| Literature DB >> 27875559 |
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.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
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
Fig 1Flow chart of study identification, inclusion, and exclusion.
Characteristic of randomized controlled trials included.
| Reference | Study Design | No. of Subjects | Population | Age | drug | dosing | Outcomes | Follow-up | Exacerbation definition |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leckie 2000 | multi-center, double-blind | 24 | mild atopic asthma | 18–45 | Mepolizumab | Single IV dose of 2.5 or 10 mg/kg or placebo for one day | Blood and sputum eosinophils; histamine PC20; | 16 weeks | NM |
| Flood-Page PT 2003 | Two-center, double-blind parallel | 24 | mild atopic asthma | 18–55 | Mepolizumab | Three IV doses of 750 mg or placebo for 8 weeks | Blood eosinophils;FEV1; PEFR; histamine PC20 | 20 weeks | NM |
| Büttner 2003 | multi-center, double-blind | 19 | mild or moderate asthma with ICS | 20–59 | Mepolizumab | Three IV doses of 250, 750 mg or placebo for 12 weeks | Blood eosinophils | 6 months | NM |
| Flood-Page P 2007 | multi-center, double-blind | 362 | moderate persistent asthma with ICS | 18–55 | Mepolizumab | Three IV doses of 250, 750 mg or placebo for 12 weeks | Blood and sputum eosinophils;FEV1; PEF; symptom scores; asthma exacerbations | 20 weeks | An acute worsening of asthma requiring additional treatment in excess of an increase in short-acting β2-agonist. |
| Haldar 2009 | Single-center doubleblind,paralle | 61 | refractory eosinophilic asthma | 18–72 | Mepolizumab | Twelve IV doses of 750 mg or placebo for 50 weeks | Blood and sputum eosinophils;FEV1; AQLQ; JACQ; FENO; histamine PC20;asthma exacerbations | 50 weeks | Periods of deterioration in asthma control in subjects who had been treated with high-dose oral prednisolone for at least 5 days |
| Nair 2009 | Single-center, double-blind, paralle | 20 | severe asthma on OCS with persistent sputum eosinophilia | NM | Mepolizumab | Five IV doses of 750 mg or placebo for 16 weeks | Blood and sputum eosinophils;FEV1;JACQ; asthma exacerbations; reduction in the dose of prednisone | 26 weeks | A 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 | multi-center, double-blind | 621 | severe eosinophilic asthma | 12–74 | Mepolizumab | Thirteen IV doses of 75, 250, or 750 mg or placebo for 52 weeks | Blood and sputum eosinophils;FEV1; AQLQ; ACQ-6;asthma exacerbations | 52 weeks | Worsening 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 | multi-center doubleblind, parallel | 135 | severe eosinophilic asthma | 16–74 | Mepolizumab | Six SC doses of 100 mg or placebo for 20 weeks | Asthma exacerbations; ACQ-5;SGRQ; reduction in the oral glucocorticoid dose | 32 weeks | A 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 | multi-center double-blind, | 576 | severe eosinophilic asthma | 12–84 | Mepolizumab | Nine doses of 75 mg IV or 100 mg SC or placebo for 32 weeks | Asthma exacerbations; ACQ-5;SGRQ;FEV1;blood eosinophil | 40 weeks | Worsening 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 | multi-center, double-blind | 32 | severe persistent asthma | NM | Reslizumab | Single IV doses of 0.03mg/kg,0.1mg/kg, 0.3mg/kg, or 1mg/kg or placebo for one day | Blood and sputum eosinophils; FEV1; | 90 days | NM |
Characteristic of randomized controlled trials included.
| Reference | Study Design | No. of Subjects | Population | Age | drug | dosing | Outcomes | Follow-up | Exacerbation definition |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FitzGerald J M 2016 | multi-center, double-blind parallel | 1205 | severe,uncontrolled, eosinophilic asthma | 12–75 | Benralizumab | Fourteen SC doses of 30mg or Eight SC doses of 30mg or placebo for 56 weeks | Asthma exacerbations; FEV1; ACQ-6; AQLQ | 56 weeks | An 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
Baseline Characteristics of Patients in the 20 Studies Included.
