Literature DB >> 27875559

Efficacy and Safety of Anti-Interleukin-5 Therapy in Patients with Asthma: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

Fa-Ping Wang1, Ting Liu1, Zhu Lan2, Su-Yun Li3, Hui Mao1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Recent trials have assessed the efficacy and safety of novel monoclonal antibodies such as reslizumab and benralizumab. However, the overall efficacy and safety anti-interleukin (IL) 5 treatment in asthma have not been thoroughly assessed.
METHODS: Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of anti-IL-5 treatment on patients with asthma published up to October 2016 in PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) that reported pulmonary function, quality of life scores, asthmatic exacerbation rate, blood and sputum eosinophil counts, short-acting β-agonist (SABA) rescue use, and adverse events were included. The pooled mean difference, and relative risks (RR), and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were calculated using random-effects models.
RESULTS: Twenty studies involving 7100 patients were identified. Pooled analysis revealed significant improvements in FEV1 (first second forced expiratory volume) (MD = 0.09, 95% CI: 0.06-0.12, I2 = 10%), FEV1% (MD = 3.75, 95% CI: 1.66-5.83, I2 = 19%), Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (AQLQ) score (MD = 0.22, 95% CI: 0.15-0.30, I2 = 0%), decreased blood, sputum eosinophils and asthmatic exacerbation (RR = 0.66, 95% CI: 0.59-0.73, I2 = 51%); peak expiratory flow (PEF) (MD = 5.45, 95% CI: -2.83-13.72, I2 = 0%), histamine PC20 (MD = -0.62, 95% CI: -1.92-0.68, I2 = 0%) or SABA rescue use (MD = -0.11, 95% CI: -0.3-0.07, I2 = 30%) were unaffected; adverse events were not increased (RR = 0.93, 95% CI: 0.89-0.98, I2 = 46%). No publication bias was observed (Egger's P = 0.78).
CONCLUSIONS: Anti-interleukin 5 monoclonal therapies for asthma could be safe for slightly improving FEV1 (or FEV1% of predicted value), quality of life, and reducing exacerbations risk and blood and sputum eosinophils, but have no significant effect on PEF, histamine PC20, and SABA rescue use. Further trials required to establish to clarify the optimal antibody for different patients.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27875559      PMCID: PMC5119789          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0166833

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


Introduction

Asthma is a common chronic inflammatory disease that affects more than 300 million people worldwide, and imposes a high disease burden and economic impact globally [1-3]. Despite taking high-dosage inhaled corticosteroids according to the Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) guidelines, at least 40% of patients continue to suffer from inadequately controlled symptoms, either because they are truly resistant or because they do not take them [4, 5]. Patients who remain uncontrolled can use other drugs such as leukotriene-receptor antagonists, slow-release theophylline, and long-acting anticholinergics [6]. Since the anti-immunoglobulin (Ig)E humanized monoclonal antibody omalizumab became the first biological treatment approved for treating allergic asthma, many small molecules and monoclonal antibodies targeting biomolecular specificities have been investigated for treating symptomatic asthma [7]. Eosinophilic inflammatory infiltration is a central event in asthma pathogenesis. IL-5 is the chief cytokine responsible for eosinophil production, survival, maturation and recruitment and activation at allergic inflammation sites [8]. Preclinical studies have demonstrated a key role for IL-5 in murine models of allergen-induced airway eosinophilia and hyperresponsiveness [9]. Given the relationship of IL-5 to eosinophilia and asthma severity, human(ized) monoclonal antibodies targeting IL-5 have shown great promise in severe refractory asthma with persistent eosinophilia [10, 11]. The anti-IL-5 agents benralizumab, reslizumab, and mepolizumab have been investigated for treating asthma [12, 13]. However, their effects on lung function (especially FEV1) have been less consistent. Here, we conducted a meta-analysis of randomized, controlled trials (RCTs) to assess whether anti-IL-5 monoclonal antibodies therapy is safe and effective in patients (more than 12 years) with asthma.

Methods

Literature searches and study selection

PubMed, Embase, and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) were searched for articles published from 1946 to October 2016, using the search terms: ‘‘anti–interleukin-5” or ‘‘mepolizumab” or “benralizumab” or “reslizumab” or “monoclonal antibody” or “anti-IL-5”, combined with ‘‘asthma”. Language restrictions were not applied. Reviews and the reference lists of relevant articles were also screened for additional articles of interest. Two independent authors (FPW and TL) screened all references according to the selection criteria. To ensure a complete review of the available studies, the abstracts of relevant scientific meetings were also examined, but trials published solely in abstract form were excluded. Any disagreements were resolved by consensus with a third author when necessary. The details of the search strategy are displayed in S1 Table.

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Eligible clinical trials were defined as: (1) adults/adolescents (≥12 years) with diagnosis of asthma; (2) investigations of patients who received anti-interleukin-5 monoclonal antibody therapy at any dose, placebo-controlled or standard therapy; (3) randomized (parallel group) placebo-controlled trials, and (4) RCTs reporting the following outcomes: blood and sputum eosinophil count, asthma exacerbation, lung function, asthma control and quality of life scores, rescue use of SABA and adverse events. We excluded non-randomized, observational, cohort, case-control and non-blinded clinical trials. FPW and TL independently screened all references according to the selection criteria. Differences in opinion about inclusion were resolved by mutual agreement and arbitration of a third author (HM).

