| Literature DB >> 18489791 |
Christopher Wt Miller1, Narayanaswamy Krishnaswamy, Chambless Johnston, Guha Krishnaswamy.
Abstract
Atopic diseases and asthma are increasing at a remarkable rate on a global scale. It is now well recognized that asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease of the airways. The inflammatory process in many patients is driven by an immunoglobulin E (IgE)-dependent process. Mast cell activation and release of mediators, in response to allergen and IgE, results in a cascade response, culminating in B lymphocyte, T lymphocyte, eosinophil, fibroblast, smooth muscle cell and endothelial activation. This complex cellular interaction, release of cytokines, chemokines and growth factors and inflammatory remodeling of the airways leads to chronic asthma. A subset of patients develops severe airway disease which can be extremely morbid and even fatal. While many treatments are available for asthma, it is still a chronic and incurable disease, characterized by exacerbation, hospitalizations and associated adverse effects of medications. Omalizumab is a new option for chronic asthma that acts by binding to and inhibiting the effects of IgE, thereby interfering with one aspect of the asthma cascade reviewed earlier. This is a humanized monoclonal antibody against IgE that has been shown to have many beneficial effects in asthma. Use of omalizumab may be influenced by the cost of the medication and some reported adverse effects including the rare possibility of anaphylaxis. When used in selected cases and carefully, omalizumab provides a very important tool in disease management. It has been shown to have additional effects in urticaria, angioedema, latex allergy and food allergy, but the data is limited and the indications far from clear. In addition to decreasing exacerbations, it has a steroid sparing role and hence may decrease adverse effects in some patients on high-dose glucocorticoids. Studies have shown improvement in quality of life measures in asthma following the administration of omalizumab, but the effects on pulmonary function are surprisingly small, suggesting a disconnect between pulmonary function, exacerbations and quality of life. Anaphylaxis may occur rarely with this agent and appropriate precautions have been recommended by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). As currently practiced and as suggested by the new asthma guidelines, this biological agent is indicated in moderate or severe persistent allergic asthma (steps 5 and 6).Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18489791 PMCID: PMC2478654 DOI: 10.1186/1476-7961-6-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Mol Allergy ISSN: 1476-7961
Asthma Definitions
| Inflammatory disease of the airways characterized by: | |
| • Infiltration by eosinophils, lymphocytes and neutrophils | |
| • Mast cell activation | |
| • Epithelial loss | |
| Associated reversible airway obstruction, recurrent symptoms and bronchial hyper-responsiveness | |
| Gene-by-environment interactions are important | |
| Plays central role in asthma pathophysiology | |
| Mediated by T cells, lymphocytes, mast cells, eosinophils and epithelium. Other resident cells such as fibroblasts and smooth muscle play a role | |
| As inflammation proceeds, other changes evolve leading to reparative or remodeling changes and include: | |
| • Sub-basement membrane thickening | |
| • Subepithelial fibrosis | |
| • Smooth muscle hypertrophy | |
| • Angiogenesis | |
| Mucus gland hyperplasia and hypersecretion | |
| Airway narrowing resulting in wheezing | |
| Probably acutely due to release of mast cell mediators such as histamine, leukotrienes, and tryptase | |
| Obstruction could be mediated by multiple factors: | |
| • Smooth muscle contraction | |
| • Airway edema | |
| • Airway remodeling and fibrosis | |
| Exaggerated bronchoconstrictive response to a wide variety of stimuli; best measured clinically by methacholine challenge testing; mediated by inflammation, remodeling and other airway changes that occur in asthma |
Inflammatory events in asthma: Role of Cytokine-IgE Axis and Inflammatory Cells
| CSM | T cells, B cells | T cell activation Antibody synthesis | ||
| TNF alpha | Endothelium | Cell adhesion, recruitment | ||
| IL-4 | T cells | Th2 cell polarization | ||
| IL-4, IL-13 | B cells | |||
| IL-13 | Goblet cell | Mucus secretion CAM | ||
| TNF-alpha | Endothelium | upregulation | ||
| LTs | Smooth muscles | Contraction | ||
| LTs, IL-5 | Eosinophils | Chemoattraction, survival | ||
| Histamine | Endothelium etc | Edema, bronchospasm | ||
| IL-4, IL-13 | B cells | |||
| IL-5 | Eosinophils | Hematopoiesis, survival | ||
| IL-9 | Mast cells | BHR, mast cell growth | ||
| Mast cells, | Early phase | |||
| MBP | Epithelium, mast cells | Injury, histamine release | ||
| LTs | Smooth muscle | Contraction | ||
| Cytokines | Multiple types | Inflammation |
CSM = Costimulatory molecule; LTs = leukotrienes; MBP = Major Basic Protein of Eosinophil; BHR = Bronchial hyperresponsiveness
Figure 1The allergen interacts with IgE on the surface of human mast cells, and mediates signaling via the high affinity IgE receptor (FcεR1). FcεR1 aggregation is followed by mast cell activation and degranulation. Mast cells release a plethora of mediators which can then regulate eosinophil activation, Th2 skewing and B cell class switching to IgE. This sequence of events ultimatelyresults in a number of immunologic and inflammatory responses.
