T.
AU - Oskarsson, Björn
AU - Joyce, Nanette C.
AU - Van den Bergh, Peter
AU - Baets, Jonathan
AU - De Bleecker, Jan L.
AU - Karam, Chafic
AU - David, William S.
AU - Mirabella, Massimiliano
AU - Nations, Sharon P.
AU - Jung, Hans H.
AU - Pegoraro, Elena
AU - Maggi, Lorenzo
AU - Rodolico, Carmelo
AU - Filosto, Massimiliano
AU - Shaibani, Aziz I.
AU - Sivakumar, Kumaraswamy
AU - Goyal, Namita A.
AU - Mori-Yoshimura, Madoka
AU - Yamashita, Satoshi
AU - Suzuki, Naoki
AU - Aoki, Masashi
AU - Katsuno, Masahisa
AU - Morihata, Hirokazu
AU - Murata, Kenya
AU - Nodera, Hiroyuki
AU - Nishino, Ichizo
AU - Romano, Carla D.
AU - Williams, Valerie S.L.
AU - Vissing, John
N1 - Funding Information: A.A. Amato declares personal fees from Novartis during the conduct of the study. M.G. Hanna has served on an advisory board for and received reimbursement from Novartis. P.M. Machado declares personal fees from Novartis during the conduct of the study and personal fees from AbbVie, Cen-tocor, Eli Lilly, Janssen, MSD, Novartis, Pfizer, and UCB, outside of the submitted work. U.A. Badrising declares reimbursement of study costs paid to his institution from Novartis during the conduct of the study and consultancy fees paid to his institution from Argen X, outside of the submitted work. H. Chinoy declares grants from the University of Manchester during the conduct of the study; personal fees and grants from UCB, outside of the submitted work; personal fees from Lilly and Momenta, outside of the submitted work; travel support from Janssen and AbbVie, outside of the submitted work; personal compensation for being a speaker or advisory board member from Novartis, UCB, Lilly, and Momenta, outside of the submitted work; and travel support from AbbVie and Janssen, outside of the submitted work. O. Benveniste declares grants and personal fees from Novartis during the conduct of the study; grants and nonfinancial support from Shire, outside of the submitted work; personal fees and nonfinancial support from LFB and CSL Behring, outside of the submitted work; and grants and personal fees from Neovacs, outside of the submitted work. A.K. Karanam, M. Wu, A. Annette Schubert-Tennigkeit, and D.A. Papanicolaou are employees of Novartis. M. Wu and D.A. Papanicolaou hold stock or shares in Novartis. L. Zhang Auberson and L.B. Tankó were employees of Novartis at the time this manuscript was drafted. T.E. Lloyd declares grants, personal fees, and nonfinancial support from Novartis during the conduct of the study. M. Needham has served on an advisory board for Novartis during the initial study design. C. Liang declares compensation for attending investigator meetings from Novartis during the conduct of the study and compensation for attending investigator meetings from Bristol-Myers Squibb, outside of the submitted work. K.A. Reardon reports grants from Novartis during the conduct of the study. M. de Visser declares personal fees from Avexis and Bristol-Myers Squibb, outside of the submitted work. R.J. Barohn has served as a consultant for NuFactor and Momenta Pharmaceutical, outside of the submitted work; and declares research support from PTC Therapeutics, Ra Pharma, Orphazyme, Sanofi Genzyme, the US Food and Drug Administration Office of Orphan Products Development, the NIH, and the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, outside of the submitted work. M.M. Dimachkie declares grants from University of Kansas Medical Center during the conduct of the study; consultancy or speaker’s fees from Alnylam, Audentes, Biomarin, Catalyst, CSL-Behring, Genzyme, Mallinckrodt, Momenta, Novartis, NuFac-tor, Octapharma, Sanofi, Shire, and Terumo, outside of the submitted work; and grants from Alexion, Alnylam, Amicus, Biomarin, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Catalyst, CSL-Behring, the US Food and Drug Administration Office of Orphan Products Development, GlaxoSmithKline, Genentech, Grifols, MDA, the NIH, Novartis, Genzyme, Octapharma, UCB Biopharma, Viromed, and TMA, outside of the submitted work. J.A.L. Miller declares speaker’s fees or compensation for advisory board membership from CSL Bering, Octapharma, and Grifols, outside of the submitted work. J.T. Kissel declares grants from Cytoki-netics, Genzyme, Alexion, Novartis, and AveXis, outside of the submitted work. B. Oskarsson declares research support from Novartis, Biogen, Genentech, GSK, Flexpharma, Cytokinetics, and consulting from Medicinova, Flexpharma, Biogen, and Mit-subishi Tanabe. N.C. Joyce declares support for this clinical trial from Novartis during the conduct of the study; support for running a clinical trial and personal fees from Biogen, outside of the submitted work; and support for running a clinical trial from Acceleron, Cytokinetics, and FlexPharma, outside of the submitted work. P. Van den Bergh reports personal fees from