アブストラクト | PURPOSE: Eculizumab, a drug that blocks activation of the terminal complement pathway, is useful in the treatment of several rare diseases. However, eculizumab-related meningococcal disease is a serious problem. Because of the difficulty diagnosing meningococcal disease, deaths from meningococcal disease may have been overlooked. The purpose of this study was to clarify the trend of meningococcal infection in patients on eculizumab and to evaluate the effectiveness of risk communication. METHODS: Pharmacovigilance analysis was conducted using the Japanese Adverse Drug Event Report database between the first quarter of 2010 and the second quarter of 2019. Of the reports of deaths, those with adverse event terms of fever, shock, altered state of consciousness, loss of consciousness, sepsis, organ failure, and disseminated intravascular coagulation were analyzed as deaths with suspected meningococcal infection. RESULTS: Of the 3559.2 person-years of eculizumab-exposed patients, 17 patients died with symptoms of meningococcal disease (including two confirmed cases). The mortality rate of meningococcal disease in patients exposed to eculizumab in Japan was estimated to be 0.56 (confirmed cases) to 4.8 (suspected cases) per 1000 person-years. Based on data from the National Epidemiological Surveillance of Infectious Disease, the mortality rate of meningococcal disease in the general population in Japan is 0.0042 per 100,000 person-years. Thus, the mortality rate from meningococcal disease in eculizumab-exposed patients is estimated to be 13,000 to 114,000 times the mortality rate from meningococcal disease in the general population of Japan. Academic societies warned of deaths from meningococcal disease in the first quarter of 2018, calling for appropriate action. Thereafter, only one death with symptoms of meningococcal disease has been reported. CONCLUSION: The analysis of the database showed that death from meningococcal disease in eculizumab-exposed individuals may occur more often than expected. This study also showed that appropriate risk communication reduced the fatality rate of meningococcal disease. |