Icatibant, a New Bradykinin-Receptor Antagonist, in Hereditary Angioedema

Marco Cicardi(University of Milan), Aleena Banerji(Harvard University Press), Francisco Bracho(Georgetown University), Alejandro Malbrán, Bernd Rosenkranz(Massachusetts General Hospital), Marc A. Riedl(University of California, Los Angeles), Konrad Bork(Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz), William R. Lumry(Massachusetts General Hospital), Werner Aberer(Medical University of Graz), H. Bier(Massachusetts General Hospital), Murat Baş(Massachusetts General Hospital), Jens Greve(Massachusetts General Hospital), Thomas K. Hoffmann(Massachusetts General Hospital), Henriette Farkas(Semmelweis University), Avner Reshef(Massachusetts General Hospital), Bruce Ritchie(University of Alberta), William H. Yang(Massachusetts General Hospital), Jürgen Grabbe(Massachusetts General Hospital), Shmuel Kivity(Massachusetts General Hospital), W. Kreuz(Goethe University Frankfurt), Robyn J. Levy(Massachusetts General Hospital), Thomas J. Luger(University of Münster), Krystyna Obtułowicz(Massachusetts General Hospital), Peter Schmid‐Grendelmeier(University of Zurich), Christian Büll(University of Zurich), Brigita Šitkauskienė(Lithuanian University of Health Sciences), William Smith(Royal Adelaide Hospital), Elias Toubi(Massachusetts General Hospital), Sonja Werner(Massachusetts General Hospital), Suresh Anné, Janne Björkander(University of Gothenburg), Laurence Bouillet(Massachusetts General Hospital), Enrìco Cillari(Massachusetts General Hospital), David Hurewitz(Massachusetts General Hospital), Kraig W. Jacobson(Massachusetts General Hospital), Constance H. Katelaris(Massachusetts General Hospital), Marcus Maurer(Massachusetts General Hospital), Hans F. Merk(Massachusetts General Hospital), Jonathan A. Bernstein(Massachusetts General Hospital), Conleth Feighery(Trinity College Dublin), Bernard Floccard(Massachusetts General Hospital), Gerald J. Gleich(University of Utah), Jacques Hébert, Martin Kaatz(Massachusetts General Hospital), Paul K. Keith(Massachusetts General Hospital), Charles H. Kirkpatrick(Massachusetts General Hospital), David Langton(Massachusetts General Hospital), Ludovic Martin(Massachusetts General Hospital), Christiane E. Pichler(Massachusetts General Hospital), David Resnick(Massachusetts General Hospital), Duane G. Wombolt(Massachusetts General Hospital), Diego S. Fernández Romero, Andrea Zanichelli(University of Milan), Francesco Arcoleo(Massachusetts General Hospital), Jochen Knolle(Massachusetts General Hospital), Irina Kravec(Massachusetts General Hospital), Liying Dong(Massachusetts General Hospital), Jens Zimmermann(Massachusetts General Hospital), Kimberly Rosen(Massachusetts General Hospital), Wing Tze Fan(Massachusetts General Hospital)
New England Journal of Medicine
August 5, 2010
Cited by 552Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Hereditary angioedema is characterized by recurrent attacks of angioedema of the skin, larynx, and gastrointestinal tract. Bradykinin is the key mediator of symptoms. Icatibant is a selective bradykinin B2 receptor antagonist. METHODS: In two double-blind, randomized, multicenter trials, we evaluated the effect of icatibant in patients with hereditary angioedema presenting with cutaneous or abdominal attacks. In the For Angioedema Subcutaneous Treatment (FAST) 1 trial, patients received either icatibant or placebo; in FAST-2, patients received either icatibant or oral tranexamic acid, at a dose of 3 g daily for 2 days. Icatibant was given once, subcutaneously, at a dose of 30 mg. The primary end point was the median time to clinically significant relief of symptoms. RESULTS: A total of 56 and 74 patients underwent randomization in the FAST-1 and FAST-2 trials, respectively. The primary end point was reached in 2.5 hours with icatibant versus 4.6 hours with placebo in the FAST-1 trial (P=0.14) and in 2.0 hours with icatibant versus 12.0 hours with tranexamic acid in the FAST-2 trial (P<0.001). In the FAST-1 study, 3 recipients of icatibant and 13 recipients of placebo needed treatment with rescue medication. The median time to first improvement of symptoms, as assessed by patients and by investigators, was significantly shorter with icatibant in both trials. No icatibant-related serious adverse events were reported. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with hereditary angioedema having acute attacks, we found a significant benefit of icatibant as compared with tranexamic acid in one trial and a nonsignificant benefit of icatibant as compared with placebo in the other trial with regard to the primary end point. The early use of rescue medication may have obscured the benefit of icatibant in the placebo trial. (Funded by Jerini; ClinicalTrials.gov numbers, NCT00097695 and NCT00500656.)


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