Long-term safety study of infliximab in moderate-to-severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Stephen I Rennard, Susan K Flavin, Prasheen K Agarwal, Kim Hung Lo, Elliot S Barnathan, Stephen I Rennard, Susan K Flavin, Prasheen K Agarwal, Kim Hung Lo, Elliot S Barnathan

Abstract

Rationale: There was an increased number of malignancies in infliximab-treated (5.7%) over placebo-treated (1.3%) patients in a 44-week, phase 2 clinical study of 234 patients with moderate-to-severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).

Objectives: To collect malignancy and mortality data from completed clinical studies of infliximab in COPD treatment.

Methods: The multicenter, observational Remicade Safety Under Long-Term Study in COPD (RESULTS COPD) collected malignancy and mortality data every six months for five years from patients who received ≥1 study-agent dose in a phase 2 study. Co-primary endpoints were the number of patients with malignancy and the number of deaths. Secondary endpoints included the number of patients with a malignancy according to malignancy type.

Results: There was a gap period between the end of the phase 2 study and the initiation of RESULTS COPD, during which six malignancies and 14 deaths were reported spontaneously for the 107 (45.7%) of 234 patients with long-term safety information. Twenty-eight patients (overall 12.0%; placebo 10.4%, infliximab 12.7%) reported malignancies, including 12 patients during RESULTS COPD. Twenty-six patients (overall 11.1%; placebo 9.1%, infliximab 12.1%) died, including nine during RESULTS COPD. Lung cancer was the most common malignancy type (placebo n = 2; infliximab n = 10).

Conclusions: The greater proportion of malignancies observed with infliximab versus placebo in a phase 2 study diminished over the long-term follow-up. Due to the observational nature, limited patient participation, potential reporting bias from the interim spontaneous reporting period, and unblinding of all patients, more definitive conclusions cannot be drawn.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00056264.

Copyright © 2012. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

Source: PubMed

3
Subscribe