Data extraction and quality assessment

FPW and TL independently extracted related data in blinded fashion from eligible studies based on the predefined criteria, which included the characteristics of the trials, interventions, and outcomes. The predefined primary outcomes were lung function [first second forced expiratory volume (FEV1), FEV1% of predicted value, peak expiratory flow (PEF), histamine PC20], the Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (AQLQ) scores, and asthma exacerbation. Asthma exacerbation was defined as a worsening of asthma requiring increased corticosteroids or albuterol dose to control symptoms and/or the need for asthma-related emergency treatment/hospitalization. Secondary outcomes were adverse events and efficacy outcomes [blood eosinophil count, sputum eosinophils (%), short-acting β-agonist (SABA) rescue use]. The risk of bias was assessed using Cochrane-recommended tools, which included: (1) adequate sequence generation; (2) allocation concealment; (3) blinding; (4) incomplete outcome data addressed; (5) free of selective reporting; and (6) free of other bias [14].

Statistical analyses

All analyses were performed with Review Manager (Version 5.3, The Cochrane Collaboration) and Stata (Version 12.0, Stata Corporation, USA), P <0.05 was considered statistically significant. If a study presented more than two interventions, we combined two or three intervention groups into a single intervention group in accordance with the Cochrane handbook.9 Random-effects model was applied in all data analyses regardless of statistical heterogeneity. Risk ratio (RR) and 95% CIs were used to analyze dichotomous data, and mean difference and 95% CI were used for continuous data. Heterogeneity assumptions were assessed using the I statistic (I>50% indicates significant heterogeneity), and tested with the χ2 statistic (P<0.05). However, the number of studies affects both the power of the heterogeneity test and the heterogeneity measures I, but not [15]. In order to the increase the power of detecting heterogeneity, the 95% CI of I and were calculated [15-17]. If substantial heterogeneity was identified, subgroup and sensitivity analyses were performed. Moreover, we separately performed subanalyses in different drugs for each outcome. Publication bias was determined using the Begg’s funnel plot and assessed by Egger’s test if the number of the studies was larger than ten.

Results

Study characteristics

We identified 3047 manuscripts: 2019 from PubMed, 893 from Embase, 135 from CENTRAL. Based on title/abstract and full-text screening, 20 RCTs were included in the meta-analysis. Fig 1 summarized the study selection process [18-37].
Fig 1

Flow chart of study identification, inclusion, and exclusion.

Tables 1–3 lists the RCT characteristics, and Table 4 describes the baseline characteristics of the patients enrolled. Sample sizes ranged from 19 to 1306 subjects. Nine, five, and six trials used mepolizumab [18-26], reslizumab [27-31], and benralizumab [32-37], respectively. Treatment duration ranged from 1 day to 56 weeks and follow-up ranged from 12 to 56 weeks. Seven studies administered drugs used subcutaneous injection [25, 26, 32, 33, 35–37], while the remaining studies used intravenous infusion [18–24, 27–31, 34]. Nine studies involved patients with severe/refractory asthma [22–28, 36, 37]; four studies included patients with mild, mild to moderate, or moderate asthma [18-21]; the remaining studies did not specify asthma severity [29-35]. Corren et al. [30] and Castro et al. [33] studied patients with non-eosinophilic asthma.
Table 1

Characteristic of randomized controlled trials included.

ReferenceStudy DesignNo. of SubjectsPopulationAgedrugdosingOutcomesFollow-upExacerbation definition
Leckie 2000[18]multi-center, double-blind24mild atopic asthma18–45MepolizumabSingle IV dose of 2.5 or 10 mg/kg or placebo for one dayBlood and sputum eosinophils; histamine PC20;16 weeksNM
Flood-Page PT 2003[19]Two-center, double-blind parallel24mild atopic asthma18–55MepolizumabThree IV doses of 750 mg or placebo for 8 weeksBlood eosinophils;FEV1; PEFR; histamine PC2020 weeksNM
Büttner 2003[20]multi-center, double-blind19mild or moderate asthma with ICS20–59MepolizumabThree IV doses of 250, 750 mg or placebo for 12 weeksBlood eosinophils6 monthsNM
Flood-Page P 2007[21]multi-center, double-blind362moderate persistent asthma with ICS18–55MepolizumabThree IV doses of 250, 750 mg or placebo for 12 weeksBlood and sputum eosinophils;FEV1; PEF; symptom scores; asthma exacerbations20 weeksAn acute worsening of asthma requiring additional treatment in excess of an increase in short-acting β2-agonist.
Haldar 2009[22]Single-center doubleblind,paralle61refractory eosinophilic asthma18–72MepolizumabTwelve IV doses of 750 mg or placebo for 50 weeksBlood and sputum eosinophils;FEV1; AQLQ; JACQ; FENO; histamine PC20;asthma exacerbations50 weeksPeriods of deterioration in asthma control in subjects who had been treated with high-dose oral prednisolone for at least 5 days
Nair 2009[23]Single-center, double-blind, paralle20severe asthma on OCS with persistent sputum eosinophiliaNMMepolizumabFive IV doses of 750 mg or placebo for 16 weeksBlood and sputum eosinophils;FEV1;JACQ; asthma exacerbations; reduction in the dose of prednisone26 weeksA patient initiated increase in the daily dose of albuterol of four or more puffs to control symptoms of chest tightness or as any one of the following: nocturnal or waking respiratory symptoms on two consecutive days, a decrease of more than 15% in the FEV1 from the level at randomization after the use of albuterol, or a 2-point worsening in the Likert score for cough by the investigators at their discretion on the basis of general clinical worsening.
Pavord 2012[24]multi-center, double-blind621severe eosinophilic asthma12–74MepolizumabThirteen IV doses of 75, 250, or 750 mg or placebo for 52 weeksBlood and sputum eosinophils;FEV1; AQLQ; ACQ-6;asthma exacerbations52 weeksWorsening of asthma requiring use of oral corticosteroids for 3 or more days, admission, or a visit to the emergency department, 50% increase in rescue medication on at least 2 of 3 successive days, increased frequency of nocturnal awakening due to asthma for at least 2 of 3 successive nights, or overall asthma symptom score of five (scale one to five) for at least 2 of 3 successive days
Bel 2014[25]multi-center doubleblind, parallel135severe eosinophilic asthma16–74MepolizumabSix SC doses of 100 mg or placebo for 20 weeksAsthma exacerbations; ACQ-5;SGRQ; reduction in the oral glucocorticoid dose32 weeksA worsening of asthma leading to the doubling (or more) of the existing maintenance dose of oral glucocorticoids for 3 or more days or hospital admission or an emergency department visit for asthma treatment
Ortega 2014[26]multi-center double-blind,576severe eosinophilic asthma12–84MepolizumabNine doses of 75 mg IV or 100 mg SC or placebo for 32 weeksAsthma exacerbations; ACQ-5;SGRQ;FEV1;blood eosinophil40 weeksWorsening of asthma such that the treating physician elected to administer systemic glucocorticoids for at least 3 days or the patient visited an emergency department or was hospitalized
Kips JC 2003[27]multi-center, double-blind32severe persistent asthmaNMReslizumabSingle IV doses of 0.03mg/kg,0.1mg/kg, 0.3mg/kg, or 1mg/kg or placebo for one dayBlood and sputum eosinophils; FEV1;90 daysNM
Table 3