| Refs. | No. | Sex | Age | Blood Eosinophils | FEV1% Predicted | Diagnosis of asthma | PEF |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Male, %) | (Mean SD, y) | (Mean SD,103/uL) | (Mean SD, %) | (mean SD, y) | (Mean SD, L/min) | ||
| Leckie 2000 | 16 | NM | 29 (6.29) | 0.25 (0.1) | 86.15 (9.58) | NM | NM |
| Flood-Page PT 2003 | 11 | 9 (82) | 31 (5.5) | 0.27 (0.18) | 87.0 (6.3) | NM | 433 (37.8) |
| Büttner 2003 | 12 | 5 (42) | 44.25 (10.85) | NM | 65.68 (10.48) | 11.75 (9.27) | NM |
| Flood-Page P 2007 | 236 | 112 (47) | 36 (29.4) | 0.35 (0.25) | 68.35 (9.2) | NM | 366.6 (90.0) |
| Haldar 2009 | 29 | 14 (48) | 48 (7) | 0.32 (0.38) | 78.1 (20.9) | NM | NM |
| Nair 2009 | 9 | 4 (44) | 56.4 (10.9) | 0.68 (0.52) | 66.6 (18.3) | NM | NM |
| Pavord 2012 | 461 | 171 (37) | 49.4 (11.2) | 0.24 (1.03) | 60.0 (16.3) | 19.5 (14.4) | NM |
| Bel 2014 | 69 | 25 (36) | 50 (9.7) | 0.25 (1.245) | 59.6 (17.0) | 17.4 (11.8) | NM |
| Ortega 2014 | 385 | 163 (42) | 50.5 (11.5) | 0.285 (1.018) | 60.3 (17.9) | 20.2 (13.4) | 262 (110) |
| Kips JC 2003 | 18 | 12 (67) | 43 (5.9) | 0.26 (0.04) | 53.4 (7.6) | NM | NM |
| Castro 2011 | 53 | 19 (36) | 44.9 (13.94) | NM | 66.0 (15.16) | 23.3 (11.38) | NM |
| Castro 2015 | Study 1: 245 Study 2: 232 | Study 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 | 398 | 137 (34) | 44.9 | 0.281 (0.264) | 66.8 | 26.2 | NM |
| Bjermer L 2016 | 210 | 85 (40) | 43.7 | 0.65 (0.006) | 69.6 | 20.2 | NM |
| Laviolette 2013 | cohort 1: 8 cohort 2: 9 | cohort 1: 6 (25) cohort 2: 5 (56) | cohort 1: 38.9 (14.7) cohort 2: 38.9 (13.8) | NM | cohort 1: 70.5 (15.6) cohort 2: 68.7 (11.4) | NM | NM |
| Castro 2014 | group 1: 244 group 2: 140 | group 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) | NM | NM |
| Nowak 2015 | 72 | 25 (35) | 36.3 (6.8) | 0.213 (0.393) | 58.1 | NM | NM |
| Park HS 2016 | 77 | 29 (38) | 53.4 (11.5) | 0.72 (0.87) | 67.8 (14.4) | NM | NM |
| Bleecker E R 2016 | 797 | 270(34) | 48.9(14) | 0.34(0.52) | 56.8(14.4) | 14.9 | NM |
| FitzGerald J M 2016 | 866 | 323(37) | 49.5(14) | 0.39(0.42) | 58.4(14.9) | 16.3 | NM |
*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
Fig 2The 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.
Fig 3The effect of anti-interleukin 5 versus placebo on FEV1% of predicted value.
Fig 4The effects of anti–interleukin-5 on PEF (L/min).
Fig 5The effects of anti–interleukin-5 on histamine PC20 (mg/ml).
Fig 6The effects of anti-interleukin 5 on Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (AQLQ).
Fig 7The effect of anti-interleukin 5 versus placebo on exacerbation.
IV = Inverse Variance.
Fig 8The effects of anti-interleukin-5 on SABA rescue use.
Fig 9The effect of anti-interleukin 5 versus placebo on adverse events.
Fig 10Risk of bias summary.
Subgroup analysis and sensitivity analyses of asthma exacerbation and FEV1 in RCTs.
| Stratification | asthma exacerbation | FEV1 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. of Patients (Studies) | RR(95% CI) | No. of Patients (Studies) | MD(95% CI) | |||||
| random-effects model | 6072(13) | 0.66(0.59–0.73) | <0.001 | 51 | 6725(14) | 0.09(0.06–0.12) | <0.001 | 10 |
| fixed effects model | 6072(13) | 0.63(0.59–0.67) | <0.001 | 51 | 6725(14) | 0.09(0.06–0.12) | <0.001 | 10 |
| mild or moderate asthma | 362(1) | 0.85(0.51–1.43) | 0.55 | … | 365(2) | -0.02(-0.2–0.15) | 0.8 | 0 |
| severe asthma | 4090(8) | 0.59(0.53–0.65) | <0.001 | 23 | 3901(7) | 0.11(0.07–0.14) | <0.001 | 35 |
| mixed asthma | 1620(4) | 0.73(0.65–0.82) | <0.001 | 18 | 2459(5) | 0.08(0.04–0.12) | <0.001 | 0 |
| eosinophilic asthma | 3117(7) | 0.64(0.56–0.74) | <0.001 | 65 | 3002(6) | 0.11(0.05–0.17) | <0.001 | 46 |
| mon-eosinophilic asthma | 282(1) | 0.76(0.60–0.97) | 0.02 | … | 773(2) | 0.06(0.00–0.11) | 0.05 | 0 |
| mixed asthma | 2673(6) | 0.66(0.57–0.77) | <0.001 | 24 | 2950(7) | 0.10(0.05–0.15) | <0.001 | 0 |
| <100 | 107(3) | 0.63(0.28–1.45) | 0.28 | 46 | 99(3) | -0.04(-0.23–0.15) | 0.68 | 0 |
| ≥100 | 5965(10) | 0.65(0.59–0.72) | <0.001 | 51 | 6626(11) | 0.09(0.06–0.13) | <0.001 | 16 |
| <50 weeks | 2530(8) | 0.64(0.54–0.76) | <0.001 | 33 | 3168(9) | 0.10(0.05–0.16) | <0.001 | 34 |
| ≥50 weeks | 3542(5) | 0.67(0.59–0.76) | <0.001 | 67 | 3557(5) | 0.08(0.04–0.12) | <0.001 | 0 |
| single dose | 134(2) | 0.93(0.61–1.42) | 0.73 | 0 | 103(1) | -0.11(-0.39–0.17) | 0.45 | … |
| multiple doses | 5938(11) | 0.65(0.57–0.74) | <0.001 | 58 | 6622(13) | 0.09(0.07–0.12) | <0.001 | 5 |
| published year ≤2011 | 575(5) | 0.73(0.52–1.02) | 0.07 | 21 | 544(5) | 0.08(-0.01–0.25) | 0.4 | 54 |
| published year >2011 | 5497(8) | 0.64(0.58–0.71) | <0.001 | 56 | 6181(9) | 0.09(0.06–0.12) | <0.001 | 0 |
| Non-multicenter | 5991(11) | 0.65(0.59–0.72) | <0.001 | 47 | 6626(11) | 0.09(0.06–0.13) | <0.001 | 16 |
| One-study-out method | … | … | From 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.
