Zuiderbuur schreef op 26 oktober 2017 17:41:
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Via een andere bron -
www.epvantage.com/Universal/View.aspx... (de tabellen krijg ik hier niet leesbaar geplaatst)
Abbvie’s Jak flashes a warning for the whole class
Date October 25, 2017
Just when Lilly determined to press ahead with its Jak inhibitor Olumiant, more fears have emerged that most of the class could be doomed in its biggest use, rheumatoid arthritis.
The concerns came yesterday from updated findings with Abbvie’s Jak competitor upadacitinib, suggesting that the risk of thrombotic events is even greater than feared. The fallout could also hit Gilead’s filgotinib and, with the sellside expecting upadacitinib and Olumiant to play important roles in RA, differently acting injectables could be the obvious beneficiaries (see tables below).
Indeed, sellside consensus data from EvaluatePharma suggest that, of the assets currently in development, upadacitinib will in 2022 represent the biggest-selling RA drug. With expected 2022 revenue of $574m in RA Olumiant appears eleventh overall.
Top 10 rheumatoid arthritis products in 2022 (tabel)
The Lilly drug is approved in the EU, but has been knocked back with a US complete response letter. On yesterday’s third-quarter earnings call Lilly said it was accumulating data for resubmitting the asset; as for thromboembolic events specifically, it said real-world evidence pointed to this adverse event being consistent with “background rates in the RA patient population”.
Late-breaking shocker
All does not seem to be business as usual, however, judging by late-breaking abstracts for next month’s American College of Rheumatology meeting, which went live this week.
Among these appeared 12-week extension data in upadacitinib’s Select-Beyond trial. Most worrying was the disclosure of four new venous thromboembolic events (VTEs), coming on top of the two that had earlier sounded the first note of caution over the Jak class (Therapy focus – Atopic dermatitis competition Jaks up, September 14, 2017).
Leerink analysts painted a bleak picture, suggesting that it was no longer possible to dismiss this as background noise. The phase III VTE rate is now 16.3 per 1,000 patient years of exposure, well above the 3-8 rate expected for RA, they wrote, calling this “a clear signal about [upadacitinib’s] pro-thrombotic activity”.
Of course, it is not clear to what extent Olumiant would be hit, but the Abbvie data should lead to further scrutiny. Lilly has said that it will resubmit Olumiant by the end of January 2018; the FDA previously asked the company to look into the observed imbalance in VTEs during the placebo-controlled period of its RA clinical trials.
Leerink reckons that if upadacitinib does have a VTE signal, and if Olumiant is delayed further for the same reason, then “it is hard to imagine Gilead’s filgotinib [being] spared from heightened scrutiny, and possibly even class labelling as well”. This class includes other assets from Astellas, Pfizer, Concert and Aclaris.
What's at stake: the Jak inhibitor pipeline (tabel)
Of this quartet only Astellas’s ASP015K seems to be in trials for RA, however. RA is the most advanced and currently biggest forecast indication for upadacitinib and Olumiant, though this could change given the impressive phase II data the former generated in atopic dermatitis last month.
If there is a silver lining it is that Xeljanz, Pfizer’s marketed Jak inhibitor, seems not to be associated with VTEs, judging by Leerink’s exhaustive review of post-marketing data, and a separate American College of Rheumatology late-breaker looking across phase II and III trials in RA, psoriasis, psoriatic arthritis and ulcerative colitis.
Still, while it cannot be said for sure that this is a class effect, increased monitoring could lead to more VTEs being found, given their frequently asymptomatic nature. Abbvie has shown that this problem is now too widespread to ignore.