Characteristic of randomized controlled trials included.

ReferenceStudy DesignNo. of SubjectsPopulationAgedrugdosingOutcomesFollow-upExacerbation definition
FitzGerald J M 2016[37]multi-center, double-blind parallel1205severe,uncontrolled, eosinophilic asthma12–75BenralizumabFourteen SC doses of 30mg or Eight SC doses of 30mg or placebo for 56 weeksAsthma exacerbations; FEV1; ACQ-6; AQLQ56 weeksAn asthma exacerbation was defined as a worsening of asthma that led to one of the following: (1) use of systemic corticosteroids for 3 days or more or a temporary increase in a stable, background dosage of oral corticosteroids; (2) an emergency department or urgent care visit (<24 h) due to asthma that required systemic corticosteroids; or (3) an inpatient admission to hospital (≥24 h) due to asthma.

FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 second; PEF, peak expiratory flow; histamine PC20, provocative concentration of histamine required to cause a 20% fall in FEV1; JACQ, Juniper Asthma Control Questionnaire; AQLQ, the Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire; ACQ, Asthma Control Questionnaire; FeNO, fraction of exhaled nitric oxide; SABAs: short-acting beta-agonists (SABAs); SC: subcutaneous injections; IV, intravenous; ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; OCS, oral corticosteroid; NM: not mentioned

Table 4

Baseline Characteristics of Patients in the 20 Studies Included.

Refs.No. *SexAgeBlood EosinophilsFEV1% PredictedDiagnosis of asthmaPEF
(Male, %)*(Mean SD, y)*(Mean SD,103/uL)*(Mean SD, %) *(mean SD, y)*(Mean SD, L/min)*
Leckie 2000[18]16NM29 (6.29)0.25 (0.1)86.15 (9.58)NMNM
Flood-Page PT 2003[19]119 (82)31 (5.5)0.27 (0.18)87.0 (6.3)NM433 (37.8)
Büttner 2003[20]125 (42)44.25 (10.85)NM65.68 (10.48)11.75 (9.27)NM
Flood-Page P 2007[21]236112 (47)36 (29.4)0.35 (0.25)68.35 (9.2)NM366.6 (90.0)
Haldar 2009[22]2914 (48)48 (7)0.32 (0.38)&78.1 (20.9)NMNM
Nair 2009[23]94 (44)56.4 (10.9)0.68 (0.52)66.6 (18.3)NMNM
Pavord 2012[24]461171 (37)49.4 (11.2)0.24 (1.03)#60.0 (16.3)19.5 (14.4)NM
Bel 2014[25]6925 (36)50 (9.7)0.25 (1.245)#59.6 (17.0)17.4 (11.8)NM
Ortega 2014[26]385163 (42)50.5 (11.5)0.285 (1.018)#60.3 (17.9)20.2 (13.4)262 (110)
Kips JC 2003[27]1812 (67)43 (5.9)0.26 (0.04)53.4 (7.6)NMNM
Castro 2011[28]5319 (36)44.9 (13.94)NM66.0 (15.16)23.3 (11.38)NM
Castro 2015[29]Study 1: 245 Study 2: 232Study 1: 103 (42) Study 2: 88 (38)Study 1: 48 (14.1) Study 2: 48 (14.4)Study 1:0.696 (0.768) Study 2: 0.61 (0.412)Study 1:63.6 (18.6) Study 2:70.4 (21.0)Study 1:19.7 (15.2) Study 2:18.2 (14.4)NM
Corren 2016[30]398137 (34)44.90.281 (0.264)66.826.2NM
Bjermer L 2016[31]21085 (40)43.70.65 (0.006)69.620.2NM
Laviolette 2013[32]cohort 1: 8 cohort 2: 9cohort 1: 6 (25) cohort 2: 5 (56)cohort 1: 38.9 (14.7) cohort 2: 38.9 (13.8)NMcohort 1: 70.5 (15.6) cohort 2: 68.7 (11.4)NMNM
Castro 2014[33]group 1: 244 group 2: 140group 1: 78 (32) group 2: 42 (30)group 1: 47.2 (12.9) group 2: 50.0 (11.5)group 1: 0.54 (0.32) group 2: 0.19 (0.12)group 1: 65.3 (15.3) group 2: 66.8 (15.1)NMNM
Nowak 2015[34]7225 (35)36.3 (6.8)0.213 (0.393)58.1NMNM
Park HS 2016[35]7729 (38)53.4 (11.5)0.72 (0.87)67.8 (14.4)NMNM
Bleecker E R 2016[36]797270(34)48.9(14)0.34(0.52)56.8(14.4)14.9NM
FitzGerald J M 2016[37]866323(37)49.5(14)0.39(0.42)58.4(14.9)16.3NM

*Data on all patients who received anti-interleukin 5, and all data are n (%) or mean (SD), unless otherwise stated.

