Ravulizumab and Efgartigimod in Myasthenia Gravis: A Real-World Study.

IF 7.8 1区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Neurology® Neuroimmunology & Neuroinflammation Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-11-27 DOI:10.1212/NXI.0000000000200331
Frauke Stascheit, Carla Daiane Ferreira de Sousa, Annette Aigner, Malina Behrens, Christian W Keller, Luisa Klotz, Sophie Lehnerer, Maike Stein, Meret Herdick, Paolo Doksani, Lea M Gerischer, Sarah Hoffmann, Konstantinos Lazaridis, John Tzartos, Heinz Wiendl, Andreas Meisel, Jan D Lünemann
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Abstract

Background and objectives: Biologics that target pathogenic antibodies (Abs) and their effector functions such as the complement inhibitor ravulizumab and the neonatal Fc receptor agonist efgartigimod have recently been approved for the treatment of acetylcholine receptor (AChR)-Ab-positive myasthenia gravis (MG), but comparative studies are lacking.

Methods: In a prospective, exploratory real-world study, we assessed clinical efficacy, safety, and biological effects of ravulizumab and efgartigimod treatment initiation. Myasthenia Gravis-Activities of Daily Living and Quantitative Myasthenia Gravis scores were used as clinical endpoints. Ab effector functions were determined by AChR-Ab-dependent complement activation and phagocytosis assays and systemic complement activation profiling.

Results: We observed similar moderate short-term efficacy of ravulizumab and efgartigimod in achieving clinical improvement. Ravulizumab reduced systemic terminal complement activation, but neither treatment showed significant effects on complement pathways proximal to C5 or functional capacities of AChR-Abs. Both treatment modalities were well tolerated with no serious adverse events reported.

Discussion: Clinical benefits obtained with ravulizumab and efgartigimod can be remarkably heterogeneous in daily clinical practice. Neither treatment relevantly changed effector functions of pathogenic AChR-Abs, supporting the concept that durable disease control in MG requires continuous administration of both fast-acting agents.

Classification of evidence: This study provides Class III evidence that in AChR-Ab-positive patients with generalized MG, ravulizumab and efgartigimod provide comparable modest improvement in MG functional scales.

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Ravulizumab和Efgartigimod治疗肌萎缩症:一项真实世界研究
背景和目的:针对致病性抗体(Abs)及其效应器功能的生物制剂,如补体抑制剂ravulizumab和新生儿Fc受体激动剂efgartigimod,最近已被批准用于治疗乙酰胆碱受体(AChR)-Ab阳性的重症肌无力(MG),但缺乏比较研究:在一项前瞻性、探索性的真实世界研究中,我们评估了开始使用雷珠单抗和依加替莫德治疗的临床疗效、安全性和生物效应。将肌无力-日常生活活动和肌无力定量评分作为临床终点。通过 AChR-Ab 依赖性补体激活和吞噬测定以及全身补体激活谱分析确定抗体效应功能:我们观察到雷珠单抗和依加替莫德在改善临床症状方面具有相似的中度短期疗效。雷珠单抗降低了全身末端补体激活,但两种治疗方法都没有对C5近端补体途径或AChR-Abs的功能能力产生显著影响。两种治疗方式的耐受性均良好,无严重不良反应报告:讨论:在日常临床实践中,使用雷珠单抗和依加替莫德获得的临床疗效可能存在明显差异。两种治疗方法均未改变致病性 AChR-Abs 的效应功能,这支持了一种观点,即 MG 疾病的持久控制需要持续使用这两种速效药物:本研究提供了III级证据,证明在AChR-Ab阳性的全身型MG患者中,雷珠单抗和依加替莫德对MG功能量表的适度改善具有可比性。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
15.60
自引率
2.30%
发文量
219
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: Neurology Neuroimmunology & Neuroinflammation is an official journal of the American Academy of Neurology. Neurology: Neuroimmunology & Neuroinflammation will be the premier peer-reviewed journal in neuroimmunology and neuroinflammation. This journal publishes rigorously peer-reviewed open-access reports of original research and in-depth reviews of topics in neuroimmunology & neuroinflammation, affecting the full range of neurologic diseases including (but not limited to) Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, ALS, tauopathy, and stroke; multiple sclerosis and NMO; inflammatory peripheral nerve and muscle disease, Guillain-Barré and myasthenia gravis; nervous system infection; paraneoplastic syndromes, noninfectious encephalitides and other antibody-mediated disorders; and psychiatric and neurodevelopmental disorders. Clinical trials, instructive case reports, and small case series will also be featured.
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