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Adverse reactions with SPEVIGO SC for treatment of GPP when not experiencing a flare1

Adverse reaction
(Rate per 100 patient-years)
SPEVIGO SCaPlacebo
Injection site reactionb31.612.7
Urinary tract infection180
Pruritus8.80
Arthralgia13.36

There were 3 subjects who discontinued subcutaneous SPEVIGO in the subcutaneous SPEVIGO cohort due to treatment emergent adverse events of psoriasis compared to no subjects in the placebo cohort who discontinued placebo for any treatment emergent adverse event.1

GPP, generalized pustular psoriasis; SC, subcutaneous.

The safety analysis included all patients who were randomly assigned and received at least one treatment dose.2

aSPEVIGO SC was administered with a 600 mg subcutaneous loading dose followed by 300 mg subcutaneously every 4 weeks.1

bInjection site reactions included erythema, pain, swelling, induration, urticaria, and warmth at the injection site.1

Adverse reactions shown are for the recommended SPEVIGO SC dose only. For a full list of adverse drug reactions, please refer to the Prescribing Information.


Specific adverse reactions

Infections: The most frequent adverse reactions that occurred in subjects treated with intravenous SPEVIGO were infections. During the 1-week placebo-controlled period in Study Effisayil-1, infections were reported in 14% of subjects treated with SPEVIGO compared with 6% of subjects treated with placebo. Serious infection (urinary tract infection) was reported in 1 subject (3%) treated with SPEVIGO and no subjects treated with placebo. Infections observed through Week 1 in Study Effisayil-1 in subjects treated with SPEVIGO were mild (29%) to moderate (71%).1

Drug Reaction With Eosinophilia and Systemic Symptoms (DRESS): Two cases of DRESS were reported in Study Effisayil-1 in subjects with GPP who were treated with intravenous SPEVIGO. RegiSCAR DRESS validation scoring (with the following categories: “no,” “possible,” “probable,” or “definite” DRESS) was applied to the reported cases. Reported cases were assessed as “no DRESS” and “possible DRESS”.1

Clinical development

Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS): Among approximately 835 subjects exposed to spesolimab-sbzo during clinical development, Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS) was reported in 3 subjects who received various doses of spesolimab-sbzo via various methods of administration in clinical trials for unapproved indications.1

GPP, generalized pustular psoriasis; IgG, immunoglobulin; IL36R, interleukin-36 receptor; RegiSCAR, Registry of Severe Cutaneous Adverse Reactions.

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