#Geometric mean on loge scale.

&geometric means±log10 SD.

NM: Not Mentioned

FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 second; PEF, peak expiratory flow; histamine PC20, provocative concentration of histamine required to cause a 20% fall in FEV1; JACQ, Juniper Asthma Control Questionnaire; AQLQ, the Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire; ACQ, Asthma Control Questionnaire; FeNO, fraction of exhaled nitric oxide; SABAs: short-acting beta-agonists (SABAs); SC: subcutaneous injections; IV, intravenous; ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; OCS, oral corticosteroid; NM: not mentioned *Data on all patients who received anti-interleukin 5, and all data are n (%) or mean (SD), unless otherwise stated. #Geometric mean on loge scale. &geometric means±log10 SD. NM: Not Mentioned

Primary outcomes

Lung function

. Fourteen studies assessed FEV1 responsiveness to anti-interleukin 5 treatment [19,21-24,26,28-31,33,34,36,37]. Six studies reported significant improvements in FEV1 between mepolizumab, reslizumab, and benralizumab treatments and placebo, while the remaining studies reported no effect on FEV1. Fig 2 showed that reslizumab was more effective than other two anti-interleukin 5 monoclonal antibodies in improving FEV1 (MD = 0.12, 95% CI: 0.04–0.19, P = 0.002), and the pooled data analysis revealed a slight improvement (MD = 0.09, 95% CI: 0.06–0.12, P<0.001). There was minimal heterogeneity (I = 10%, P = 0.34, 95% CI -53% to 47%, ).
Fig 2

The effect of anti-interleukin 5 versus placebo on FEV1.

CI = confidence interval; FEV1 = forced expiratory volume in 1 second; SD = standard derivation; IV = Inverse Variance.

The effect of anti-interleukin 5 versus placebo on FEV1.

CI = confidence interval; FEV1 = forced expiratory volume in 1 second; SD = standard derivation; IV = Inverse Variance.

FEV1% of predicted value

Seven trials using three different anti-interleukin 5 antibodies reported FEV1% of predicted value [23,25-28,34,35]. Overall, anti-interleukin 5 treatment was associated with modestly improved in FEV1% of predicted value compared to placebo (MD = 3.75, 95% CI 1.66–5.83, P = 0.0004) (Fig 3), and heterogeneity was not statistically significant (I = 19%, P = 0.29, 95% CI 0% to 62%, ). When looking at subgroups, there were no differences by benralizumab (MD = -0.88, 95% CI -6.88–5.13, P = 0.78).
Fig 3

The effect of anti-interleukin 5 versus placebo on FEV1% of predicted value.

Peak expiratory flow (PEF) and Provocative concentration of histamine (histamine PC20)

Four trials depicted PEF change after anti-interleukin 5 treatment [19,21,34,35], and only three about mepolizumab studies reported the results in histamine PC20 [18,19,22]. Results from the pooled data illustrated that anti-interleukin 5 could not significantly improve PEF (MD = 5.45, 95% CI: -2.83–13.72, P = 0.2) (Fig 4) or PC20 (MD = -0.62, 95% CI: -1.92–0.68, P = 0.35) (Fig 5). Studies were highly homogeneous (I = 0%, P = 0.73, 95% CI 0% to 84%, ; I = 0%, P = 0.73, 95% CI 0% to 89%, ). Our confidence in these results is low due to the wide CI.
Fig 4

The effects of anti–interleukin-5 on PEF (L/min).

Fig 5

The effects of anti–interleukin-5 on histamine PC20 (mg/ml).

Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (AQLQ) score

Eight trials of three different anti-interleukin 5 antibodies reported AQLQ scores [22,24,29,31,33,34,36,37]. Pooled analysis showed that anti-interleukin 5 treatment was associated with significantly improved AQLQ score (MD = 0.22, 95% CI 0.15–0.30, P<0.001), with no significant heterogeneity (I = 0%, P = 0.94, 95% CI 0% to 29%, ) (Fig 6). Among subgroups, AQLQ scores improved only in the trials involving reslizumab and benralizumab treatment trials (MD = 0.27, 95% CI 0.13–0.42, P = 0.0002; MD = 0.21, 95% CI 0.11–0.31, P<0.001), but not mepolizumab (P = 0.08).
Fig 6

The effects of anti-interleukin 5 on Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (AQLQ).

Asthma exacerbations

Thirteen studies (6,072 participants) reported on asthma exacerbations [21-29,33,34,36,37]. Table 1 summarizes their definitions for asthma exacerbation. Although these definitions varied, all 13 studies defined exacerbation based on increased corticosteroids or albuterol dose to control symptoms and/or the need for asthma-related emergency treatment/hospitalization. Fig 7 showed that anti-interleukin 5 monoclonal therapies were associated with a significant reduction in asthmatic exacerbation compared with placebo (RR = 0.66, 95% CI, 0.59–0.73, P<0.001), but the reporting was significantly heterogeneous (I = 51%, P<0.001, 95% CI 12% to 73%, ).
Fig 7

The effect of anti-interleukin 5 versus placebo on exacerbation.

