A randomized trial of icatibant in ace-inhibitor-induced angioedema

Murat Baş, Jens Greve, Klaus Stelter, Miriam Havel, Ulrich Strassen, Nicole Rotter, Johannes Veit, Beate Schossow, Alexander Hapfelmeier, Victoria Kehl, Georg Kojda, Thomas K. Hoffmann

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

185 Scopus citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND Angioedema induced by treatment with angiotensin-converting-enzyme (ACE) inhibitors accounts for one third of angioedema cases in the emergency room; it is usually manifested in the upper airway and the head and neck region. There is no approved treatment for this potentially life-threatening condition.

METHODS In this multicenter, double-blind, double-dummy, randomized phase 2 study, we assigned patients who had ACE-inhibitor-induced angioedema of the upper aerodigestive tract to treatment with 30 mg of subcutaneous icatibant, a selective bradykinin B2 receptor antagonist, or to the current off-label standard therapy consisting of intravenous prednisolone (500 mg) plus clemastine (2 mg). The primary efficacy end point was the median time to complete resolution of edema.

RESULTS All 27 patients in the per-protocol population had complete resolution of edema. The median time to complete resolution was 8.0 hours (interquartile range, 3.0 to 16.0) with icatibant as compared with 27.1 hours (interquartile range, 20.3 to 48.0) with standard therapy (P = 0.002). Three patients receiving standard therapy required rescue intervention with icatibant and prednisolone; 1 patient required tracheotomy. Significantly more patients in the icatibant group than in the standard-therapy group had complete resolution of edema within 4 hours after treatment (5 of 13 vs. 0 of 14, P = 0.02). The median time to the onset of symptom relief (according to a composite investigator-assessed symptom score) was significantly shorter with icatibant than with standard therapy (2.0 hours vs. 11.7 hours, P = 0.03). The results were similar when patient-assessed symptom scores were used.

CONCLUSIONS Among patients with ACE-inhibitor-induced angioedema, the time to complete resolution of edema was significantly shorter with icatibant than with combination therapy with a glucocorticoid and an antihistamine.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)418-425
Number of pages8
JournalNew England Journal of Medicine
Volume372
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2015

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