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Efficacy of Treatment With Secukinumab in Patients With Hidradenitis Suppurativa
abstract
This abstract is available on the publisher's site.
Access this abstract nowINTRODUCTION
The International Hidradenitis Suppurativa Severity Score System (IHS4) is a validated tool that measures inflammatory lesions, including draining tunnels, in hidradenitis suppurativa (HS).
OBJECTIVE
To evaluate secukinumab efficacy using IHS4 in patients with moderate to severe HS.
METHODS
Data from the SUNSHINE and SUNRISE trials, which assessed subcutaneous secukinumab 300 mg every 2 (SECQ2W) and 4 (SECQ4W) weeks in adults with moderate to severe HS, were analyzed. Assessments included changes from baseline in IHS4 and severity classification up to Week 52; IHS4-55, IHS4-75, IHS4-90 responses (55%, 75% and 90% reduction in IHS4) and concordance between IHS4-55 and HS clinical response (HiSCR), at Weeks 16 and 52.
RESULTS
In total, 1084 patients (SECQ2W = 361; SECQ4W = 360; placebo = 363) were analyzed. At Week 16, SECQ2W and SECQ4W demonstrated a numerically higher reduction in IHS4 from baseline versus placebo (adjusted mean [95% CI]: -10.80 [-12.30 to -9.30] and -9.46 [-10.96 to -7.96] vs. -4.92 [-6.43 to -3.41]); the reduction was maintained until Week 52 in both dose regimens. A greater proportion of patients achieved IHS4-55 with SECQ2W (43.4%) and SECQ4W (39.5%) versus placebo (31.5%) at Week 16, with further improvement at Week 52. Similar trends were observed for IHS4-75 and IHS4-90 responses. While no patients had mild disease based on IHS4 (80.7% had severe and 19.3% had moderate HS) at baseline, a greater proportion of patients were categorized as having mild disease at Week 16 in the SECQ2W (25.9%) and SECQ4W (24.0%) groups versus placebo (16.4%); this trend continued up to Week 52 in both dose regimens. Strong concordance (>85%) was observed between IHS4-55 and HiSCR.
CONCLUSIONS
Both SECQ2W and SECQ4W demonstrated efficacy in improving treatment response as measured by IHS4 and reducing disease severity versus placebo at Week 16 and these improvements were sustained through Week 52. These findings support that the dynamic and dichotomous IHS4 can efficiently detect treatment response changes in clinical trial settings.
Additional Info
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Secukinumab efficacy in patients with hidradenitis suppurativa assessed by the International Hidradenitis Suppurativa Severity Score System (IHS4): A post hoc analysis of the SUNSHINE and SUNRISE trials
J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol 2024 Oct 19;[EPub Ahead of Print], CC Zouboulis, A Kyrgidis, A Alavi, GBE Jemec, A Martorell, AV Marzano, HH van der Zee, MB Wozniak, AL Martinez, T Kasparek, T Bachhuber, CE Ortmann, I Lobach, N Thomas, S Ravichandran, T TzellosFrom MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
Hidradenitis suppurativa is a chronic inflammatory skin condition, characterized by recurrent nodules, abscesses, and draining tunnels. There are several validated tools that help characterize hidradenitis suppurativa disease severity and response to treatments in both the clinic and clinical trial settings. Some of the most commonly used tools have clear limitations. The Hurley staging system, for example, is a static snapshot of disease that grades severity based primarily on the extent of tissue destruction but does not measure disease activity and is, therefore, not appropriate for monitoring treatment response. Hidradenitis Suppurativa Clinical Response, ie, HiSCR, which is the most widely used outcome measure in hidradenitis suppurativa clinical trials, does not account for improvements in draining tunnels, which may have an even greater impact on the quality of life than inflammatory nodules.
The authors of this post hoc analysis of data from the SUNSHINE and SUNRISE trials used the International Hidradenitis Suppurativa Severity Scoring System (IHS4) and IHS4-55 (a 55% reduction in the IHS4 score from baseline) to determine the efficacy of secukinumab. The IHS4 assessment tool includes draining tunnels and accounts for lesion severity, weighing them accordingly (the number of nodules [multiplied by 1 point], number of abscesses [multiplied by 2 points], and number of draining tunnels [multiplied by 4 points]). Treatment with secukinumab (every 2 weeks and every 4 weeks) resulted in greater reductions in the IHS4 score at week 16 compared to placebo, and the reduction was maintained through week 52. In addition, a greater proportion of patients in the secukinumab treatment groups achieved an IHS4-55 response at week 16 compared with those in the placebo group. IHS4-55 demonstrated strong concordance with HiSCR.
Interestingly, among patients with Hurley stage I disease (traditionally thought of as "mild" hidradenitis suppurativa), 45% and 55% had moderate and severe disease, respectively, based on the IHS4 classification. This highlights the importance of not relying on the Hurley stage to determine biologic candidacy for patients with hidradenitis suppurativa. A patient with one abscess and two inflammatory nodules but no scarring or tunnels has Hurley stage I disease but would be considered to have moderate disease severity using tools such as IHS4 and the Hidradenitis Suppurativa Physician's Global Assessment scale. In addition, beyond disease activity, factors such as treatments tried and failed and the impact on functional status and quality of life must also be taken into account when considering biologic candidacy. Timely intervention with appropriate long-term therapeutic strategies should be implemented to try to prevent disease progression and irreversible tissue damage. Continued research regarding outcome measures is needed to ensure that our clinical trial endpoints capture meaningful change.