Phase 3 Studies Comparing Brodalumab with Ustekinumab in Psoriasis
Probity Medical Research · Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai · +26 more institutions
Abstract
Early clinical studies suggested that the anti-interleukin-17 receptor A monoclonal antibody brodalumab has efficacy in the treatment of psoriasis.
In two phase 3 studies (AMAGINE-2 and AMAGINE-3), patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis were randomly assigned to receive brodalumab (210 mg or 140 mg every 2 weeks), ustekinumab (45 mg for patients with a body weight ≤100 kg and 90 mg for patients >100 kg), or placebo. At week 12, patients receiving brodalumab were randomly assigned again to receive a brodalumab maintenance dose of 210 mg every 2 weeks or 140 mg every 2 weeks, every 4 weeks, or every 8 weeks; patients receiving ustekinumab continued to receive ustekinumab every 12 weeks, and patients receiving placebo received 210 mg of brodalumab every 2 weeks. The primary aims were to evaluate the superiority of brodalumab over placebo at week 12 with respect to at least a 75% reduction in the psoriasis area-and-severity index score (PASI 75) and a static physician's global assessment (sPGA) score of 0 or 1 (clear or almost clear skin), as well as the superiority of brodalumab over ustekinumab at week 12 with respect to a 100% reduction in PASI score (PASI 100).
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 37.22
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 22
Authors
35Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Ustekinumab
- Psoriasis
- Dermatology
- Ixekizumab
- Internal medicine
- Secukinumab
- Psoriatic arthritis
- Good health and well-being