7 research outputs found

    Assessment of HAE prophylaxis transition from androgen therapy to berotralstat: A subset analysis of the APeX-S trial

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    Background: Given the recent approval of oral berotralstat in several countries for hereditary angioedema (HAE) prophylaxis, transition from long-term androgens to berotralstat may occur in clinical practice. The open-label, Phase II APeX-S trial provided an opportunity to assess the safety and effectiveness of berotralstat in patients previously treated with differing durations of androgens and shorter transition periods. Therefore, we examined the safety, effectiveness, and impact on quality of life of berotralstat after prior androgen use in patients from the APeX-S trial. Alanine aminotransferase (ALT) elevations were also examined because of the association with androgen exposure and hepatic function impairment. Methods: We conducted an analysis of a subset of 39 patients from the APeX-S trial aged ≥12 years with HAE due to C1 inhibitor deficiency (HAE-C1-INH) with prior androgen use who discontinued androgen therapy within <60 days of receiving berotralstat. Patients received daily berotralstat (150 mg) and were divided into subgroups for this analysis based on time between androgen discontinuation and berotralstat commencement (<14 days versus 14 to <60 days). Results: Berotralstat was generally well tolerated, with nasopharyngitis (21%), upper respiratory tract infection (15%), nausea (15%), diarrhea (15%), and abdominal pain (10%) being the most common adverse events occurring in ≥10% of the total subset. Only 7/145 (5%) of all APeX-S study patients with a prior history of androgen therapy experienced ALT elevations, 6 of which were grade 3 or 4 toxicities. All 7 patients recovered without sequelae and belonged to the subgroup of patients who transitioned <14 days after discontinuing androgens (n = 18). A reduction in monthly attack rate versus Month 1 was observed over 12 months for all patients who transitioned from prior androgen therapy to berotralstat prophylaxis in under 60 days, irrespective of duration of prior androgen therapy or timing of transition (N = 39). Similarly, meaningful patient-reported improvements from both Angioedema Quality of Life Questionnaire and Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire for Medication scores were achieved, with a sustained benefit shown over the berotralstat treatment period. Conclusions: Berotralstat treatment led to sustained HAE symptom control irrespective of duration of prior androgen therapy or timing of transition. Most patients safely transitioned from long-term androgens to berotralstat. Although occurring in a small group of patients, liver-related adverse events following berotralstat treatment may be associated with a shorter androgen washout period, but further research is required to confirm this. Clinical trial registration: NCT03472040. Retrospectively registered March 21, 2018

    Sleep quality during and after severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (COVID‐19) lockdowns in the UK:Results from the SleepQuest study

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    Sleep is fundamental to health. The aim of this study was to analyse and determine factors predicting sleep quality during and after national lockdowns due to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (COVID-19) in the UK. A longitudinal online survey-based study (SleepQuest) involving UK adults was administered in Spring 2020, Winter 2020, and Winter 2022 including questionnaires probing sleep quality, depression, anxiety, beliefs about sleep, demographics, COVID-19 status, and exercise. The primary outcome was sleep quality (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index). A linear mixed-effects model evaluated factors associated with baseline and longitudinal sleep quality. Complete data were provided by 3306 participants in Spring 2020, 2196 participants in Winter 2020, and 1193 in Winter 2022. Participants were mostly female (73.8%), white (97.4%), and aged over 50 years (81.0%). On average, participants reported poor sleep quality in Spring 2020 (mean [SD] Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index score = 6.59 [3.6]) and Winter 2020 (mean [SD] Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index score = 6.44 [3.6]), with improved but still poor sleep quality in Winter 2022 (mean [SD] Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index score = 6.17 [3.5]). Improved sleep quality was driven by better subjective sleep and reduced daytime dysfunction and sleep latency. Being female, older, having caring responsibilities, working nightshifts, and reporting higher levels of depression, anxiety, and unhelpful beliefs about sleep were associated with worse baseline PSQI scores. Better sleep quality was associated with more days exercising per week at baseline. Interventions focusing on improving mental health, exercise, and attitudes towards sleep, particularly in at-risk groups, may improve sleep-related outcomes in future pandemics

    Randomized trial of the efficacy and safety of Berotralstat (BCX7353) as an oral prophylactic therapy for hereditary angioedema: results of APeX-2 ihrough 48 weeks (Part 2)

