| Literature DB >> 25645133 |
Tianwen Lai1, Shaobin Wang2, Zhiwei Xu2, Chao Zhang2, Yun Zhao2, Yue Hu2, Chao Cao2, Songmin Ying3, Zhihua Chen2, Wen Li2, Bin Wu4, Huahao Shen5.
Abstract
Currently, limited information is available to clinicians regarding the long-term efficacy of omalizumab treatment for allergic asthma. In this report, we aimed to (i) systematically review the evidence regarding the long-term efficacy of omalizumab in patients with persistent uncontrolled allergic asthma, and to (ii) discuss the cost-effectiveness evidence published for omalizumab in this patient population. A comprehensive search for randomized controlled trials (RCTs; ≥52 weeks) was performed, and six studies met our final inclusion criteria (n = 2,749). Omalizumab was associated with significant improvements in quality of life and the Global Evaluation of Treatment Effectiveness. Omalizumab also allowed patients to completely withdraw from inhaled corticosteroid therapy and did not increase the overall incidence of adverse events. However, there was insufficient evidence that omalizumab reduced the incidence of exacerbations, and the cost-effectiveness of omalizumab varied across studies. Our data indicated that omalizumab use for at least 52 weeks in patients with persistent uncontrolled allergic asthma was accompanied by an acceptable safety profile, but it lacked effect on the asthma exacerbations. Use of omalizumab was associated with a higher cost than conventional therapy, but these increases may be cost-effective if the medication is used in patients with severe allergic asthma.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25645133 PMCID: PMC4314644 DOI: 10.1038/srep08191
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Flow diagram.
Characteristic of randomized controlled trials included
| Source | Study design | Female/Patients (No.) | Age (y) | IgE (IU/ml) | Severity/FEV1 (%pred) | Study duration (weeks) | Exacerbation definition |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Omalizumab | 164/268 | 39.3 | 172.5 | 68.2 | A worsening of asthma symptoms and was severe enough to require treatment with oral or intravenous corticosteroids or a doubling of the subject's baseline inhaled BDP dose. | ||
| Control | 146/257 | 39.0 | 186.3 | 67.7 | |||
| Omalizumab | 150/245 | 68.8 | 173.4 | 68.8 | Worsening of asthma requiring treatment with oral or intravenous corticosteroids or doubling of the patient's most recent BDP maintenance dose. | ||
| Control | 119/215 | 68.2 | 186.2 | 68.2 | |||
| Omalizumab | 86/115 | 38.7 | NA | 65.6 | Asthma worsening requiring treatment with systemic corticosteroids and the ADRIs, unscheduled physician visit, or hospitalization/emergency room visit. | ||
| Control | 34/49 | 39.3 | NA | 64.1 | |||
| Omalizumab | 124/254 | 41 | 220.2 | 70.0 | Worsening of asthma requiring treatment with oral or parenteral corticosteroids or doubling of the patient's most recent BDP maintenance dose. | ||
| Control | 120/299 | 40 | 204.1 | 70.4 | |||
| Omalizumab | 134/421 | 8.7 | 476.0 | 86.0 | Worsening of asthma symptoms requiring doubling of baseline ICS dose and/or treatment with rescue systemic corticosteroids for 3 days. | ||
| Control | 69/207 | 8.4 | 456.9 | 87.2 | |||
| Omalizumab | 86/208 | 10.9 | NA | 92.9 | A need for systemic glucocorticoids, hospitalization, or both, in accordance with a recent report by the American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society | ||
| Control | 91/211 | 10.8 | NA | 92.2 |
‡The data are shown as mean.
FEV1, forced expiratory volume in one second; DB, Double-blind; OL, Open-label; M, moderate; S, severe; BDP, beclomethasone dipropionate; ADRIs, annual rate of asthma deteriorationrelated incidents; NA, not available.
§Reddel HK, et al. An official American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society statement: asthma control and exacerbations: standardizing endpoints for clinical asthma trials and clinical practice. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 180, 59–99 (2009).
Risk of bias of the included studies
| Study | Sequence generation | Allocation concealment | Data collection blinded | Complete outcome data | Selective outcome reporting |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Finn et al | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Lanier et al | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Niven et al | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Buhl et al | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Lanier et al | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Busse et al | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Figure 2The effect of omlizumab on asthma exacerbations.
