Fixed Cycle and Every-Other-Week Dosing of Intravenous Efgartigimod for Generalized Myasthenia Gravis: Part B of ADAPT NXT
Kelly Gwathmey1, Vera Bril2, Ali A. Habib3, Kristl G. Claeys4, Yessar Hussain5, Gregory Sahagian6, Elena Cortés-Vicente7, Edward Brauer8, Jeff Guptill8, Deborah Gelinas8, Li Liu8, Rosa H. Jimenez8, Delphine Masschaele8, Renato Mantegazza9, Andreas Meisel10, Fang Sun11, Shahram Attarian12
1Virginia Commonwealth University, 2University Health Network, 3University of California, 4University Hospitals Leuven, 5Austin Neuromuscular Center, 6The Neurology Center of Southern California, 7Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau, 8argenx, 9Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Neurologico Carlo Besta, 10Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, 11Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, 12Reference Center for Neuromuscular Disorders and ALS Timone Hospital University
Objective:

The phase 3b ADAPT NXT study (NCT04980495) investigated the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of efgartigimod administered either every other week (Q2W) or in fixed-cycle dosing regimens.

Background:

Individualized fixed-cycle dosing of efgartigimod, a human immunoglobulin G1 Fc-fragment that blocks the neonatal Fc receptor, was well tolerated and efficacious in the ADAPT/ADAPT+ phase 3 trials in generalized myasthenia gravis (gMG).

Design/Methods:

Adult participants with anti-acetylcholine receptor antibody positive gMG were randomized 3:1 to Q2W or fixed-cycle (4 once-weekly infusions, 4 weeks between cycles) dosing of 10 mg/kg efgartigimod for a 21-week period in Part A. In Part B, participants in the fixed-cycle arm received one additional cycle of 4 once-weekly infusions of efgartigimod before switching to a Q2W regimen. All participants had an option to switch to every-three-weeks (Q3W) dosing in Part B, depending on clinical assessment.

Results:

Sixty-nine participants were treated (fixed cycle, n=17; Q2W, n=52) in Part A. Least squares mean (95% CI) of the change from baseline in Myasthenia Gravis Activities of Daily Living (MG-ADL) total score from Week 1-21 (primary endpoint) was -5.1 (-6.5 to -3.8) in the fixed-cycle arm and -4.6 (-5.4 to -3.8) in the Q2W arm; changes remained similar through Week 21.  Achievement of minimal symptom expression (MG-ADL score 0-1) was observed in 47.1% (n=8/17) and 44.2% (n=23/52) of participants in the fixed-cycle and Q2W arms, respectively. Efgartigimod was well tolerated; COVID-19, upper respiratory tract infection, and headache were the most common treatment-emergent adverse events. Clinical data analysis for Part B will be presented at the congress.  

Conclusions:

The results of ADAPT NXT build upon previous studies and provide additional efgartigimod dosing approaches (fixed cycles and Q2W) to maintain clinical efficacy in participants with gMG.

10.1212/WNL.0000000000210664
Disclaimer: Abstracts were not reviewed by Neurology® and do not reflect the views of Neurology® editors or staff.