Ravulizumab in Aquaporin‐4–Positive Neuromyelitis Optica Spectrum Disorder
Pittock SJ., Barnett M., Bennett JL., Berthele A., de Sèze J., Levy M., Nakashima I., Oreja‐Guevara C., Palace J., Paul F., Pozzilli C., Yountz M., Allen K., Mashhoon Y., Kim HJ.
ObjectiveCHAMPION‐NMOSD (NCT04201262) is a phase 3, open‐label, externally controlled interventional study evaluating the efficacy and safety of the terminal complement inhibitor ravulizumab in adult patients with anti–aquaporin‐4 antibody–positive (AQP4+) neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD). Ravulizumab binds the same complement component 5 epitope as the approved therapeutic eculizumab but has a longer half‐life, enabling an extended dosing interval (8 vs 2 weeks).MethodsThe availability of eculizumab precluded the use of a concurrent placebo control in CHAMPION‐NMOSD; consequently, the placebo group of the eculizumab phase 3 trial PREVENT (n = 47) was used as an external comparator. Patients received weight‐based intravenous ravulizumab on day 1 and maintenance doses on day 15, then once every 8 weeks. The primary endpoint was time to first adjudicated on‐trial relapse.ResultsThe primary endpoint was met; no patients taking ravulizumab (n = 58) had an adjudicated relapse (during 84.0 patient‐years of treatment) versus 20 patients with adjudicated relapses in the placebo group of PREVENT (during 46.9 patient‐years; relapse risk reduction = 98.6%, 95% confidence interval = 89.7%–100.0%,p < 0.0001). Median (range) study period follow‐up time was 73.5 (11.0–117.7) weeks for ravulizumab. Most treatment‐emergent adverse events were mild/moderate; no deaths were reported. Two patients taking ravulizumab experienced meningococcal infections. Both recovered with no sequelae; one continued ravulizumab treatment.InterpretationRavulizumab significantly reduced relapse risk in patients with AQP4+ NMOSD, with a safety profile consistent with those of eculizumab and ravulizumab across all approved indications. ANN NEUROL 2023;93:1053–1068