95
Views
0
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Review

Subcutaneous methotrexate for symptomatic control of severe recalcitrant psoriasis: safety, efficacy, and patient acceptability

, &
Pages 65-70 | Published online: 05 May 2015

Abstract

Background

Although oral methotrexate is an effective first-line traditional systemic therapy for psoriasis, the use of the subcutaneous form of methotrexate for the treatment of psoriasis has not been fully established.

Objective

This study is a literature review of the research related to the safety, efficacy, and patient acceptability of subcutaneous methotrexate for its application in the treatment of severe recalcitrant psoriasis.

Methods

Systematic literature searches were conducted of the PubMed, Ovid, and ClinicalTrials.gov databases.

Results

Only three relevant sources of literature were found studying subcutaneous methotrexate specifically in the context of psoriasis. Of these, only one clinical trial was found to directly study the use of subcutaneous methotrexate in psoriasis patients; however, results of this study have not been published. The other two literature sources involved a cost-effectiveness analysis and a literature review for subcutaneous methotrexate. Otrexup™ and Rasuvo™ are two particular single-use auto-injector modalities of subcutaneous methotrexate that are approved by the US Food and Drug Administration. The equivalents of Rasuvo available in countries outside of the USA are advertised as Metoject® or Metex®. Much more research has been conducted on the use of subcutaneous methotrexate in rheumatoid arthritis patients.

Conclusion

There is a lack of original evidence-based studies evaluating the use of subcutaneous methotrexate specifically for the treatment of psoriasis. Based on the more extensively researched data on the safety, efficacy, and patient acceptability of subcutaneous methotrexate in rheumatoid arthritis patients, its application for the treatment of moderate-to-severe psoriasis is promising. More evidence-based studies on psoriasis subjects are needed to explore the practical application of subcutaneous methotrexate as a treatment option for severe recalcitrant psoriasis.

Video abstract

Point your SmartPhone at the code above. If you have a QR code reader the video abstract will appear. Or use:

http://youtu.be/O-5IhniUmSk

Introduction

Methotrexate (MTX) has been used for decades as the most commonly prescribed traditional systemic therapy worldwide for the treatment of psoriasis.Citation1 Although its mechanism of action has not been fully elucidated, current evidence supports that it works by acting as both an antimetabolite (by inhibiting dihydrofolate reductase) and an immunomodulatory agent (by promoting adenosine release, thereby suppressing inflammation).Citation2,Citation3 Due to its anti-inflammatory quality, it is widely used as a treatment for various inflammatory diseases including but not limited to rheumatoid arthritis (RA), Crohn’s disease, multiple sclerosis, psoriasis, and psoriatic arthritis.Citation4 MTX has long been used as a standard of care to treat psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis at typically between 7.5 and 25.0 mg/week in a single weekly dose or three divided doses separated by 12 hours every week,Citation5,Citation6 although it has most extensively been studied for the treatment of RA.Citation3 MTX is the disease-modifying anti-rheumatic first-line therapy for RA, and the majority of RA patients are treated in doses similar to those used for psoriasis.Citation3,Citation7 Various routes of administration exist for MTX: oral (PO), intravenous, subcutaneous (SC), and intramuscular for psoriasis,Citation8,Citation9 although the most commonly used route is still PO, largely due to convenience.Citation10 The pharmacokinetics of SC administration for MTX were first examined in 1988, the same year that it was approved for the treatment of RA.Citation11 Even though SC MTX has been more extensively studied in the context of RA, there has been a paucity of studies for understanding its application as a treatment of psoriasis. One particular paper published in August 2014 by Chiaravalloti and Strober presented the potential advantages and disadvantages of using self-administered SC MTX for the treatment of psoriasis based on a review of the literature.Citation8 The aim of our paper is to present a systematic review regarding the efficacy, safety, and patient acceptability of SC MTX for the symptomatic control of severe recalcitrant psoriasis, with an update of additional research that has been conducted since the last review by Chiaravalloti and Strober and a focus on patient-oriented studies. Based on our findings, our secondary objective is to propose potential studies to advance our understanding on the use of SC MTX in the treatment of psoriasis.

Methods

A systematic electronic literature search using the terms “subcutaneous methotrexate” and “psoriasis” from the dates January 1, 1960 until December 31, 2014 was conducted of the PubMed, Ovid, US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and ClinicalTrials.gov databases and search engines. Due to the limited literature published on the use of SC MTX in psoriasis, the aforementioned search was extended to SC MTX in the application of RA. Finally, a supplemental Internet search via the Google search engine for any remaining related publications was conducted using the keywords “subcutaneous methotrexate” and “psoriasis” with the constraints of being articles or announcements on human subjects only.

