A phase 3, randomized, double-blind registration study in patients with breast cancer receiving neoadjuvant myelosuppressive chemotherapy has found clinical equivalence between filgrastim and its biosimilar after switching studies.
A phase 3, randomized, double-blind registration study in patients with breast cancer receiving neoadjuvant myelosuppressive chemotherapy has found clinical equivalence between filgrastim and its biosimilar after switching studies. The study results were presented during a poster session at the 2017 Annual Meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
Filgrastim EP2006 (Zarxio) was the first biosimilar approved by the FDA for commercial use in the United States in 2016. The current phase 3 study compared the impact of switching the reference product with the biosimilar and also the biosimilar with the reference product, in the said patient population.
The 218 German patients receiving 5 µg/kg/day filgrastim over 6 chemotherapy cycles were randomized equally into 4 arms: 2 arms received only 1 product, either the biosimilar or reference (unswitched), and 2 arms (switched) received alternating treatments every other cycle (the first then reference or vice versa, over cycles 1 to 6). Four patients did not receive treatment: 2 in the reference group, 1 in the switched group, and 1 in the biosimilar group.
A total of 107 patients switched treatment, and 51 patients received reference drug in all cycles. Incidence of febrile neutropenia (FN) was 3.4% (switched) vs 0% (reference) (95% CI, -9.65 to 4.96). Infections occurred in 9.3% of the switched cohort, compared with 9.9% in the reference cohort. Hospitalization due to FN was low with 1 patient in cycle 6 (switched).
Treatment-related adverse event (TEAE) related to filgrastim were reported in 42.1% (switched) vs 39.2% (reference) (all cycles). The most frequent TEAE was musculoskeletal/connective tissue disorders related to filgrastim, which occurred in 35.5% (switched) compared with 39.2% (reference) (all cycles). These events included bone pain (30.8% vs 33.3%).
No neutralizing or clinically relevant antibodies against recombinant human granulocyte-colony stimulating factor were detected post-dose while switching from reference product to biosimilar and vice versa.
The authors concluded that there was no evidence of clinically meaningful differences related to efficacy, safety, or immunogenicity when patients with breast cancer were switched from reference to biosimilar filgrastim, or from biosimilar to reference filgrastim.
Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy Becomes Leading Initial Treatment for Advanced Epithelial Ovarian Cancer
October 22nd 2024By 2021, neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by interval cytoreductive surgery became the most common initial treatment for patients with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer, overtaking primary cytoreductive surgery.
Read More
Insurance Insights: Dr Jason Shafrin Estimates DMD Insurance Value
July 18th 2024On this episode of Managed Care Cast, we're talking with the author of a study published in the July 2024 issue of The American Journal of Managed Care® that estimates the insurance value of novel Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) treatment.
Listen
Delayed Diagnoses, Oxygen Therapy Use Linked to Worse Outcomes in Patients With Fibrotic ILD
October 21st 2024Posters presented at the CHEST 2024 annual meeting revealed that delays in diagnosing fibrotic interstitial lung disease (ILD) can negatively impact overall survival, while supplemental oxygen therapy may exacerbate clinical burdens through increased rates of acute exacerbations and hospitalizations.
Read More
From Polypharmacy to Personalized Care: Dr Nihar Desai Discusses Holistic Cardiovascular Care
May 30th 2024In this episode of Managed Care Cast, Nihar Desai, MD, MPH, cardiologist and vice chief of Cardiology at the Yale School of Medicine, discusses therapies for cardiovascular conditions as they relate to patient adherence, polypharmacy, and health access.
Listen
A Novel Approach to Chronic GVHD With Axatilimab: Dr Daniel Wolff
October 18th 2024The latest therapy approved to treat chronic graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) has a new target different than the other approved therapies. Daniel Wolff, MD, also discusses future research on axatilimab to treat chronic GVHD earlier.
Read More