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Winrevair — Description, Dosage, Side Effects | PillsCard
Rx
Winrevair
45 mg, Proszek i rozpuszczalnik do sporządzania roztworu do wstrzykiwań
INN: Sotaterceptum
Data updated: 2026-04-13
Available in:
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Form
Proszek i rozpuszczalnik do sporządzania roztworu do wstrzykiwań
Dosage
45 mg
Route
podskórna
Storage
—
About This Product
User Reviews
Reviews reflect personal experiences and are not medical advice. Always consult your doctor.
Manufacturer
Merck Sharp & Dohme B.V. (Holandia)
Composition
Sotaterceptum 45 mg
ATC Code
C02KX
Source
URPL
Pharmacotherapeutic group: antihypertensives, antihypertensives for pulmonary arterial hypertension. ATC code: C02KX06
Mechanism of action
Sotatercept is an activin signalling inhibitor with high selectivity for Activin-A, a dimeric glycoprotein which belongs to the transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) superfamily of ligands. Activin-A binds to the activin receptor type IIA (ActRIIA) regulating key signalling for inflammation, cell proliferation, apoptosis, and tissue homeostasis.
Activin-A levels are increased in PAH patients. Activin binding to ActRIIA promotes proliferative signalling while there is a decrease in anti-proliferative bone morphogenetic protein receptor type II (BMPRII) signalling. The imbalance of ActRIIA-BMPRII signalling underlying PAH results in vascular cell hyperproliferation, causing pathological remodelling of the pulmonary arterial wall, narrowing the arterial lumen, increasing pulmonary vascular resistance, and leads to increased pulmonary artery pressure and right ventricular dysfunction.
Sotatercept consists of a recombinant homodimeric activin receptor type IIA-Fc (ActRIIA-Fc) fusion protein, which acts as a ligand trap that scavenges excess Activin-A and other ligands for ActRIIA to inhibit activin signalling. As a result, sotatercept rebalances the pro-proliferative (ActRIIA/Smad2/3-mediated) and anti-proliferative (BMPRII/Smad1/5/8-mediated) signalling to modulate vascular proliferation.
Pharmacodynamic effects
A phase 2 clinical study (PULSAR) assessed pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) in patients with PAH after 24 weeks of treatment with sotatercept. The decrease from baseline in PVR was significantly greater in the sotatercept 0.7 mg/kg and 0.3 mg/kg groups compared with the placebo group. The placebo-adjusted least squares (LS) mean difference from baseline was -269.4 dyn*sec/cm
5
(95% CI: -365.8, -173.0) for the sotatercept 0.7 mg/kg group and -151.1 dyn*sec/cm
5
(95% CI: -249.6, -52.6) for the sotatercept 0.3 mg/kg group.
In rat models of PAH, a sotatercept analogue reduced expression of pro-inflammatory markers at the pulmonary arterial wall, reduced leucocyte recruitment, inhibited proliferation of endothelial and smooth muscle cells, and promoted apoptosis in diseased vasculature. These cellular changes were associated with thinner vessel walls, reversed arterial and right ventricular remodelling, and improved haemodynamics.
Clinical efficacy and safety
The efficacy of sotatercept was evaluated in adult patients with PAH in the pivotal STELLAR study. STELLAR was a double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicentre, parallel-group clinical study in which 323 patients with PAH (WHO Group 1 Functional Class II or III) were randomised 1:1 to sotatercept (starting dose 0.3 mg/kg escalated to target dose 0.7 mg/kg) (n=163) or placebo (n=160) administered subcutaneously once every 3 weeks. Patients continued their treatment assignment in the long-term double-blind treatment period until all patients completed Week 24.
Participants in this study were adults with a median age of 48.0 years (range: 18 to 82 years), of which 16.7% were ≥ 65 years of age. Median weight was 68.2 kg (range: 38.0 to 141.3 kg); 89.2% of participants were White, and 79.3% were not Hispanic or Latino; and 79.3% were female. The most common PAH aetiologies were idiopathic PAH (58.5%), heritable PAH (18.3%), and PAH associated with connective tissue diseases (14.9%), PAH associated with simple congenital heart disease with repaired systemic-to-pulmonary shunts (5%), or drug or toxin-induced PAH (3.4%). The mean time since PAH diagnosis to screening was 8.76 years.
