52726 Bimekizumab impact on concomitant rescue interventions in patients with moderate to severe hidradenitis suppurativa in BE HEARD I & II
Recommended Citation
Bechara FG, Sayed C, Goldberg S, Szepietowski JC, Guillem P, Hamzavi I, Dokhe P, Joshi P, Rolleri R, Davis L, van der Zee HH. 52726 Bimekizumab impact on concomitant rescue interventions in patients with moderate to severe hidradenitis suppurativa in BE HEARD I & II. J Am Acad Dermatol 2024; 91(3):AB143.
Document Type
Conference Proceeding
Publication Date
9-1-2024
Publication Title
J Am Acad Dermatol
Abstract
Introduction: Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS), a chronic, systemic inflammatory skin disease characterized by deep, painful, and difficult-to-treat lesions, often requires rescue interventions alongside conventional treatment.[1] Here, we investigate the impact of bimekizumab (BKZ), a monoclonal IgG1 antibody that inhibits interleukin (IL)-17F and IL-17A, on the need for concomitant rescue interventions in patients with moderate to severe HS. Methods: We report pooled, post hoc analysis from the initial treatment period (Weeks 0–16) of the BE HEARD I&II trials.[2,3] Adult patients with moderate to severe HS were randomized to BKZ (320mg every 2 weeks [Q2W] or Q4W) or placebo (PBO). The incidence of concomitant rescue interventions for HS, including medical (antibiotics, analgesics) and procedural (incision/drainage, intralesional triamcinolone injection), and time to first procedural intervention, are reported. Results: Overall, 1,014 patients were randomized to BKZ (n=868) or PBO (n=146) across BE HEARD I&II. In BKZ-treated and PBO-treated patients, 4.1% (n=36) and 8.9% (n=13) received ≥1 rescue analgesic; 4.0% (n=35) and 5.5% (n=8), received ≥1 rescue systemic antibiotic. Incidence of ≥1 incision/drainage intervention was 2.1% (n=18) in BKZ-treated and 3.4% (n=5) in PBO-treated patients; 1.6% BKZ-treated (n=14) and 3.4% PBO-treated (n=5) received ≥1 intralesional triamcinolone injection. Time to first procedural intervention was 65.3±36.2 (mean days±standard deviation) in BKZ-treated and 30.4±17.0 in PBO-treated patients. Conclusions: Over 16 weeks, the incidence of concomitant interventions for HS was low in BKZ-treated patients; low levels of rescue analgesic use in BKZ-treated patients may indicate reduced pain burden. Time to first procedure was numerically longer for BKZ- versus PBO-treated patients.
Volume
91
Issue
3
First Page
AB143