IV = Inverse Variance.

The effect of anti-interleukin 5 versus placebo on exacerbation.

IV = Inverse Variance.

Secondary outcomes

Blood and sputum eosinophils

18 trials included blood eosinophil analysis and six trials compared sputum eosinophil levels between anti-interleukin 5 treatment and placebo [18,22-24,28,32]. As the data were reported inconsistently (data were shown as median [range], mean [SD] or geometric mean [log10 SE]), we did not obtain a synthesized analysis of the outcomes. However, from all the results reported, a similar outcome was identified that anti-interleukin 5 significantly decreased blood and sputum eosinophils compared with placebo (S2 Table).

SABA rescue use

Four trials evaluated the effect of anti-interleukin 5 antibodies on SABA use (Fig 8) [21,29-31]. Analyses of these studies showed a non-significant decrease in the anti–interleukin 5 group compared with the placebo group (MD = -0.11, 95% CI -0.3–0.07, P = 0.22), with low heterogeneity (I = 11%, P = 0.34, 95% CI 0% to 54%, ) among the studies.
Fig 8

The effects of anti-interleukin-5 on SABA rescue use.

Adverse events

13 studies reported adverse events, and anti-interleukin 5 therapy was well tolerated [23-26,28-33,35-37]. The pooled RR was 0.93 (95% CI: 0.89–0.98), which showed the lower adverse events incidence were slightly in the anti-interleukin 5 group (P = 0.002), with modest heterogeneity (I = 46%, P = 0.02, 95% CI 2.3% to 71%, ) (Fig 9). However, sensitivity analysis that excluded two studies which included patients with non-eosinophilic asthma revealed no heterogeneity (I = 0%, P = 0.75, 95% CI 0% to 48%, ) [30,33]. Therefore, the heterogeneity can be explained by the varied participant types. In subgroup analysis, however, only treatment with reslizumab was associated with a trend of lower adverse events incidence (RR = 0.88, 95% CI: 0.81–0.96, P = 0.003), while no significant differences were found in both mepolizumab (RR = 0.95, 95% CI: 0.89–1.01, P = 0.12) and benralizumab treatment groups (RR = 0.98, 95% CI: 0.92–1.04 P = 0.44).
Fig 9

The effect of anti-interleukin 5 versus placebo on adverse events.

Risk of bias

Fig 10 summarizes the methodological domain assessments for each included study. Most trials had low risk of bias across the six domains. The allocation sequence was adequately generated and concealed in fourteen trials, [22-29,32-37]. The randomization techniques included computer generated randomization codes and minimization. The remaining trials did not report the method used, and we were unable to obtain this information. All but one study was described as double-blinded [20]. Almost all RCTs reported complete outcome data, only one trial reported on attrition insufficiently [27].
Fig 10

Risk of bias summary.

Subgroup analyses and sensitivity analysis

To clarify the heterogeneity or identify the optimal patients for this treatment, subgroup analyses were carried out for asthma exacerbations and FEV1 (Table 5). The studies were stratified according to effects model, asthma severity, asthma types, sample size, drug administration dosage, follow-up duration and published year. Subgroup analyses showed the efficacy of anti-interleukin 5 on asthma exacerbations were only influenced by asthma severity. Most subgroups showed significantly reduced exacerbations risk. Single dose anti-interleukin 5 in two studies showed no significant differences in exacerbation rates. However, the subgroup results should be interpreted with caution because of the limited sample size and potential bias inherent to subgroup analysis. The meta-analysis findings remained stable with multicenter trials. In addition, excluding the results of any single study did not alter the overall findings. Furthermore, based on the subgroups analysis, we could know that anti-interleukin 5 can significantly improve the FEV1 of severe asthma (MD = 0.11, P<0.001) and eosinophilic asthma (MD = 0.11, P = 0.001). This further confirmed that the severe eosinophilic asthma patients are the optimal patients for anti-interleukin 5 treatment.
Table 5

Subgroup analysis and sensitivity analyses of asthma exacerbation and FEV1 in RCTs.

Stratificationasthma exacerbationFEV1
No. of Patients (Studies)RR(95% CI)P ValueI2, %No. of Patients (Studies)MD(95% CI)P ValueI2, %
Subgroup analysis
Effects model
 random-effects model6072(13)0.66(0.59–0.73)<0.001516725(14)0.09(0.06–0.12)<0.00110
 fixed effects model6072(13)0.63(0.59–0.67)<0.001516725(14)0.09(0.06–0.12)<0.00110
Asthma severity
 mild or moderate asthma362(1)0.85(0.51–1.43)0.55365(2)-0.02(-0.2–0.15)0.80
 severe asthma4090(8)0.59(0.53–0.65)<0.001233901(7)0.11(0.07–0.14)<0.00135
 mixed asthma1620(4)0.73(0.65–0.82)<0.001182459(5)0.08(0.04–0.12)<0.0010
Asthma types
 eosinophilic asthma3117(7)*0.64(0.56–0.74)<0.001653002(6)*0.11(0.05–0.17)<0.00146
 mon-eosinophilic asthma282(1)0.76(0.60–0.97)0.02773(2)0.06(0.00–0.11)0.050
 mixed asthma2673(6)0.66(0.57–0.77)<0.001242950(7)0.10(0.05–0.15)<0.0010
No. of subjects
 <100107(3)0.63(0.28–1.45)0.284699(3)-0.04(-0.23–0.15)0.680
 ≥1005965(10)0.65(0.59–0.72)<0.001516626(11)0.09(0.06–0.13)<0.00116
Follow-up
 <50 weeks2530(8)0.64(0.54–0.76)<0.001333168(9)0.10(0.05–0.16)<0.00134
 ≥50 weeks3542(5)0.67(0.59–0.76)<0.001673557(5)0.08(0.04–0.12)<0.0010
Intervention dosage
 single dose134(2)0.93(0.61–1.42)0.730103(1)-0.11(-0.39–0.17)0.45
 multiple doses5938(11)0.65(0.57–0.74)<0.001586622(13)0.09(0.07–0.12)<0.0015
Year
 published year ≤2011575(5)0.73(0.52–1.02)0.0721544(5)0.08(-0.01–0.25)0.454
 published year >20115497(8)0.64(0.58–0.71)<0.001566181(9)0.09(0.06–0.12)<0.0010
Sensitivity analysis
 Non-multicenter5991(11)0.65(0.59–0.72)<0.001476626(11)0.09(0.06–0.13)<0.00116
 One-study-out methodFrom 0.65 (0.58–0.71) to 0.68 (0.61–0.75)

