STOCKHOLM, April 18,
2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Calliditas Therapeutics
AB (Nasdaq: CALT) (Nasdaq Stockholm: CALTX)
("Calliditas"), today announced additional data
analyses from the 2-year Phase 3 NeflgArd trial evaluating Nefecon
(TARPEYO® (budesonide) delayed-release capsules/Kinpeygo®) in
patients with IgA nephropathy (IgAN), were presented at the ISN
World Congress of Nephrology in Buenos
Aires, Argentina on April 13-16,
2024.
"We were pleased to share additional analyses from the 2-year
Phase 3 NeflgArd trial of Nefecon in IgAN at this year's World
Congress of Nephrology," said Richard
Philipson, Chief Medical Officer of Calliditas. "These
additional data further reinforce the impact of Nefecon across the
entire study population, irrespective of baseline UPCR levels or
patient's racial and ethnic backgrounds."
Poster presentation details are below and will be available on
the Presentations and Publications page on the Calliditas'
corporate website following the meeting.
Poster Presentation Analyses:
Poster Title: "Nefecon treatment provides kidney benefits
for patients with IgAN that extend to those with low levels of
UPCR: A sub-analysis of the phase III NefIgArd trial"
An extended analysis of patients with baseline UPCR levels above
and below 0.8 g/g was performed to further explore the potential
benefits of Nefecon. In the full analysis involving 364 patients
regardless of baseline UPCR, Nefecon treatment consistently
improved the estimated glomerular filtrate rate (eGFR) over the
2-year study period compared to placebo. 72 patients with a
baseline UPCR <0.8 g/g experienced sustained eGFR improvement
(p=0.0026), which persisted for up to 18 months after treatment
initiation, even after the treatment cessation at month 9.
Those patients also achieved an eGFR slope of -0.25
mL/min/1.73 m2 per year,
indicating that Nefecon treatment may support them in reaching the
RaDaR treatment target of an eGFR decline of <1 mL/min/1.73 m2
per year. This objective is pivotal in mitigating the risk of
kidney failure in their lifetime.
Poster Title: "eGFR decline in patients with IgAN treated
with Nefecon or placebo: Results from the 2-year NefIgArd Phase 3
trial"
During the 9-month treatment period, Nefecon showed a 30%
reduction in UPCR compared to the placebo, sustained for 2 years.
The percentage of patients with a confirmed 30% reduction in eGFR
or kidney failure was lower in the Nefecon arm compared to
placebo, and the time to such events was significantly delayed with
Nefecon (hazard ratio [HR] 0.45; 95% confidence interval 0.26,
0.75]; p=0.0014 [1-sided]). Supplementary analysis with rescue
medication yielded similar results, irrespective of the handling of
rescue medication: Rescue medication counted as an event: HR 0.51
(95% CI 0.33, 0.79), Regardless of rescue medication: HR 0.44 (95%
CI 0.27, 0.71). The treatment effect of Nefecon on the risk of
kidney function decline was consistent regardless of baseline UPCR.
These findings strongly suggest preserved kidney function and
provide support for Nefecon as a disease-modifying therapy in
patients with IgAN.
Poster Title: Nefecon effect on quality of life in
patients with IgAN: SF-36 results from the Phase 3 NefIgArd
trial"
The 2-year results of quality of life (QoL) analyses based on
36-Item Short Form Survey (SF-36) assessments at 9 and 24 months
revealed no meaningful differences in any QoL domain between
Nefecon and placebo groups after 9 months of treatment. These SF-36
scores remained consistent after 15 months of off-drug
observational follow-up further supporting the benefit/risk profile
of Nefecon.
Poster Title: "Nefecon treatment response in Asian and
White patient populations with immunoglobulin A nephropathy: A
2-year analysis of the Phase 3 NefIgArd trial"
The responses to Nefecon treatment from the full 2-year NefIgArd
trial were assessed in patients identifying as Asian (n=83) or
White (n=275). Regardless of race and ethnicity, Nefecon showed a
favorable change in eGFR compared to placebo of 5.5
mL/min/1.73 m2 in Asian
patients and 4.8 mL/min/1.73
m2 in White patients. Nefecon also demonstrated
greater reductions in UPCR at 9 and 24 months with notable delays
in kidney function decline events. These effects were consistent
across races and ethnicities. Additionally, Nefecon significantly
reduced the rate of microhematuria in both Asian and White
patients. Overall, these findings highlight Nefecon's efficacy and
tolerability across different racial and ethnic groups.
Indication
TARPEYO is indicated to reduce the loss of kidney function in
adults with primary immunoglobulin A nephropathy (IgAN) who are at
risk for disease progression.
Important Safety Information
Contraindications: TARPEYO is contraindicated in
patients with hypersensitivity to budesonide or any of the
ingredients of TARPEYO. Serious hypersensitivity reactions,
including anaphylaxis, have occurred with other budesonide
formulations.
Warnings and Precautions
Hypercorticism and adrenal axis suppression: When
corticosteroids are used chronically, systemic effects such as
hypercorticism and adrenal suppression may occur. Corticosteroids
can reduce the response of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal (HPA)
axis to stress. In situations where patients are subject to surgery
or other stress situations, supplementation with a systemic
corticosteroid is recommended. When discontinuing therapy or
switching between corticosteroids, monitor for signs of adrenal
axis suppression.