Figure 2This figure demonstrates the pivotal position of IgE and mast cells in the initiation of the asthma inflammatory cascade. Mast cells can interact with B cells which can both interact with Th2 type T cells , an interaction mediated by cell surface cognate molecules and resulting in IgE class switching in B cells and cytokine expression. This can lead to endothelial activation allowing the emigration of activated eosinophils into airway tissue. Eosinophil-derived products (including major basic protein, cytokines, chemokines, and leukotrienes) can influence airway remodeling by inducing changes in airway cells such as epithelium, fibroblasts and smooth muscles.
Figure 3Omalizumab targets the Cε3 epitope on the fragment of IgE which binds the α chain of the high-affinity trimeric IgE receptor, thus blocking the binding of IgE with its receptor. On the left, formation of a hexamer complex of omalizumab-IgE is shown, and on the right molecular sizes of the IgE and Omalizumab molecules are shown.
Conditions shown to respond to omalizumab/anti-IgE* therapy
| [66,69,85-89] | |
| • | [55,64,90-94] |
| • | [57,95,96] |
| [97,98] | |
| [52,70,71,99,100] | |
| [78] | |
| [101] | |
| [102] | |
| [79] |
Presumed mechanisms of action of Omalizumab and effects in asthma
| Binding to constant region of IgE | |
| Decreased free levels of IgE | |
| Decreased mast cell/basophil FcεR1 expression | |
| Decreased mucosal eosinophils | |
| Decreased sputum eosinophils | |
| Decreased tissue IgE+ mast cells | |
| Decreased tissue B and T lymphocytes | |
| Inhibition of early and late phase reactions | |
| Improved BHR/unchanged BHR | |
| Improved response to methacholine challenge | |
| Mast cell stabilization: inhibits degranulation | |
| Decreased exacerbations | |
| Improved peak flow | |
| Small improvement in FEV1 | |
| Decreased rescue β2-agonist use | |
| Improved quality of life | |
| Decreased mean nocturnal clinical score | |
| Decreased total asthma clinical score | |
| Decreased hospitalizations | |
| Improved asthma control | |
| Steroid-sparing effect | |
Adverse events with Omalizumab
| Malignancy | 20/4127 patients | 0.5% versus 0.2% control Breast, prostate, melanoma Skin cancer, parotid, etc. | |
| Anaphylaxis | 1/1000 patients | 0.1%–0.2% 60% within 1–3rd dose <2 hrs 14% after 4th dose, <30 mins | |
| Viral infection | 23% | Fever, myalgia, etc. 53% versus 42% control | |
| Parasitic infection | 36/68 | Odds risk 1.98 Geohelminths | |
| Immunogenicity | <0.1% | Antibody to Omalizumab | |
| Injection site reaction | 45% | Warmth, erythema Bruising, burning | |
| Skin eruption* | 6% | Dermatitis, urticaria | |
| Infections* | 20% | ||
| Sinusitis* | 15% | ||
| Headache* | 15% | ||
| Pharyngitis* | 11% | ||
| Thrombocytopenia | ? | Post-marketing observation | |
| Alopecia | ? | Post-marketing observation |
* Reactions occurring at the same rate as placebo/controls
Omalizumab-Other features
| Unknown | |
| Category B | |
| Excreted in milk* | |
| Study with monkeys shows no effect | |
| Safety below 12 years unknown | |
| Not enough data |
* No human data available
Anaphylaxis management
| Assessment of breathing, circulation and orientation | |
| Inject epinephrine 0.3 mg intramuscularly in lateral thigh | |
| Activate emergency services (911) | |
| Patient to be placed in recumbent position | |
| Establish and maintain airway Oxygen | |
| Establish an intravenous line | |
| Use nebulized beta-agonist for bronchospasm +/- corticosteroids and antihistamines | |
| Patient education | |
| Provision of epinephrine autoinjector | |
| Anaphylaxis identification (card, bracelet) | |
| Xolair information sheet |
Figure 4Administration of Epipen auto–injector. Panel 1 shows an auto–injector, and panels 2–4 demonstrate steps in arming the autoinjector and self-administration technique. The patient should grip the unit with the black tip pointing downward (panel 2) and proceed to pull off the gray safety release (panel 3). The injector should then be applied at a 90° angle with the outer thigh and held firmly for approximately 10 seconds after a click is heard (panel 4).
Administration every 4 weeks
| >30–100 | 150 | 150 | 150 | 300 |
| >100–200 | 300 | 300 | 300 | |
| >200–300 | 300 | |||
| >300–400* | ||||
| >400–500* | ||||
| >500–600* | ||||
* See Table 8 for details on dosing
Administration every 2 weeks
| >30–100* | ||||
| >100–200* | 225 | |||
| >200–300* | 225 | 225 | 300 | |
| >300–400 | 225 | 225 | 300 | |
| >400–500 | 300 | 300 | 375 | |
| >500–600 | 300 | 375 | ||
| >600–700 | 375 | |||
* See Table 7 for further details on dosing.