*The Castro 2015 inclued two groups, group 1 for eosinophilic asthma, group 2 for non-eosinophilic asthma.

*The Castro 2015 inclued two groups, group 1 for eosinophilic asthma, group 2 for non-eosinophilic asthma.

Publication bias

Publication bias was assessed using Begg’s funnel plot and Egger’s test. Begg’s funnel plot of the 14 studies evaluated the effect of anti-interleukin 5 on FEV1 and the Egger’s test suggested no publication bias (P = 0.78, Fig 11). And also no publication bias was detected by Egger’s test for other outcomes analysis (all P>0.05). However, we could not fully exclude publication bias in four outcomes (FEV1%, PEF, histamine PC20, SABA rescue use); we could not evaluate the potential risk of publication bias, since these tests have very low power in meta-analysis.
Fig 11

Begg’s funnel plot evaluated the effect of anti-interleukin-5 on FEV1.

Discussion

We identified 20 RCTs investigating the effect of anti-interleukin 5 monoclonal antibodies in patients with asthma. The results suggest that anti-interleukin 5 therapy was well tolerated and could significantly improve AQLQ score, FEV1, FEV1% of predicted value, and decrease asthmatic exacerbation, blood and sputum eosinophil levels, but yielded no effects in PEF, PC20, SABA rescue use. Additionally, reslizumab seems to be safer and more effective than the other two drugs based on all outcomes. However, since varied baseline of patients among studies, it is not possible to draw a firm conclusion. Different from previous systematic reviews that only included studies of on mepolizumab [38, 39], we included trials about mepolizumab and other two anti-interleukin-5 antibodies-reslizumab and benralizumab. Additionally, the results should be interpreted with caution due to with the relatively small sample sizes and small number of included trials. Therefore, our results may be more believable. In contrast to previous systematic reviews, we found that anti-interleukin-5 treatment slightly increased FEV1 and FEV1% of predicted value. But the clinical relevance of this finding to patients may not be clinically important because of the modest improvement. Only three or four studies reported detailed data, therefore we could not draw exact conclusions for these two parameters due to the insufficient data. Previous two systematic reviews failed to show a significant effect in FEV1, likely due to small number of trials analyzed [38, 39]. Liu et al [39] converted and pooled continuous variable data such as blood and sputum eosinophils. To reduce the possible bias resulting from data conversion, we only obtained qualitative descriptions with estimations of the two outcomes. Besides, when studies with multiple intervention groups, Liu et al [39] only selected one pair of interventions and exclude the others which are not generally recommended by Cochrane handbook. Our meta-analysis found that there was a significant improvement in AQLQ score, which is consistent with previous two meta-analyses. However, as the mean change in AQLQ score is less than the clinical minimally important difference of 0.5 units, the clinical relevance of this finding may not be clinically important to patients [40]. Asthma exacerbations are associated with substantial morbidity and mortality [41]. Decreasing the asthma exacerbations rate is a key goal in asthma management. Our meta-analysis showed a significant reduction in exacerbation rates. The clinical relevance of this finding to patients may be clinically important. The inconsistency of the results between asthma exacerbations and rescue use of SABA might due to the next two reasons: 1) the slight improvement in lung functions; 2) most exacerbations in trials were predominantly those that would generally be judged severe on the basis of a need for systemic corticosteroid or requiring admission or visit to emergency. This systematic review also has limitations. First, we aimed to identify the overall effect of anti-interleukin-5 therapy on asthma, the asthma severity and baseline asthma therapy varied among studies (Table 2), so the population examined in this review was too heterogeneous to draw any conclusions about the general asthma population. Further research is needed to clarify which subgroups of patients with asthma can benefit from this treatment. Second, in accordance with the Cochrane handbook, we combined two or three intervention groups into a single intervention group regardless of different intervention dosage and administration routine. This made identifying the optimal dose and regimen for treating asthma difficult. Thirdly, although these studies shared many common issues, there were also substantial subgroup and study heterogeneities. Moreover, there also was significant heterogeneity among studies evaluating asthma exacerbation and adverse events; although we used a random-effects model to account for this, the correction is only partial. As for PEF, histamine PC20 and SABA rescue use, given the small number of studies being meta-analysed, it is difficult to detect heterogeneity and accurately estimate it [42]. Lastly, Ortega et al [43] re-examined baseline blood eosinophil counts from previous two studies [24,26] on mepolizumab, they found that the use of the baseline at a threshold of at least 150 cells/μL can be a reliable and simple biomarker for patient selection associated with positive clinical responses to mepolizumab treatment. However, due to the lack of individual patient data among all studies, we failed to further analysis the relationship between blood eosinophil counts≥150 cells/μL at baseline and outcomes of mepolizumab, reslizumab and benralizumab treatment.
Table 2

Characteristic of randomized controlled trials included.