Fig 11Begg’s funnel plot evaluated the effect of anti-interleukin-5 on FEV1.
Characteristic of randomized controlled trials included.
| Reference | Study Design | No. of Subjects | Population | Age | drug | dosing | Outcomes | Follow-up | Exacerbation definition |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Castro 2011 | multi-center, double-blind | 106 | severe eosinophilic asthma | 18–75 | Reslizumab | Three IV doses of 3mg/kg or placebo for 12 weeks | Blood and sputum eosinophils;ACQ-7; FEV1; asthma exacerbations | 15 weeks | A 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 | two duplicate multi-center, double-blind parallel | Study 1:489 Study 2:464 | uncontrolled asthma | 12–75 | Reslizumab | Thirteen IV doses of 3mg/kg or placebo for 52 weeks | Blood eosinophils; asthma exacerbations; FEV1; AQLQ; ACQ-7; rescue SABAs | 52 weeks | Worsening 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 | multi-center, double-blind | 492 | non-eosinophilic asthma | 18–65 | Reslizumab | Four IV doses of 3mg/kg or placebo for 16 weeks | Blood eosinophils;ACQ-7; FEV1;rescue SABAs | 28 weeks | NM |
| Bjermer L 2016 | multi-center, double-blind parallel | 315 | uncontrolled asthma | 12–75 | Reslizumab | Four IV doses of 0.3mg/kg, 3mg/kg or placebo for 16 weeks | Blood eosinophils; FEV1; FVC;ACQ-6(5);FEF25-75%; ASUI; AQLQ | 20 weeks | A reduction in FEV1 of ≥20%, hospitalization due to asthma, emergency treatment of asthma, or use of systemic corticosteroids for ≥3 days |
| Laviolette 2013 | multi-center, double-blind | cohort 1:13 cohort 2:14 | eosinophilic asthma | 18–65 | Benralizumab | Single 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 days | Blood, sputum eosinophils; adverse events | 84 days or 140 days | NM |
| Castro 2014 | multi-center, double-blind | group 1:324 group 2:282 | group 1: eosinophilic asthma group 2: non-eosinophilic asthma | 18–75 | Benralizumab | Eight SC doses of 2, 20, or 100 mg for eosinophilic patients and 100 mg for non-eosinophilic or placebo for 1 year | Blood eosinophils; asthma exacerbations; FEV1; AQLQ; | 1 year | An increase in asthma symptoms that did not resolve after rescue medication and needed treatment with systemic steroids for at least 3 days |
| Nowak 2015 | multi-center double-blind, parallel | 110 | acute asthma | 18–60 | Benralizumab | Single IV dose of 0.3mg/kg or 1mg/kg or placebo for one day | Blood eosinophils; asthma exacerbations; FEV1; ACQ-7; AQLQ | 168 days | An 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 | multi-center, double-blind | 106 | eosinophilic asthma | 20–75 | Benralizumab | Seven SC doses of 2, 20, or 100 mg or placebo for 40 weeks | Blood eosinophils; asthma exacerbations; FEV1; PEF; ACQ-6;FENO | 52 weeks | An increase in asthma symptoms that required treatment with systemic steroids for at least 3 days. |
| Bleecker E R 2016 | multi-center, double-blind parallel | 1306 | severe uncontrolledasthma with eosinophilia | 12–75 | Benralizumab | Twelve SC doses of 30 mg or Seven SC doses of 30mg or placebo for 48 weeks | Asthma exacerbations; FEV1; ACQ-6; AQLQ | 48 weeks | A 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 |