Efficacy

While the enteral route has been preferred due to its convenience, it can compromise the bioavailability of MTX, especially at higher doses, due to saturation of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract’s absorptive capacity.Citation12 At PO doses above 25 mg/day the bioavailability of MTX becomes unpredictable,Citation13 whereas the SC route demonstrates a linear and superior bioavailability in comparison.Citation9,Citation13Citation15

In 2008, Braun et al published the first and only clinical trial to provide clinical evidence for SC MTX’s superior efficacy over PO MTX. The study population was MTX- and biologic-naïve patients with active RA. The randomized controlled trial showed significant clinical improvement at 24 weeks with 15 mg/week of SC MTX compared to 15 mg/week of PO MTX, as defined by American College of Rheumatology criteria for 20% (ACR20) and 70% (ACR70) improvement outcomes.Citation16 Although results from the study can be extrapolated to psoriasis, there has yet to be a study, as far as we are aware, that has published a head-to-head comparison of the clinical efficacy and safety of PO to SC MTX specifically for the treatment of psoriasis.

In the UK, a retrospective analysis was conducted of 103 RA patients who were switched from PO to SC MTX at a mean dose of 15 mg/week due to either inefficacy or intolerance. Although both groups exhibited a significant improvement in their disease activity scores 3 months after switching, the group that switched due to intolerance notably displayed an even more significant improvement in disease activity.Citation17

In October 2013, the FDA approved the first form of a single-dose disposable auto-injector modality for the once-weekly self-administration of SC MTX (Otrexup™, Antares Pharma, Ewing, NJ, USA) for RA, polyarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis, and severe recalcitrant psoriasis.Citation18 This form of SC MTX is available in dosage strengths of 7.5, 10.0, 15.0, 20.0, and 25.0 mg. Subsequently, a randomized crossover head-to-head trial comparing the pharmacokinetics between the SC auto-injector and PO administration routes for MTX at doses of 10, 15, 20, and 25 mg weekly in 47 RA patients demonstrated that the SC route achieved an increasingly higher, dose-proportional MTX exposure than the comparable PO dose, and the disparity continued to increase through doses of 25 mg/week. The study also observed no increases in adverse events with SC MTX over its 8-week period.Citation15

Recently, the only clinical trial to most directly study the effect of SC MTX on psoriasis patients, as far as we are aware, has been completed. A Phase I randomized crossover clinical trial that concluded in October 2013 enrolled 35 subjects with moderate-to-severe psoriasis. Its aim was to determine the relative bioavailability of SC injection of 50 mg/mL MTX from a prefilled pen (Metoject®, medac GmbH, Hamburg, Germany) versus intramuscular administration of 25 mg/mL MTX; however, the results of the study have yet to be published.Citation19 This prefilled single-dose disposable SC auto-injector pen produced by medac GmbH has the benefit of offering the widest dose range in a SC MTX modality, as it is available in ten different once-weekly dosage strengths that range from 7.5 mg to 30.0 mg in 2.5 mg increments. It is most commonly available in numerous countries outside of the USA by the name of Metoject. medac GmbH also advertises the same product as Metex® in several other European countries and Rasuvo™ in the USA.Citation20 Only recently, in July 2014, has the FDA approved the use of Rasuvo. Similar to Otrexup, Rasuvo is approved for RA, polyarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis, and severe recalcitrant psoriasis.Citation21 In a single-center open-label randomized two-period two-sequence single-dose crossover study of 62 subjects, the single-dose administration of Rasuvo demonstrated a higher relative bioavailability and fewer GI adverse events than PO MTX.Citation22

Safety

The side effects of MTX are known to usually involve the GI system with common symptoms including nausea and anorexia.Citation1 In gathering information regarding SC MTX’s safety and tolerability profile, we examined the data for its safety profile in RA patients, since the dosages used to treat the majority of RA and psoriasis patients are similar.Citation3 In a systematic literature review of 38 publications on the optimal dosage and route of administration of MTX in RA patients, observational data suggest fewer GI adverse events with parenteral administration of MTX.Citation1,Citation10,Citation23

The first study to estimate the change in GI adverse events when converting from PO to SC MTX was recently published in June 2014.Citation23 This retrospective survey of patients who had switched from PO to SC MTX measured responses on visual analog scales. Results of the survey showed that switching from PO to SC MTX resulted in significant improvements in the following GI adverse events: frequency of nausea, intensity of nausea, and frequency of discomfort. The only outcome not significantly reduced was frequency in vomiting.Citation23 In another retrospective analysis of 80 RA patients who had all converted from PO to SC MTX due to PO MTX’s GI side effects, all the disease activity parameters and number of GI side effects had decreased at their first- and third-month visits, with no dropouts with SC MTX at the third-month visit.Citation24 Although larger controlled studies are needed to further corroborate their results, these retrospective analyses indicate the potential for improvement in GI adverse events in patients who switch from PO to SC MTX.