Results of subgroup and sensitivity analyses from a meta-analyses of randomized controlled trials
| Trials | Asthma exacerbation | Withdrew ICS completely | Change in GFTE score | AQLQ ≥ 1.5 | Adverse events |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ←RR (95%CI), P value→ | |||||
| 0.63 [0.55, 0.71] <0.0001 | 1.86 [1.51, 2.29] <0.0001 | 1.54 [1.38, 1.72] <0.00001 | 2.08 [1.03, 4.20] = 0.04 | 0.97 [0.93, 1.01] = 0.11 | |
| Low | 0.57 [0.43, 0.74] <0.0001 | – | 1.42 [1.24, 1.62] <0.00001 | 3.23 [1.58, 6.59] = 0.001 | 0.96 [0.92, 1.01] = 0.12 |
| High | 0.64 [0.55, 0.75] <0.00001 | 1.86 [1.51, 2.29] <0.0001 | 1.65 [1.45, 1.87] <0.00001 | 1.57 [1.23, 2.01] = 0.0003 | 0.96 [0.88, 1.06] = 0.44 |
| Adolescents and adults | 0.65 [0.56, 0.76] <0.00001 | 1.86 [1.51, 2.29] <0.0001 | 1.60 [1.30, 1.97] <0.00001 | 2.08 [1.03, 4.20] = 0.04 | 0.99 [0.93, 1.07] = 0.54 |
| Children | 0.41 [0.29, 0.58] <0.00001 | – | 1.53 [1.30, 1.80] <0.00001 | – | 0.91 [0.75, 1.12] = 0.06 |
| Moderate-sever | 0.68 [0.55, 0.84] = 0.0004 | 2.37 [1.17, 4.78] = 0.02 | 1.60 [1.30, 1.97] <0.00001 | 2.08 [1.03, 4.20] = 0.04 | 1.01 [0.93, 1.09] = 0.88 |
| Severe | 0.58 [0.49, 0.69] <0.00001 | 1.82 [1.46, 2.26] <0.0001 | 1.53 [1.30, 1.80] <0.00001 | – | 0.95 [0.89, 1.02] = 0.28 |
| Omalizumab/ICS | 0.63 [0.50, 0.80] = 0.0002 | 1.86 [1.51, 2.29] <0.0001 | 1.49 [1.33, 1.66] <0.00001 | 1.57 [1.23, 2.01] = 0.0003 | 0.98 [0.93, 1.02] = 0.32 |
| Omalizumab/ICS + LABA | 0.59 [0.49, 0.72] <0.00001 | – | 1.68 [1.43, 1.97] <0.00001 | 3.23 [1.58, 6.59] = 0.001 | 0.83 [0.67, 1.04] = 0.10 |
| Open label | 0.60 [0.44, 0.81] = 0.001 | – | – | 3.23 [1.58, 6.59] = 0.001 | – |
| Double-blinded | 0.63 [0.54, 0.73] <0.0001 | 1.86 [1.51, 2.29] <0.0001 | 1.54 [1.38, 1.72] <0.00001 | 1.57 [1.23, 2.01] = 0.0003 | 0.97 [0.93, 1.01] = 0.11 |
| Fixed-effects model | 0.62 [0.55, 0.71] <0.00001 | 1.88 [1.52, 2.33] <0.0001 | 1.52 [1.37, 1.68] <0.00001 | 1.77 [1.40, 2.24] <0.00001 | 0.96 [0.91, 1.01] = 0.08 |
RR, relative risk; CI, confidence interval; ICS, included inhaled corticosteroid; GETE, Global Evaluation of Treatment Effectiveness; AQLQ, Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire; LABA, long-acting beta2-agonists.
Figure 3The effect of omlizumab on the adverse events.
Summary of cost-effectiveness trials evaluating omalizumab add-on therapy vs stander therapy included in the systematic review
| Source | Country | Target population | Outcomes (ICER) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canada | Uncontrolled severe persistent asthma despite high dose ICS and LABA | Omalizumab add-on therapy in patients with severe persistent asthma was cost-effective | ||
| USA | Moderate to severe persistent asthma uncontrolled with ICS | $287,200/QALY (£176,369/QALY) | Adding omalizumab to usual care improves QALYs at an increase in direct medical costs. The value increases when omalizumab response is used to guide long-term treatment | |
| Sweden | Uncontrolled severe persistent asthma despite high dose ICS and LABA | Omalizumab provided cost offsets, improves quality of life and may have an attractive ICER in treating the severe allergic asthma population | ||
| Italy | Severe and resistant asthma despite treatment with high does ICS and LABA | Omalizumab added to an optimized therapy significantly improves clinical outcomes in persistent allergic asthma. Costs also increased, but proved justified by health benefits achieved | ||
| Netherlands | Uncontrolled allergic asthma despite treatment with high does ICS and LABA | Non-clinical trial experience with omalizumab supported the finding of fewer exacerbations in the allergic asthma population while treated with omalizumab, and therapy was found to continue to have an attractive cost-effectiveness ratio | ||
| USA | Moderate to severe persistent asthma uncontrolled with ICS | Omalizumab was clearly more expensive than other controller medications in patients with moderate allergic asthma. However, it could be cost saving if it was used in nonsmoking patients despite maximal asthma therapy | ||
| USA | Severe persistent asthma received ICS plus quick relievers (e.g. SABA) | $821,000/QALY (£504,176/QALY) | Omalizumab is not cost-effective for most patients with severe asthma. It is especially important that clinicians explore alternative medications for asthma before initiating omalizumab. |
§Conversion to £ uses the rate of: 1 dollar = £0.6141 and 1 euro = £0.7878 (19 Sep 2014).
ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; LABA, long-acting beta2-agonists; AQLQ, Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire; QALY, quality-adjusted life year; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio.