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New study results provide evidence that Ofev® (nintedanib) slows progression of IPF beyond four years with consistent safety

By admin

September 17, 2018

Business Wire India

Results from INPULSIS-ON, published in Lancet Respiratory Medicine, provide insights into the long-term safety, efficacy and tolerability of Ofev (nintedanib) in patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). These data suggest that the effect of nintedanib on slowing disease progression of IPF persists beyond four years. Results also indicate that the long-term efficacy of nintedanib in reducing disease progression may be sustained in patients who require dose adjustments.

 

The exploratory findings of the open-label extension trial are consistent with results from the Phase III INPULSIS trials and show that continued treatment with nintedanib, for up to 68 months, has a manageable safety and tolerability profile, with no new safety signals identified. The INPULSIS-ON trial featured a large cohort of patients with IPF who have received nintedanib, and these data add to the growing body of evidence suggesting that nintedanib provides long-term benefits to patients with IPF.

 

IPF is a rare, debilitating and fatal lung disease that affects approximately 3 million people worldwide. It causes progressive scarring of the lungs, resulting in continuous and irreversible deterioration in lung function and breathing difficulties. As IPF progresses, lung function gradually and irreversibly deteriorates.

 

In the INPULSIS-ON trial, involving 734 patients:

 

The most common adverse event during INPULSIS-ON was diarrhoea, as in the INPULSIS and TOMORROW trials, and led to treatment discontinuation in 4.7% and 10.2% of patients who continued and initiated nintedanib during INPULSIS-ON, respectively. Cardiovascular (major adverse cardiac and vascular events, e.g heart attack or stroke) and bleeding exposure-adjusted event rates collected in patients who continued or initiated nintedanib in INPULSIS-ON were similar to those observed in placebo-treated patients in the INPULSIS trials.These findings are also consistent with post-marketing surveillance data collected in the US during the first year following the launch of nintedanib as a treatment for IPF.

 

“The results of INPULSIS-ON add to a growing body of evidence showing that nintedanib provides long-term benefits to patients with IPF,” said Professor Bruno Crestani, lead investigator of INPULSIS-ON, Professor of Pneumology at the Paris Diderot University School of Medicine, France and Head of the Pneumology and Rare Lung Disease Department at Bichat Hospital, France. “IPF is a chronic disease that requires long-term treatment; therefore, long-term safety and efficacy data beyond four years of treatment is important. With these positive data from INPULSIS-ON, physicians can feel confident that their patients can benefit from nintedanib over the long term.”

 

Dr Susanne Stowasser, Associate Head of Medicine Respiratory at Boehringer Ingelheim said: “The INPULSIS-ON results provide valuable insights about the long-term safety and efficacy of OFEV in IPF and supply further evidence of its positive impact on the lives of people living with this disease.” Dr Stowasser added: “Progressive fibrosing lung diseases like IPF continue to have a devastating impact on people’s lives and our focus remains on researching and bringing to market treatments that improve the lives of these patients at need.”

 

~ENDS~

 

Please click on the link below for ‘Notes to Editors’ and ‘References’:

 

http://www.boehringer-ingelheim.com/press-release/inpulsis-shows-ofev-slows-progression-ipf

 

Intended audiences:

 

This press release is issued from our Corporate Headquarters in Ingelheim, Germany and is intended to provide information about our global business.

 

 

 

 

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Source: Businesswire