The results of the previously mentioned trial by Braun et al that compared 15 mg/week of PO to SC MTX showed that a superior clinical efficacy of SC MTX was not counterbalanced by a significant increase in frequency of adverse events. Both routes exhibited similar adverse events, and the frequency of adverse events was not significantly different, at 66% and 62% for the PO and SC routes, respectively. Despite these findings, however, more patients on SC MTX withdrew from therapy due to toxicity.Citation16 These results were rather unexpected based on the earlier mentioned repeated findings from studies that the parenteral administration of MTX demonstrates fewer GI adverse events. No studies were found to specifically examine the effects of SC MTX on liver fibrosis. Moreover, the hepatotoxic effects of parenteral MTX have been controversial and mostly limited to small-scale studies.Citation25Citation27

Patient acceptability

Patient acceptability is particularly significant in dictating adherence to therapy. As mentioned in the article by Chiaravalloti and Strober, a potential drawback to SC MTX is patients’ fear of needles and/or the discomfort of self-injecting;Citation8 however, this doubt has been strongly reassured with the advent of the widely accepted biologics which require self-injection.Citation15,Citation16

In a large post-marketing surveillance study in Germany that examined the preference, satisfaction, usability, and tolerability of the SC self-administration of a ready-to-use prefilled syringe of high-concentration (50 mg/mL) MTX, 89.1% of patients endorsed that self-administration led to a feeling of more independence and improved quality of life (83.6%).Citation28 Although the majority of the study population were patients with RA, 59 (14.6%) of the patients had psoriatic arthritis and the results of this patient-centered outcomes study can be generalized to psoriasis patients.

In a crossover study that examined RA patients’ preference between the previously described prefilled pens and prefilled syringes of SC MTX at weekly doses of 15.0, 17.5, or 20.0 mg, the prefilled pen was generally favored with regard to patient use, acceptability, and satisfaction.Citation29 Study nurses and physicians also recommended the prefilled pen due to convenience.Citation29 Moreover, a study on Otrexup revealed that patients reported no or minimal pain at the administration site and a safe usability profile after proper training by site personnel and review of written instructions.Citation30 This Phase II single-dose study was conducted in RA patients, 90.1% of who had moderate-to-severe functional handicaps which may have affected manual dexterity.Citation30 In a usability study on Rasuvo, 104 RA subjects reported consistently high degrees of easy performance, effectiveness, successful confirmation of delivery, and patient satisfaction.Citation21 These studies suggest the benefits of a couple of nontraditional modalities (pen and auto-injector) for administering SC MTX to promote patient compliance.

The cost-to-efficacy ratio of a treatment option is also a significant factor to consider when evaluating its likelihood for patient adherence and suitability in clinical practice. A cost-effectiveness analysis shows the superior incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of SC MTX to cyclosporine, adalimumab, and infliximab in the treatment of moderate-to-severe psoriasis.Citation31 A cost-effectiveness analysis conducted in Spain determined that the additional costs of Metoject compared to PO MTX would be compensated for by its improved effectiveness for RA in the Spanish Health System.Citation32 Similarly, a cost-minimization analysis conducted in the UK demonstrated considerable savings for RA patients when switching from PO to SC MTX rather than to biologics.Citation33

Conclusion

Multiple studies on SC MTX within the arena of RA point to the promising clinical benefits of SC MTX either as a monotherapy or combined with other therapies for psoriasis. However, there continues to be a scarcity of studies directly examining SC MTX for the management of psoriasis. So far, only one clinical trial has been found to study the effects of SC MTX in psoriasis patients; however, results of this trial have not been made available.Citation19 Repeated findings from its use in numerous RA studies show that SC MTX has superior bioavailability at higher doses with no increase in frequency of GI adverse effects as compared to comparable doses via the PO route.Citation15,Citation16 It also has illustrated an improvement in quality of life, and favorable cost-to-efficacy ratio compared to biologics.Citation32 Interpretation of these results suggests the extrapolated but not yet established superior clinical efficacy, safety, and patient acceptability of SC MTX for psoriasis patients. Hence, large-controlled studies must be done specifically in psoriasis subjects to further validate these interpretations. Although safety, efficacy, and patient acceptability are significant aspects in considering the integration of the SC route of MTX in the treatment algorithm for psoriasis, a more extensive pharmacoeconomics analysis of the cost-to-benefit ratio for its use would also prove to be valuable.