ReferenceStudy DesignNo. of SubjectsPopulationAgedrugdosingOutcomesFollow-upExacerbation definition
Castro 2011[28]multi-center, double-blind106severe eosinophilic asthma18–75ReslizumabThree IV doses of 3mg/kg or placebo for 12 weeksBlood and sputum eosinophils;ACQ-7; FEV1; asthma exacerbations15 weeksA 20% or more decrease from baseline in FEV1; or worsening of Asthma requiring emergency treatment, hospital admission, or three or more days of oral corticosteroid treatment.
Castro 2015[29]two duplicate multi-center, double-blind parallelStudy 1:489 Study 2:464uncontrolled asthma12–75ReslizumabThirteen IV doses of 3mg/kg or placebo for 52 weeksBlood eosinophils; asthma exacerbations; FEV1; AQLQ; ACQ-7; rescue SABAs52 weeksWorsening of asthma that resulted in use of systemic corticosteroids in patients not already receiving treatment, or a two-times increase in the dose of either inhaled corticosteroids or systemic corticosteroids for 3 or more days, or the need for asthma-related emergency treatment
Corren 2016[30]multi-center, double-blind492non-eosinophilic asthma18–65ReslizumabFour IV doses of 3mg/kg or placebo for 16 weeksBlood eosinophils;ACQ-7; FEV1;rescue SABAs28 weeksNM
Bjermer L 2016[31]multi-center, double-blind parallel315uncontrolled asthma12–75ReslizumabFour IV doses of 0.3mg/kg, 3mg/kg or placebo for 16 weeksBlood eosinophils; FEV1; FVC;ACQ-6(5);FEF25-75%; ASUI; AQLQ20 weeksA reduction in FEV1 of ≥20%, hospitalization due to asthma, emergency treatment of asthma, or use of systemic corticosteroids for ≥3 days
Laviolette 2013[32]multi-center, double-blindcohort 1:13 cohort 2:14eosinophilic asthma18–65BenralizumabSingle IV dose of 1mg/kg or placebo (cohort 1) for one day or three SC doses of 100 or 200 mg or placebo (cohort 2) for 56 daysBlood, sputum eosinophils; adverse events84 days or 140 daysNM
Castro 2014[33]multi-center, double-blindgroup 1:324 group 2:282group 1: eosinophilic asthma group 2: non-eosinophilic asthma18–75BenralizumabEight SC doses of 2, 20, or 100 mg for eosinophilic patients and 100 mg for non-eosinophilic or placebo for 1 yearBlood eosinophils; asthma exacerbations; FEV1; AQLQ;1 yearAn increase in asthma symptoms that did not resolve after rescue medication and needed treatment with systemic steroids for at least 3 days
Nowak 2015[34]multi-center double-blind, parallel110acute asthma18–60BenralizumabSingle IV dose of 0.3mg/kg or 1mg/kg or placebo for one dayBlood eosinophils; asthma exacerbations; FEV1; ACQ-7; AQLQ168 daysAn increase of asthma symptoms that did not resolve within 2 hours after the use of rescue albuterol or corticosteroids and required an unscheduled medical visit; or during a scheduled study visit, the subject had acute asthma symptoms and a reduction of greater than or equal to 20% in predicted peak expiratory flow or FEV1, which in the opinion of the investigator required treatment.
Park HS 2016[35]multi-center, double-blind106eosinophilic asthma20–75BenralizumabSeven SC doses of 2, 20, or 100 mg or placebo for 40 weeksBlood eosinophils; asthma exacerbations; FEV1; PEF; ACQ-6;FENO52 weeksAn increase in asthma symptoms that required treatment with systemic steroids for at least 3 days.
Bleecker E R 2016[36]multi-center, double-blind parallel1306severe uncontrolledasthma with eosinophilia12–75BenralizumabTwelve SC doses of 30 mg or Seven SC doses of 30mg or placebo for 48 weeksAsthma exacerbations; FEV1; ACQ-6; AQLQ48 weeksA worsening of asthma that led to one of the following: (1) use of systemic corticosteroids, or temporary increase in a stable oral corticosteroid background dosage, for at least 3 days or a single injectable dose of corticosteroids; (2) emergency department or visit to an urgent care centre (<24 h) because of asthma that needed systemic corticosteroids;or (3) inpatient hospital stay (≥24 h) because of asthma

Conclusions

Our study indicates that anti-interleukin-5 therapy is safe and may reduce asthma exacerbation risk, slightly improve FEV1, FEV1%, and quality of life; and decrease blood and sputum eosinophil levels, although PEF, PC20 were not improved or SABA rescue use reduced. Anti-interleukin-5 therapy may therefore be beneficial as adjunct asthma therapy, particularly in severe and eosinophilic asthma. Further trials are necessary to determine the most effective asthma treatment drug and studies need to be performed that distinguish which patients will respond to particular antibodies, both within and between classes (i.e., who will respond to mepolizumab vs. benralizumab or? reslizumab vs. benralizumab?).

Search strategies.

(DOCX) Click here for additional data file.

Secondary efficacy outcomes of included RCTs.

(DOCX) Click here for additional data file.

The data of all outcomes in all RCTs.

(DOCX) Click here for additional data file.

PRISMA 2009 Checklist.