Most participants were receiving either triple (61.3%) or double (34.7%) background PAH therapy, and more than one-third (39.9%) were receiving prostacyclin infusions. The proportions of participants in WHO FC II was 48.6% and in WHO FC III was 51.4%. The STELLAR study excluded patients diagnosed with HIV-associated PAH, PAH associated with portal hypertension, schistosomiasis-associated PAH, and PVOD.
The primary efficacy endpoint was the change from baseline at Week 24 in 6-Minute Walk Distance (6MWD). In the sotatercept treatment group, the median of the placebo-adjusted change in 6MWD from baseline at Week 24 was 40.8 meters (95% CI: 27.5, 54.1; p < 0.001). The median of the placebo-adjusted changes in 6MWD at Week 24 were also evaluated in subgroups. The treatment effect was consistent across the different subgroups including sex, PAH diagnostic group, background therapy at baseline, prostacyclin infusion therapy at baseline, WHO FC, and baseline PVR.
The secondary endpoints included improvements in multicomponent improvement (MCI), PVR, N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP), WHO FC, time to death or first occurrence of clinical worsening events.
MCI was a pre-defined endpoint measured by the proportion of patients achieving all three of the following criteria at Week 24 relative to baseline: improvement in 6MWD (increase ≥ 30 m), improvement in NT-proBNP (decrease in NT-proBNP ≥ 30% or maintenance/achievement of NT-proBNP level < 300 ng/L), and improvement in WHO FC or maintenance of WHO FC II.
Disease progression was measured by the time to death or first occurrence of a clinical worsening event. Clinical worsening events included worsening-related listing for lung and/or heart transplant, need to initiate rescue therapy with an approved background PAH therapy or the need to increase the dose of infusion prostacyclin by ≥ 10%, need for atrial septostomy, hospitalisation for worsening PAH (≥ 24 hours), or deterioration of PAH (worsened WHO FC and decrease in 6MWD ≥ 15% with both events occurring at the same time or different times). Clinical worsening events and death were captured until the last patient completed the Week 24 visit (data up to the data cutoff; median duration of exposure 33.6 weeks).
At Week 24, 38.9% of sotatercept-treated patients showed improvement in MCI versus 10.1% in the placebo group (p < 0.001). The median treatment difference in PVR between sotatercept and placebo group was -234.6 dyn*sec/cm
5
(95% CI: -288.4, -180.8; p <0.001). The median treatment difference in NT-proBNP between the sotatercept and placebo groups was -441.6 pg/mL (95% CI: -573.5, -309.6; p < 0.001). Improvement in WHO FC from baseline occurred in 29% of patients in sotatercept versus 13.8% in placebo (p < 0.001).
Treatment with sotatercept resulted in an 82% reduction (HR 0.182, 95% CI: 0.075, 0.441; p <0.001) in the occurrence of death or clinical worsening events compared to placebo (see Table 4). The treatment effect of sotatercept versus placebo started by Week 10 and continued for the duration of the study.
Table 4: Death or clinical worsening events
Placebo
(N=160)
Sotatercept
(N=163)
Total number of subjects who experienced death or at least one clinical worsening event, n (%)
29 (18.1)
7 (4.3)
Assessment of death or first occurrence of clinical worsening events*, n (%)
Death
6 (3.8)
2 (1.2)
Worsening-related listing for lung and/or heart transplant
1 (0.6)
1 (0.6)
Need for atrial septostomy
0 (0.0)
0 (0.0)
PAH-specific hospitalisation (≥24 hours)
8 (5.0)
0 (0.0)
Deterioration of PAH
†
15 (9.4)
4 (2.5)
* A subject can have more than one assessment recorded for their first event of clinical worsening. There were 2 participants receiving placebo and no participant receiving sotatercept who had more than one assessment recorded for their first event of clinical worsening. This analysis excluded the component “need to initiate rescue therapy with an approved PAH therapy or need to increase the dose of infusion prostacyclin by 10% or more”.
†
Deterioration of PAH is defined by both of the following events occurring at any time, even if they began at different times, as compared to their baseline values: (a) Worsened WHO functional class (II to III, III to IV, II to IV, etc.); and (b) Decrease in 6MWD by ≥ 15% (confirmed by two 6MWTs at least 4 hours apart but no more than one week).