presents proposed studies to address the research gaps that would help validate SC MTX’s application in clinical practice for the treatment of psoriasis. As of the creation of this paper, no trials, as far as we are aware, have conducted head-to-head comparisons between PO and SC administration of MTX for the management of psoriasis, although the call to address this insufficiency has already been previously mentioned.Citation34 Proposed evidence-based studies that are needed to understand its application in clinical practice include: long-term and dose-ranging trials, efficacy and safety evaluations after switching from PO MTX, head-to-head comparisons with PO MTX and biologics, trials of SC MTX as a monotherapy or in combination with other therapies, quality-of-life studies, and cost-to-efficacy analyses.

Table 1 Proposed studies for addressing research gaps in the utilization of subcutaneous methotrexate (MTX) for the treatment of psoriasis

This review reemphasizes the potential benefits of SC MTX that have been examined in RA. As suggested in studies on SC MTX in the RA population,Citation10,Citation34 SC MTX could be the bridge between insufficient response to PO MTX and attempting the much more expensive biologic therapies. Moreover, it could potentially replace PO MTX as a first-line systemic therapy for moderate-to-severe psoriasis due to its potential long-term cost-to-efficacy benefits while having better bioavailability with comparable tolerability. It could also maximize the symptomatic control of severe recalcitrant psoriasis when used in combination with biologics. Hence, we highly suggest that further comparison trials and studies for SC MTX be conducted directly examining psoriasis subjects on outcomes such as: Psoriasis Area Severity Index or Physician Global Assessment scores, patient quality-of-life questionnaires, adverse-event evaluations, and cost-to-efficacy analyses.

Disclosure

Dr Wu has received research funding from AbbVie, Amgen, Coherus BioSciences, Eli Lilly, Janssen, Merck, Novartis, Pfizer, Regeneron, and Sandoz; he is a consultant for AbbVie, Amgen, Celgene, DUSA Pharmaceuticals, Eli Lilly, and Pfizer. The other authors do not have any conflicts of interest to disclose in this work. This work is exempted from review by an institutional review board and has not been presented previously.