Gen-zyme, Pfizer, Alnylam, CSL Behring, LFB France, and UCB Pharma, outside of the submitted work. J. Baets reports personal fees and travel support from Novartis, during the conduct of the study; and consultancy fees from Sanofi and CSL Behring, outside of the submitted work. M. Mirabella declares grants, personal fees, consultancy or speaking fees, research support, travel grants, and reimbursement for participation in scientific advisory boards from Bayer Schering, Biogen, Sanofi Genzyme, Novartis, TEVA, Ultragenix, and Merck Serono, outside of the submitted work; and travel grants and reimbursement for participation in scientific advisory boards from CSL Behring, outside of the submitted work. S.P. Nations declares personal fees from Grifols and Bio Products Laboratory, outside of the submitted work. E. Pegoraro declares grants and nonfinancial support from Santhera, outside of the submitted work; personal fees from Sarepta and Roche, outside of the submitted work; nonfinancial support from Gen-zyme, outside of the submitted work; and grants from PTC Pharmaceuticals, outside of the submitted work. L. Maggi declares support related to running of this clinical trial from Novartis Pharma during the conduct of the study and grants from Sanofi Genzyme, outside of the submitted work. N.A. Goyal has served on an advisory board for Novartis. M. Aoki declares research grants from the Japanese Ministry of Health Labor and Welfare, the National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry, the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, and the Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development during the conduct of the study; and personal fees from Mitsu-bishi Tanabe Pharma, Astellas Pharma, Takeda Pharmaceutical Company, Sanofi, Novartis Pharma, and Dainippon Sumitomo Pharma during the conduct of the study. M. Katsuno declares a clinical trial fee from Novartis during the conduct of the study; personal fees from Novartis, Daiichi-Sankyo, Sumitomo Dai-nippon, Takeda, and Tanabe-Mitsubishi, outside of the submitted work; grants from the Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development, the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, the Japanese Ministry of Health Labor and Welfare, the Naito Foundation, the Uehara Memorial Foundation, Otsuka, Nihonseiyaku, Sanofi, Astellas, Sumitomo Dainippon, and Pfizer, outside of the submitted work; and patent Funding Information: The authors thank the investigators, coinvestigators, and study coordinators of the RESILIENT extension study group for their contributions to the study: members of the cardiovascular adjudication committee: Brendan Everett, MD (committee chairman, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, MA); Aruna D. Pradhan, MD (member, Brigham and Women’s Hospital); Viviany Taqueti, MD (member, Brigham and Women’s Hospital); Benjamin Olenchock, MD (member, Brigham and Women’s Hospital); members of the orthopedic adjudication committee: Michael Blauth, MD (committee chairman, Medical University Innsbruck, Department for Trauma Surgery, Innsbruck, Austria); Christian Kammerlander, MD (member, Medical University Innsbruck, Department for Trauma Surgery, Innsbruck, Austria); Dietmar Krappinger, MD (member, Medical University Innsbruck, Department for Trauma Surgery); and data monitoring committee members: Cathleen Colon-Emeric, MD (chairperson, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC); Matthew Meriggioli, MD (member, Rush University Medical Center Chicago, IL); Ilpo Huhtaniemi, MD (member, Imperial College London, UK); Jay Magaziner, PhD (member, University of Maryland Baltimore); Eric Velazquez, MD (member, Duke University Medical Center); Scott R. Evans, PhD (DMC Biostatistician, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA); Robert Griggs, MD (former member, University of Rochester, NY). M.G.H. is supported by a Medical Research Council center grant (MR/K000608/ 1). P.M.M. is supported by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) University College London Hospitals Biomedical Research Centre. H.C. is supported by a grant from the Medical Research Council (MR/N003322/1) and the NIHR Biomedical Research Centre Funding Scheme. The views expressed in this publication are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the NHS, the National Institute for Health Research, or the Department of Health. The authors acknowledge the contribution of Satoshi Nakano, who was principal investigator at the Osaka City General Hospital (Osaka, Japan) and who died in 2017. Funding Information: loyalty from Takeda, outside of the submitted work. I. Nishino declares grants from Astellas Pharma and Daiichi Sankyo, outside of the submitted work; grants and personal fees from Sanofi Japan, outside of the submitted work; and personal fees from Japan Blood Products