N = number of subjects in FAS population; n = number of subjects in the category. Percentages are calculated as (n/N)*100.
Immunogenicity
At Week 24 in STELLAR, anti-drug antibodies (ADA) were detected in 44/163 (27%) of patients taking sotatercept. Among these 44 patients, 12 tested positive for neutralising antibodies against sotatercept. No evidence of ADA impact on pharmacokinetics, efficacy or safety was observed.
Paediatric population
The Agency has deferred the obligation to submit the results of studies with Winrevair in one or more subsets of the paediatric population in the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension (see section 4.2 for information on paediatric use).
⚠️ Warnings
Selecting the appropriate product kit
If a patient's weight requires the use of two 45 mg vials, a 2-vial kit should be used instead of two 1-vial kit to eliminate the need for multiple injections (see section 6.5).
Reconstitution and administration instructions
Winrevair powder and solvent for solution for injection should be reconstituted before use and administered as a single injection according to patient weight (see section 4.2).
See the separate Instructions for Use booklet provided in the kit for detailed step by step instructions on how to prepare and administer the medicinal product. An overview of the reconstitution and administration instructions is provided below.
Reconstitution
- Remove the kit from the refrigerator and wait 15 minutes to allow the prefilled syringe(s) and medicinal product to come to room temperature prior to preparation.
- Check the vial to ensure the medicinal product is not expired. The powder should be white to off-white and may look like a whole or broken up cake.
- Remove the lid from the vial containing the powder and swab the rubber stopper with an alcohol wipe.
- Attach the vial adaptor to the vial.
- Visually inspect the prefilled syringe for any damage or leaks and the sterile water inside to ensure there are no visible particles.
- Break off the cap of the prefilled syringe and attach the syringe to the vial adaptor.
- Inject all of the sterile water from the attached syringe into the vial containing the powder:
• The prefilled syringe provided with the vial 45 mg contains 1.0 mL of sterile water.
- After reconstitution, the 45 mg vial can only provide up to a dose of 0.9 mL of medicinal product. The final concentration after reconstitution is 50 mg/mL.
- Gently swirl the vial to reconstitute the medicinal product. Do not shake or vigorously agitate.
- Allow the vial to stand for up to 3 minutes to allow bubbles to disappear.
- Visually inspect the reconstituted solution. When properly mixed, the reconstituted solution should be clear to opalescent and colourless to slightly brownish-yellow, and should not have clumps or powder.
- Unscrew the syringe from the vial adaptor and discard the emptied syringe.
- If prescribed a 2-vial kit, repeat the steps within this section to prepare the second vial.
- Use the reconstituted solution as soon as possible, but no later than 4 hours after reconstitution.
Dosing syringe preparation
- Before preparing the dosing syringe, visually inspect the reconstituted solution. The reconstituted solution should be clear to opalescent and colourless to slightly brownish-yellow, and should not have clumps or powder.
- Swab the vial adaptor with an alcohol wipe.
- Remove the dosing syringe from its packaging and attach the syringe to the vial adaptor.
- Turn the syringe and vial upside-down and withdraw the appropriate volume for injection, based on the patient's weight.
• If the dose amount requires the use of two vials, withdraw the entire contents of the first vial and slowly transfer the entire contents into the second vial, to ensure dose accuracy.
• Turn the syringe and vial upside-down and withdraw the required amount of medicinal product.
- If necessary, push the plunger in to remove excess medicinal product or air from the syringe.
- Remove the syringe from the vial adaptor and attach the needle.
Administration
Winrevair is to be administered as a single subcutaneous injection.
-
Select the injection site on the abdomen (at least 5 cm away from navel), upper thigh, or upper arm and swab with an alcohol wipe. Select a new site for each injection that is not scarred, tender, or bruised.
•
For administration by the patient or caregiver, train them to inject only in the abdomen or upper thigh (see “Instructions for Use” booklet).
-
Perform subcutaneous injection.
-
Discard the emptied syringe. Do not reuse the syringe.
Any unused medicinal product or waste material should be disposed of in accordance with local requirements.
See section 4.4 for instructions on the traceability of biological medicinal products.