(DOCX) Click here for additional data file.
  40 in total

1.  Quantifying heterogeneity in a meta-analysis.

Authors:  Julian P T Higgins; Simon G Thompson
Journal:  Stat Med       Date:  2002-06-15       Impact factor: 2.373

2.  A simulation study comparing properties of heterogeneity measures in meta-analyses.

Authors:  M Mittlböck; H Heinzl
Journal:  Stat Med       Date:  2006-12-30       Impact factor: 2.373

Review 3.  Uncertainty in heterogeneity estimates in meta-analyses.

Authors:  John P A Ioannidis; Nikolaos A Patsopoulos; Evangelos Evangelou
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2007-11-03

4.  Efficacy and safety of benralizumab for patients with severe asthma uncontrolled with high-dosage inhaled corticosteroids and long-acting β2-agonists (SIROCCO): a randomised, multicentre, placebo-controlled phase 3 trial.

Authors:  Eugene R Bleecker; J Mark FitzGerald; Pascal Chanez; Alberto Papi; Steven F Weinstein; Peter Barker; Stephanie Sproule; Geoffrey Gilmartin; Magnus Aurivillius; Viktoria Werkström; Mitchell Goldman
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2016-09-05       Impact factor: 79.321

5.  Determining a minimal important change in a disease-specific Quality of Life Questionnaire.

Authors:  E F Juniper; G H Guyatt; A Willan; L E Griffith
Journal:  J Clin Epidemiol       Date:  1994-01       Impact factor: 6.437

6.  Global strategy for asthma management and prevention: GINA executive summary.

Authors:  E D Bateman; S S Hurd; P J Barnes; J Bousquet; J M Drazen; J M FitzGerald; P Gibson; K Ohta; P O'Byrne; S E Pedersen; E Pizzichini; S D Sullivan; S E Wenzel; H J Zar
Journal:  Eur Respir J       Date:  2008-01       Impact factor: 16.671

7.  Monoclonal anti-interleukin-5 treatment suppresses eosinophil but not T-cell functions.

Authors:  C Büttner; A Lun; T Splettstoesser; G Kunkel; H Renz
Journal:  Eur Respir J       Date:  2003-05       Impact factor: 16.671

8.  Purified interleukin 5 supports the terminal differentiation and proliferation of murine eosinophilic precursors.

Authors:  Y Yamaguchi; T Suda; J Suda; M Eguchi; Y Miura; N Harada; A Tominaga; K Takatsu
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1988-01-01       Impact factor: 14.307

9.  Oral glucocorticoid-sparing effect of mepolizumab in eosinophilic asthma.

Authors:  Elisabeth H Bel; Sally E Wenzel; Philip J Thompson; Charlene M Prazma; Oliver N Keene; Steven W Yancey; Hector G Ortega; Ian D Pavord
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2014-09-08       Impact factor: 91.245

Review 10.  Targeted anti-inflammatory therapeutics in asthma and chronic obstructive lung disease.

Authors:  Andrew L Durham; Gaetano Caramori; Kian F Chung; Ian M Adcock
Journal:  Transl Res       Date:  2015-08-20       Impact factor: 7.012

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  12 in total

Review 1.  Cutaneous Manifestations of Reactions to Biologics.

Authors:  Iris M Otani; Amy S Levin; Aleena Banerji
Journal:  Curr Allergy Asthma Rep       Date:  2018-02-21       Impact factor: 4.806

Review 2.  Anti-IL-5 therapies for asthma.

Authors:  Hugo A Farne; Amanda Wilson; Stephen Milan; Emma Banchoff; Freda Yang; Colin Ve Powell
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2022-07-12

Review 3.  Anti-IL5 therapies for asthma.

Authors:  Hugo A Farne; Amanda Wilson; Colin Powell; Lynne Bax; Stephen J Milan
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2017-09-21

Review 4.  Targeting the Interleukin-5 Pathway for Treatment of Eosinophilic Conditions Other than Asthma.

Authors:  Florence Roufosse
Journal:  Front Med (Lausanne)       Date:  2018-04-06

Review 5.  Reslizumab in the treatment of inadequately controlled asthma in adults and adolescents with elevated blood eosinophils: clinical trial evidence and future prospects.

Authors:  Jorge Máspero
Journal:  Ther Adv Respir Dis       Date:  2017-07-06       Impact factor: 4.031

6.  Short-term efficacy and tolerability of venlafaxine extended release in adults with generalized anxiety disorder without depression: A meta-analysis.

Authors:  Xinyuan Li; Lijun Zhu; Yingying Su; Shaokuan Fang
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-10-05       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 7.  Resolution of chronic inflammatory disease: universal and tissue-specific concepts.

Authors:  Georg Schett; Markus F Neurath
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2018-08-15       Impact factor: 14.919

8.  Adverse events of benralizumab in moderate to severe eosinophilic asthma: A meta-analysis.

Authors:  Wanshu Liu; Xuesu Ma; Weikang Zhou
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2019-05       Impact factor: 1.817

9.  Efficacy and tolerability of short-term duloxetine treatment in adults with generalized anxiety disorder: A meta-analysis.

Authors:  Xinyuan Li; Lijun Zhu; Chunkui Zhou; Jing Liu; Heqian Du; Chenglin Wang; Shaokuan Fang
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-03-20       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Health care resource utilization and characteristics of patients with eosinophilic asthma in secondary health care in Finland.

Authors:  Mika J Mäkelä; Helene Nordahl Christensen; Antti Karlsson; Sarang Rastogi; Kirsi Kettunen
Journal:  Eur Clin Respir J       Date:  2018-04-15
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