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    Background: Berotralstat (BCX7353) is a recently approved, oral, once-daily kallikrein inhibitor for hereditary angioedema (HAE) prophylaxis. In the APeX-2 trial, berotralstat reduced HAE attack rates over 24 weeks, with a favorable safety and tolerability profile. Objective: Evaluate berotralstat safety, tolerability, and effectiveness over 48 weeks. Methods: APeX-2 is a phase 3, parallel-group, multicenter trial (NCT03485911) in patients with HAE due to C1 esterase inhibitor deficiency. Part 1 was double-blind and placebo-controlled, with patients randomized to 24 weeks of berotralstat 150 mg, 110 mg, or placebo. In part 2, patients continued berotralstat the same dose or, if initially randomized to placebo, were rerandomized to berotralstat 150 mg or 110 mg through weeks 24 to 48. The primary end point was safety and tolerability. Results: One hundred eight patients received 1 or more doses of berotralstat in part 2. Treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) occurred in 30 of 39 patients (77%) in the placebo group during part 1, and 25 of 34 patients (74%) re-randomized from placebo to berotralstat 110 mg or 150 mg in part 2, with drug-related TEAEs in 13 of 39 (33%), and 11 of 34 (32%) in the same groups. Most TEAEs were mild or moderate, with no serious drug-related TEAEs. The most common TEAEs were upper respiratory tract infections, abdominal pain, diarrhea, and vomiting. Mean (±standard error of the mean) monthly attack rates at baseline and week 48 were 3.06 (±0.25) and 1.06 (±0.25) in the berotralstat 150mg 48-week group and 2.97 (±0.21) and 1.35 (±0.33) in the berotralstat 110mg 48-week group. Conclusions: The safety, tolerability, and effectiveness of berotralstat were maintained over 48 weeks of treatment

    Long-term safety and effectiveness of berotralstat for hereditary angioedema: the open-label APeX-S study

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    Abstract Background Berotralstat (BCX7353) is an oral, once‐daily inhibitor of plasma kallikrein recently approved for prevention of angioedema attacks in adults and adolescents with hereditary angioedema (HAE). The objective of this report is to summarize results from an interim analysis of an ongoing long‐term safety study of berotralstat in patients with HAE. Methods APeX‐S is an ongoing, phase 2, open‐label study conducted in 22 countries (ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03472040). Eligible patients with a clinical diagnosis of HAE due to C1 inhibitor deficiency (HAE‐C1‐INH) were centrally allocated to receive berotralstat 150 or 110 mg once daily. The primary objective was to determine long‐term safety and the secondary objective was to evaluate effectiveness. Results Enrolled patients (N = 227) received berotralstat 150 mg (n = 127) or 110 mg (n = 100) once daily. The median (range) duration of exposure was 342 (11–540) and 307 (14–429) days for the 150‐mg and 110‐mg groups, respectively. Treatment‐emergent adverse events (TEAEs) occurred in 91% (n = 206) of patients. The most common TEAEs across treatment groups were upper respiratory tract infection (n = 91, 40%), abdominal pain (n = 57, 25%), headache (n = 40, 18%), and diarrhea (n = 31, 14%) and were mostly mild to moderate. Fifty percent (n = 113) of patients had at least one drug‐related adverse event (AE; 150 mg, n = 57 [45%]; 110 mg, n = 56 [56%]), and discontinuations due to AEs occurred in 19 (8%) patients (150 mg, n = 13 [10%]; 110 mg, n = 6 [6%]). Three (1.3%) patients experienced a drug‐related serious TEAE. Among patients who received berotralstat through 48 weeks (150 mg, n = 73; 110 mg, n = 30), median HAE attack rates were low in month 1 (150 mg, 1.0 attacks/month; 110 mg, 0.5 attacks/month) and remained low through 12 months (0 attacks/month in both dose groups). Mean HAE attack rates followed a similar trend, and no evidence for patient tolerance to berotralstat emerged. In both dose groups, angioedema quality of life scores showed clinically meaningful changes from baseline. Conclusions In this analysis, both berotralstat doses, 150  and 110 mg once daily, were generally well tolerated. Effectiveness results support the durability and robustness of berotralstat as prophylactic therapy in patients with HAE. Trial registration The study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03472040)
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