52726 Bimekizumab impact on concomitant rescue interventions in patients with moderate to severe hidradenitis suppurativa in BE HEARD I & II

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

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