Factors associated with long-term retention of treatment with golimumab in rheumatoid arthritis, axial spondyloarthritis, and psoriatic arthritis: an analysis of the Spanish BIOBADASER registry.

2021 
Retention of biological treatment provides a marker of drug effectiveness and patient satisfaction. Retention of golimumab was high in clinical trial extensions and real-world studies up to 5 years in patients with immune-mediated rheumatic diseases. To assess the probability of real-world long-term retention of treatment with golimumab up to 7 years after treatment initiation. This retrospective noninterventional study involved analysis of the Spanish biological drugs registry, BIOBADASER. Adults who had ever received golimumab for rheumatoid arthritis (RA), axial spondyloarthritis (SpA), or psoriatic arthritis (PsA), and had initiated it > 6 months before the analysis date, were included. Among 685 patients (28.5% RA, 42.9% SpA, 28.6% PsA), the overall probability of retention of golimumab treatment since initiation was 71.7% (95% confidence interval 68.1–74.9) at year 1, 60.5% (56.5–64.2%) at year 2, 55.6% (51.5–59.5%) at year 3, 50.6% (46.2–54.8%) at year 4, 45.1% (40.1–50.0%) at year 5, 44.2% (39.0–49.3) at year 6, and 39.5% (32.8–46.2) at year 7. Retention was greater in patients with axial SpA or PsA versus RA (p < 0.001) and when golimumab was used as first-line treatment versus third or later lines (p < 0.001). Factors associated with greater golimumab retention in Cox regression included use as first-line biological therapy, having axial SpA or PsA rather than RA, and concomitant methotrexate therapy. Steroids were associated with lower retention. In this real-world study of RA, axial SpA, and PsA patients, the retention rate of golimumab was 39.5% at year 7.
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