Relationship between Benralizumab Exposure and Asthma Exacerbation Rate for Patients with Severe Asthma

Pneumologie ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 72 (S 01) ◽  
pp. S15-S15
Author(s):  
L Roskos ◽  
B Wang ◽  
YL Chia ◽  
B Yu ◽  
P Barker ◽  
...  
2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (4) ◽  
pp. 419-427
Author(s):  
S. N. Avdeev ◽  
Z. R. Aisanov ◽  
A. S. Belevskiy ◽  
A. V. Emelyanov ◽  
N. P. Knyazheskaya ◽  
...  

According to the modern concepts, asthma is a heterogeneous disease characterized by chronic airway inflammation and respiratory symptoms, which vary in time and intensity and manifest together with variable obstruction of the airways. Asthma is responsible for the deterioration of health status and quality of life in approximately 339 million of adult patients and children worldwide. Despite the fact that asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease, patients with asthma generally inadequately receive anti-inflammatory therapy in real clinical practice and rely on short-acting beta2-agonists (SABA) too much; this can “mimic” worsening of asthma symptoms. SABA monotherapy “on demand” does not affect chronic airway inflammation, underlying asthma occurrence and progression. As a result, such patients still have the risk of asthma exacerbation and disease progression. Therefore, the need of a new therapeutic strategy for patients with milder asthma (steps 1 and 2), which would provide anti-inflammatory treatment considering the low adherence to the regular maintenance therapy and high dependency on SABA, is obvious. Such approach has become available after the SYGMA (SYmbicort® Given as needed in Mild Asthma) trial was completed. According to the results of this trial, budesonide/formoterol 160/4.5 µg/dose as needed was superior to as needed SABA in better asthma control and decrease in severe asthma exacerbation rate by 64% (p < 0.001). Results of SYGMA 1 and 2 trials also demonstrated that budesonide/formoterol 160/4.5 µg/dose as needed was noninferior compared to regular treatment with budesonide in preventing severe asthma exacerbations while the cumulative dose of budesonide was reduced by ≥75%. 


CHEST Journal ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 156 (4) ◽  
pp. A936-A939 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mario Castro ◽  
Nicola Hanania ◽  
Santiago Quirce ◽  
Lawrence Sher ◽  
Jorge Maspero ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Bing Wang ◽  
Yen Lin Chia ◽  
Binbing Yu ◽  
Peter Barker ◽  
Mitch Goldman ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Geertje de Boer ◽  
Gert Jan Braunstahl ◽  
Rudi Hendriks ◽  
Gerdien Tramper

Thorax ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. thoraxjnl-2020-215168
Author(s):  
David J Jackson ◽  
John Busby ◽  
Paul E Pfeffer ◽  
Andrew Menzies-Gow ◽  
Thomas Brown ◽  
...  

BackgroundThe UK Severe Asthma Registry (UKSAR) is the world’s largest national severe asthma registry collecting standardised data on referrals to UK specialist services. Novel biologic therapies have transformed the management of type 2(T2)-high severe asthma but have highlighted unmet need in patients with persisting symptoms despite suppression of T2-cytokine pathways with corticosteroids.MethodsDemographic, clinical and treatments characteristics for patients meeting European Respiratory Society / American Thoracic Society severe asthma criteria were examined for 2225 patients attending 15 specialist severe asthma centres. We assessed differences in biomarker low patients (fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) <25 ppb, blood eosinophils <150/μL) compared with a biomarker high population (FeNO ≥25 ppb, blood eosinophils ≥150/µL).ResultsAge (mean 49.6 (14.3) y), age of asthma onset (24.2 (19.1) y) and female predominance (62.4%) were consistent with prior severe asthma cohorts. Poor symptom control (Asthma Control Questionnaire-6: 2.9 (1.4)) with high exacerbation rate (4 (IQR: 2, 7)) were common despite high-dose treatment (51.7% on maintenance oral corticosteroids (mOCS)). 68.9% were prescribed biologic therapies including mepolizumab (50.3%), benralizumab (26.1%) and omalizumab (22.6%). T2-low patients had higher body mass index (32.1 vs 30.2, p<0.001), depression/anxiety prevalence (12.3% vs 7.6%, p=0.04) and mOCS use (57.9% vs 42.1%, p<0.001). Many T2-low asthmatics had evidence of a historically elevated blood eosinophil count (0.35 (0.13, 0.60)).ConclusionsThe UKSAR describes the characteristics of a large cohort of asthmatics referred to UK specialist severe asthma services. It offers the prospect of providing novel insights across a range of research areas and highlights substantial unmet need with poor asthma control, impaired lung function and high exacerbation rates. T2-high phenotypes predominate with significant differences apparent from T2-low patients. However, T2-low patients frequently have prior blood eosinophilia consistent with possible excessive corticosteroid exposure.


2019 ◽  
Vol 40 (6) ◽  
pp. 410-413
Author(s):  
Paul A. Greenberger

Exacerbations of persistent or intermittent asthma should be anticipated by physicians and health-care professionals. Patients who are likely to experience an exacerbation often have a history of an exacerbation in the previous year, and the absolute eosinophil count in peripheral blood is ≥ 400/μL. Similarly, expectorated or induced sputum eosinophilia of ≥2% is associated with exacerbations. These phenotypic findings have led to effective biologic therapies, which target eosinophils or immunoglobulin E or the T-helper type 2 phenotype, especially in children, adolescents, and adults with frequent exacerbations. In children, a reduced forced expiratory volume in the first second of expiration (FEV1) to forced vital capacity ratio can be associated with future exacerbations, although the FEV1 may be in the normal range, even with children who have persistent severe asthma. Asthma control questionnaires did not differentiate between children with or children without a future exacerbation. Alternatively, in adults, the lower baseline FEV1 (2.3 L [74% predicted] versus 2.5 L [78% predicted]) identified patients more likely to have a future exacerbation compared with patients who were not having an exacerbation. After correcting for FEV1, the asthma control questionnaire data were associated with exacerbations. In adolescents (ages ≥ 12 years) and adults with persistent mild asthma, most (73%) did not have sputum eosinophilia, and some of these patients responded well to the anticholinergic, tiotropium, which would argue differently from administration of an inhaled corticosteroid as first-line controller therapy. In a three-track study of patients with persistent mild asthma, as-needed budesonide-formoterol and scheduled budesonide were associated with approximately one-half of the annual exacerbation rate of as-needed albuterol. In patients with persistent moderate-to-severe asthma, tiotropium added to controller therapy caused an increase in FEV1 without improving the asthma control questionnaire findings. There were two studies that explored whether either quadrupling or quintupling the inhaled corticosteroid at the first sign of loss of control of asthma would provide meaningful reductions of severe exacerbations of asthma, but the findings did not support this strategy. Both biologic therapies and environmental control (dust mite impermeable encasings) have resulted in reductions of exacerbations in patients with persistent moderate and severe asthma.


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