Patients with moderate to severe hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh
Class B and C respectively) could be at an increased risk of
hypercorticism and adrenal axis suppression due to an increased
systemic exposure to oral budesonide. Avoid use in patients with
severe hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh Class C). Monitor for
increased signs and/or symptoms of hypercorticism in patients with
moderate hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh Class B).
Risks of immunosuppression: Patients who are on drugs
that suppress the immune system are more susceptible to infection
than healthy individuals. Chickenpox and measles, for example, can
have a more serious or even fatal course in susceptible patients or
patients on immunosuppressive doses of corticosteroids. Avoid
corticosteroid therapy in patients with active or quiescent
tuberculosis infection; untreated fungal, bacterial, systemic
viral, or parasitic infections, or ocular herpes simplex. Avoid
exposure to active, easily transmitted infections (e.g., chicken
pox, measles). Corticosteroid therapy may decrease the immune
response to some vaccines.
Other corticosteroid effects: TARPEYO is a systemically
available corticosteroid and is expected to cause related adverse
reactions. Monitor patients with hypertension, prediabetes,
diabetes mellitus, osteoporosis, peptic ulcer, glaucoma or
cataracts, or with a family history of diabetes or glaucoma, or
with any other condition where corticosteroids may have unwanted
effects.
Adverse reactions: In clinical studies, the most
common adverse reactions with TARPEYO (occurring in ≥5% of TARPEYO
treated patients, and ≥2% higher than placebo) were peripheral
edema (17%), hypertension (12%), muscle spasms (12%), acne (11%),
headache (10%), upper respiratory tract infection (8%), face edema
(8%), weight increased (7%), dyspepsia (7%), dermatitis (6%),
arthralgia (6%), and white blood cell count increased
(6%).
Drug interactions: Budesonide is a substrate for CYP3A4.
Avoid use with potent CYP3A4 inhibitors, such as ketoconazole,
itraconazole, ritonavir, indinavir, saquinavir, erythromycin, and
cyclosporine. Avoid ingestion of grapefruit juice with TARPEYO.
Intake of grapefruit juice, which inhibits CYP3A4 activity, can
increase the systemic exposure to budesonide.
Use in specific populations
Pregnancy: The available data from published case
series, epidemiological studies, and reviews with oral budesonide
use in pregnant women have not identified a drug-associated risk of
major birth defects, miscarriage, or other adverse maternal or
fetal outcomes. There are risks to the mother and fetus associated
with IgAN. Infants exposed to in-utero corticosteroids, including
budesonide, are at risk for hypoadrenalism.
Please see Full Prescribing
Information.
About TARPEYO
TARPEYO is an oral 4mg delayed release formulation of
budesonide, designed to remain intact until it reaches the ileum.
Each capsule contains coated beads of budesonide that target
mucosal B-cells present in the ileum, including the Peyer's
patches, which are responsible for the production of
galactose-deficient IgA1 antibodies (Gd-Ag1) causing IgA
nephropathy.
About the NeflgArd Study
NefIgArd was a global, Phase 3, randomized, double-blind,
placebo-controlled, multicenter study to evaluate the efficacy and
safety of TARPEYO 16 mg once daily vs placebo in adult patients
with primary IgAN (N=364) as an addition to optimized RASi therapy.
Patients were randomized 1:1 to receive 16 mg/day oral capsules of
TARPEYO or matching placebo for 9 months, followed by a 15-month
observational follow-up period without the study drug.
The primary efficacy endpoint was time-weighted average of eGFR
over 2 years. The time-weighted average of eGFR over 2 years showed
a statistically significant treatment benefit with TARPEYO versus
placebo (difference 5•05 mL/min per 1•73 m² [95% CI 3•24 to 7•38],
p<0•0001).
The favorable effect of TARPEYO on eGFR was seen by Month 3 (the
earliest assessment) and did not appear to increase in magnitude
over two years. At the end of Year 2, there was a 5.9
mL/min/1.73 m2 difference in the mean change from baseline in eGFR
between TARPEYO and placebo (95% CI: 3.3 to 8.5 mL/min/1.73 m2;
p<0.0001). The effect on kidney function seen during the 9-month
treatment period persisted following completion of treatment
through the end of the study but the overall effect on the
long-term rate of decline has not been established.
The most common adverse reactions with TARPEYO (occurring in ≥5%
of TARPEYO treated patients and ≥2% higher than placebo) were
peripheral edema (17%), hypertension (12%), muscle spasms (12%),
acne (11%), headache (10%), upper respiratory tract infection (8%),
face edema (8%), weight increase (7%), dyspepsia (7%), dermatitis
(6%), arthralgia (6%), and white blood cell count increase
(6%).
About Primary Immunoglobulin A Nephropathy
Primary immunoglobulin A nephropathy (IgA nephropathy or IgAN or
Berger's Disease) is a rare, progressive, chronic autoimmune
disease that attacks the kidneys and occurs when
galactose-deficient IgA1 is recognized by autoantibodies, creating
IgA1 immune complexes that become deposited in the glomerular
mesangium of the kidney.This deposition in the kidney can lead to
progressive kidney damage and potentially a clinical course
resulting in end- stage renal disease. IgAN most often develops
between late teens and late 30s.
For further information, please contact:
Åsa Hillsten, Head of IR & Sustainability, Calliditas
Tel : +46 76 403 35 43, Email : asa.hillsten@calliditas.com
The information was sent for publication, through the agency
of the contact persons set out above, on April 18, 2023, at 13.00
p.m. CET.
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