Abatacept can be administered intravenously as a short infusion or subcutaneously as an injection. Intravenously, the substance is applied by means of a half-hour short infusion without premedication; the dosage is approximately 10 mg/kg body weight per infusion (< 60 kg: 500 mg, 60 - 100 kg: 750 mg, > 100 kg: 1000 mg). Infusions are given at baseline and after 2 or 4 weeks, then every four weeks.
The maximum dose of 1000 mg should not be exceeded.
Children and adolescents weighing less than 75 kg will receive 10mg/kg body weight. Those weighing 75kg and over will receive a dose according to the adult regimen.
Abatacept should be reapplied in adults and in children/adolescents two and four weeks after the first infusion and every 4 weeks thereafter.
There is insufficient experience for deviating doses (e.g., shortening or lengthening the infusion interval).
Subcutaneously, Abatacept can be injected weekly as a pre-filled syringe containing 125 mg of active ingredient. According to the product information, subcutaneous long-term therapy should also be started with an intravenously administered saturation dose (in the amount indicated above) if possible; the first subcutaneous injection should be given within 24 hours after the saturation infusion. When switching from intravenous to subcutaneous use, the first subcutaneous injection should be given at the time of the next scheduled infusion.
The combined use with MTX is specified in the label, for a recommendation of alternative DMARDs as combination partners, e.g. in case of MTX intolerance or contraindications, the previous experience is not sufficient, such combinations are also not approved. An application in combination with other biologics, especially TNF-alpha inhibitors, is not recommended due to increased side effect rates, especially infections. Abatacept also showed monotherapeutic efficacy in an early phase II study, but due to a lack of further experience it is not yet possible to assess whether monotherapy is an additional alternative in cases of MTX intolerance. There is no approval for this in Germany.