Osteoarthritis and Cartilage Open (Dec 2024)

Unbiased analysis of knee cartilage thickness change over three years after sprifermin vs. placebo treatment – A post-hoc analysis from the phase 2B FORWARD study

  • Felix Eckstein,
  • Susanne Maschek,
  • Wolfgang Wirth,
  • Christoph Ladel,
  • Asger Reinstrup Bihlet,
  • Chris Knight,
  • Kenneth Somberg,
  • Luping Zhao

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 4
p. 100513

Abstract

Read online

Objective: Post-treatment cartilage morphometry in the FORWARD study was performed without blinding to MRI acquisition order, involving potential reader bias. Here we obtained unbiased estimates of cartilage change post-treatment, reading year (Y)2 and Y5 MRIs with blinding to time point. We studied whether post-treatment cartilage thickness change differed between sprifermin- and placebo-treated knees. Methods: FORWARD was a 5-year randomized control trial in 549 knee osteoarthritis patients. Here, Y2/Y5 images were analyzed with blinding to relative temporal order and treatment group. Cartilage change during Y2→Y5 was obtained in 337 participants: n ​= ​57 treated with placebo intra-articular injections every 6 months (q6M); n ​= ​69 with 30 ​μg sprifermin every 12 months (q12 ​M), n ​= ​67 with 30 ​μg q6M, n ​= ​73 with 100 ​μg q12 ​M, and n ​= ​71 with 100 ​μg q6M between baseline (BL) and 18 ​M. Total femorotibial joint (TFTJ) cartilage thickness was the primary analytic focus. Results: TFTJ cartilage thickness change during Y2→Y5 was −26μm (SD64; 95%CI -32,-19) across the cohort; no statistically significant difference (p ​= ​0.80) was observed between Sprifermin treated or placebo arms (one-way ANOVA). All groups lost cartilage, but the treatment-related difference in cartilage thickness in Sprifermin arms relative to placebo at Y2 was maintained until Y5. Annualized cartilage change in placebo participants was −8.2 ​μm (SD21; 95%CI -14,-2.5) during Y2→Y5 vs. −5.4 ​μm (SD27; 95%CI -13,1.8) during BL→Y2; no significant difference was identified (t-test). Conclusion: FORWARD is the first study evaluating post-treatment benefits of a potential disease modifying osteoarthritis drug. Cartilage thickness gained with 100 ​μg sprifermin at Y2 is maintained to Y5 and thus appears viable and sustainable.This is a post-hoc analysis of the FORWARD trial: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01919164.

Keywords