References

  • MenterAKormanNElmetsCGuidelines of care for the management of psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis: section 4. Guidelines of care for the management and treatment of psoriasis with traditional systemic agentsJ Am Acad Dermatol200961345148519493586
  • CatherJMenterANovel therapies for psoriasisAm J Clin Dermatol20023315917311978137
  • WeinsteinGDJeffesEWIIIMethotrexateKooJYLevinECLeonAWuJJGottliebABModerate to Severe Psoriasis4th edBoca Raton, FLCRC Press2014151168
  • MedlinePlusMethotrexate [web page on the Internet]Bethesda, MDNational Institutes of Health United States National Library of Medicine nd [updated May 15, 2014]. Available from: http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/druginfo/meds/a682019.htmlAccessed December 30, 2014
  • GottliebAKormanNGordonKGuidelines of care for the management of psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis: Section 2. Psoriatic arthritis: overview and guidelines of care for treatment with an emphasis on the biologicsJ Am Acad Dermatol200858585186418423261
  • KalbRStroberBWeinsteinGLebwohlMMethotrexate and psoriasis: 2009 National Psoriasis Foundation Consensus ConferenceJ Am Acad Dermatol200960582483719389524
  • PincusTYaziciYSokkaTAletahaDSmolenJSMethotrexate as the “anchor drug” for the treatment of early rheumatoid arthritisClin Exp Rheumatol2008215 Suppl 31S179S185
  • ChiaravallotiAJStroberBEThe use of self-administered subcutaneous methotrexate for the treatment of psoriasisJ Drugs Dermatol201413892993125116970
  • JundtJWBrowneBAFioccoGPSteeleADMockDA comparison of low dose methotrexate bioavailability: oral solution, oral tablet, subcutaneous and intramuscular dosingJ Rheumatol19932011184518498308768
  • VisserKvan der HeijdeDOptimal dosage and route of administration of methotrexate in rheumatoid arthritis: a systematic review of the literatureAnn Rheum Dis20096871094109919033290
  • BalisFMirroJJrReamanGHPharmacokinetics of subcutaneous methotrexateJ Clin Oncol1988612188218863199171
  • TianHCronsteinBNUnderstanding the mechanisms of action of methotrexate: implications for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritisBull NYU Hosp Jt Dis200765316817317922664
  • HoekstraMHaagsmaCNeefCProostJKnuifAvan de LaarMBioavailability of higher dose methotrexate comparing oral and subcutaneous administration in patients with rheumatoid arthritisJ Rheumatol200431464564815088287
  • TukováJChládekJNemcováDChládkováJDolezalováPMethotrexate bioavailability after oral and subcutaneous dministration in children with juvenile idiopathic arthritisClin Exp Rheumatol20092761047105320149329
  • SchiffMHJaffeJSFreundlichBHead-to-head, randomised, crossover study of oral versus subcutaneous methotrexate in patients with rheumatoid arthritis: drug-exposure limitations of oral methotrexate at doses ≥15 mg may be overcome with subcutaneous administrationAnn Rheum Dis20147381549155124728329
  • BraunJKästnerPFlaxenbergPMC-MTX.6/RH Study GroupComparison of the clinical efficacy and safety of subcutaneous versus oral administration of methotrexate in patients with active rheumatoid arthritis: results of a six-month, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, controlled, phase IV trialArthritis Rheum2008581738118163521
  • HameedBJonesHSubcutaneous methotrexate is well tolerated and superior to oral methotrexate in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritisInt J Rheum Dis2010134e83e8421199461
  • In brief: otrexup – a single-use auto-injector formulation of methotrexateMed Lett Drugs Ther20145614392824691150
  • medac GmbHBioavailability in patient with psoriasis: Metoject pre-filled pen ClinicalTrials.gov [website on the Internet]Bethseda, MDUS National Library of Medicine2014 [updated March 13, 2015]. Available from: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02097173?term=NCT02097173&rank=1. NLM identifier: NCT02097173Accessed January 2, 2015
  • Metoject [homepage on the Internet]Medac Pharma, Inc Available at: http://www.metoject.comAccessed January 29, 2015
  • Rasuvo [drug label]Chicago, ILMedac Pharma, Inc2014
  • PichlmeierUHeuerKSubcutaneous administration of methotrexate with a prefilled autoinjector pen results in a higher relative bioavailability compared with oral administration of methotrexateClin Exp Rheumatol201432456357124983446
  • KromannCLage-HansenPKoefoedMJemecGBDoes switching from oral to subcutaneous administration of methotrexate influence on patient reported gastro-intestinal adverse effects?J Dermatolog Treat Epup6172014
  • BormanPDemirGKaygısızFOkumuşMLETTER TO THE EDITOR Subcutaneous (SC) Methotrexate (MTX) is Better and Well-Tolerable than Oral MTX in Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients, Switched from Oral to SC Administration Due to Gastrointestinal Side EffectsOpen Rheumatol J20148181925232363
  • VanscottEJAuerbachRWeinsteinGDParenteral methotrexate in psoriasisArch Dermatol19648955055614107621
  • FryLThe treatment of psoriasis with parenteral methotrexateBr J Dermatol19667852822885937350
  • NewmanMAuerbachRFeinerHThe role of liver biopsies in psoriatic patients receiving long-term methotrexate treatment. Improvement in liver abnormalities after cessation of treatmentArch Dermatol19891259121812242774597
  • StriesowFBrandtAPreference, satisfaction and usability of subcutaneously administered methotrexate for rheumatoid arthritis or psoriatic arthritis: results of a postmarketing surveillance study with a high-concentration formulationTher Adv Musculoskelet Dis2012413922870490
  • DemaryWSchwenkeHRockwitzKSubcutaneously administered methotrexate for rheumatoid arthritis, by prefilled syringes versus prefilled pens: patient preference and comparison of the self-injection experiencePatient Prefer Adherence201481061107125125973
  • FreundlichBKivitzAJaffeJNearly pain-free self-administration of subcutaneous methotrexate with an autoinjector: results of a phase 2 clinical trial in patients with rheumatoid arthritis who have functional limitationsJ Clin Rheumatol201420525626025036562
  • PuigLMethotrexate: new therapeutic approachesActas Dermosifiliogr2014105658358923434058
  • CrespoCBrosaMGalvánJPharmacoeconomic analysis of Metoject(®) in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis in SpainReumatol Clin201064203211 Spanish21794714
  • FitzpatrickRScottDKearyICost-minimisation analysis of subcutaneous methotrexate versus biologic therapy for the treatment of patients with rheumatoid arthritis who have had an insufficient response or intolerance to oral methotrexateClin Rheumatol201332111605161223835658
  • MontaudiéHSbidianEPaulCMethotrexate in psoriasis: a systematic review of treatment modalities, incidence, risk factors and monitoring of liver toxicityJ Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol201125Suppl 21218