Organization and Eisai, outside of the submitted work. C.D. Romano and V.S.L. Williams declare support from Novartis; collaborated with Novartis on the development of the Sporadic Inclusion Body Myositis Physical Functioning Assessment (sIFA) before this study; and are both employed by RTI Health Solutions, which conducts research projects for multiple pharma and biotech companies. J. Vissing declares support for this clinical trial from Novartis during the conduct of the study. D.P. Ascherman, J.L. De Bleecker, C. Karam, W.S. David, H.H. Jung, C. Rodolico, M. Filosto, A.I. Shaibani, K. Sivakumar, M. Mori-Yoshimura, S. Yamashita, N. Suzuki, H. Morihata, K. Murata, and H. Nodera declare no competing interests. Go to Neurology.org/N for full disclosures. Publisher Copyright: © 2021 Lippincott Williams and Wilkins. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Objective To assess long-term (2 years) effects of bimagrumab in participants with sporadic inclusion body myositis (sIBM). Methods Participants (aged 36–85 years) who completed the core study (RESILIENT [Efficacy and Safety of Bimagrumab/BYM338 at 52 Weeks on Physical Function, Muscle Strength, Mobility in sIBM Patients]) were invited to join an extension study. Individuals continued on the same treatment as in the core study (10 mg/kg, 3 mg/kg, 1 mg/kg bimagrumab or matching placebo administered as IV infusions every 4 weeks). The co–primary outcome measures were 6-minute walk distance (6MWD) and safety. Results Between November 2015 and February 2017, 211 participants entered double-blind placebo-controlled period of the extension study. Mean change in 6MWD from baseline was highly variable across treatment groups, but indicated progressive deterioration from weeks 24–104 in all treatment groups. Overall, 91.0% (n = 142) of participants in the pooled bimagrumab group and 89.1% (n = 49) in the placebo group had ≥1 treatment-emergent adverse event (AE). Falls were slightly higher in the bimagrumab 3 mg/kg group vs 10 mg/kg, 1 mg/kg, and placebo groups (69.2% [n = 36 of 52] vs 56.6% [n = 30 of 53], 58.8% [n = 30 of 51], and 61.8% [n = 34 of 55], respectively). The most frequently reported AEs in the pooled bimagrumab group were diarrhea 14.7% (n = 23), involuntary muscle contractions 9.6% (n = 15), and rash 5.1% (n = 8). Incidence of serious AEs was comparable between the pooled bimagrumab and the placebo group (18.6% [n = 29] vs 14.5% [n = 8], respectively). Conclusion Extended treatment with bimagrumab up to 2 years produced a good safety profile and was well-tolerated, but did not provide clinical benefits in terms of improvement in mobility. The extension study was terminated early due to core study not meeting its primary endpoint.
AB - Objective To assess long-term (2 years) effects of bimagrumab in participants with sporadic inclusion body myositis (sIBM). Methods Participants (aged 36–85 years) who completed the core study (RESILIENT [Efficacy and Safety of Bimagrumab/BYM338 at 52 Weeks on Physical Function, Muscle Strength, Mobility in sIBM Patients]) were invited to join an extension study. Individuals continued on the same treatment as in the core study (10 mg/kg, 3 mg/kg, 1 mg/kg bimagrumab or matching placebo administered as IV infusions every 4 weeks). The co–primary outcome measures were 6-minute walk distance (6MWD) and safety. Results Between November 2015 and February 2017, 211 participants entered double-blind placebo-controlled period of the extension study. Mean change in 6MWD from baseline was highly variable across treatment groups, but indicated progressive deterioration from weeks 24–104 in all treatment groups. Overall, 91.0% (n = 142) of participants in the pooled bimagrumab group and 89.1% (n = 49) in the placebo group had ≥1 treatment-emergent adverse event (AE). Falls were slightly higher in the bimagrumab 3 mg/kg group vs 10 mg/kg, 1 mg/kg, and placebo groups (69.2% [n = 36 of 52] vs 56.6% [n = 30 of 53], 58.8% [n = 30 of 51], and 61.8% [n = 34 of 55], respectively). The most frequently reported AEs in the pooled bimagrumab group were diarrhea 14.7% (n = 23), involuntary muscle contractions 9.6% (n = 15), and rash 5.1% (n = 8). Incidence of serious AEs was comparable between the pooled bimagrumab and the placebo group (18.6% [n = 29] vs 14.5% [n = 8], respectively). Conclusion Extended treatment with bimagrumab up to 2 years produced a good safety profile and was well-tolerated, but did not provide clinical benefits in terms of improvement in mobility. The extension study was terminated early due to core study not meeting its primary endpoint.
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U2 - 10.1212/WNL.0000000000011626
DO - 10.1212/WNL.0000000000011626
M3 - Article
C2 - 33597289
AN - SCOPUS:85103473554
SN - 0028-3878
VL - 96
SP - E1595-E1607
JO - Neurology
JF - Neurology
IS - 12
ER -