| Literature DB >> 28913336 |
Diego Bagnasco1, Matteo Ferrando1, Gilda Varricchi2, Francesca Puggioni3, Giovanni Passalacqua1, Giorgio Walter Canonica1,3.
Abstract
The definition of asthma has changed considerably in recent years, to the extent that asthma is no longer considered a single disease but a heterogeneous disorder that includes several phenotypes and, possibly, endotypes. A more detailed analysis of the immunological mechanisms underlying the pathogenesis of asthma shows interleukin 5 (IL-5) to be a crucial cytokine in several asthma phenotypes. In fact, IL-5 exerts selective action on eosinophils, which, in turn, sustain airway inflammation and worsen asthma symptoms and control. Clinical trials have shown drugs targeting IL-5 or its receptor alpha subunit (IL-5Ra) to be a promising therapeutic approach to severe asthma, whose characteristics render standard therapy of little use: systemic corticosteroids only partially control the disease and have well-known adverse effects, and omalizumab is used for allergic subtypes. Analysis of the design process of clinical trials reveals the importance of patient selection, taking into account both clinical data (e.g., exacerbations, lung function, and quality of life) and biomarkers (e.g., eosinophils, which are predictive of therapeutic response).Entities:
Keywords: biomarkers; eosinophils; interleukin 5; monoclonal antibodies; personalized medicine; precision medicine; safety; severe asthma
Year: 2017 PMID: 28913336 PMCID: PMC5583162 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2017.00135
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Figure 1The role of interleukin 5 (IL-5) and eosinophils in airways.
Clinical trials on anti-interleukin 5 (IL-5) and IL-5Ra antagonists: main results and safety findings.
| Chupp et al. ( | Improvement in QoL | ⇧ FEV1 (176 mL in mepolizumab group) | Headache, nasopharyngitis, back pain, urticaria, arthralgia, arrhythmias, injection-site reactions | 5% of patients in mepolizumab group has serious adverse events (asthma, systemic reactions) |
| Ortega et al. ( | ⇩ Exacerbations (with intravenous medication, 47%; with subcutaneous administration, 53%) | ⇧ FEV1 (100 mL intravenous administration, 98 mL subcutaneous administration) | Nasopharyngitis, upper respiratory tract infection, and headache | Incidence of 7% in intravenous group, 8% in subcutaneous, 14% in placebo |
| Bel et al. ( | ⇩ Exacerbations (32%) | Improvement in Asthma Control Questionnaire 5 score | Headache, nasopharyngitis, injection-site reaction | Asthma exacerbations, pneumonia (both in placebo group) |
| Pavord et al. ( | ⇩ Exacerbations (48% with 75-mg dose and 39% with 250-mg dose) | No change in FEV1 | Headache, nasopharyngitis, infusion-related reaction | 3 deaths (1 septic shock after acute pancreatitis, fatal asthma attack, suicide) |
| Nair et al. ( | ⇩ Exacerbations | ⇩ Eosinophil count (in sputum and blood samples) | 1 patient with shortness of breath (heart failure-related), 1 patient with aches and tiredness | No drug-related events recorded 1 death in placebo group |
| Haldar et al. ( | ⇩ Exacerbations (2.0 vs. 3.4 drug/placebo) | Improvement in AQLQ score | Facial flushing, rash, pruritus, erectile or ejaculatory dysfunction, fatigue | Severe acute asthma |
| Flood-Page et al. ( | Reduction at higher doses of drug | No improvement in lung function or symptoms | Upper respiratory tract infection, asthma, headache, rhinitis, bronchitis, sinusitis, viral infection, injury, back pain, nausea, and pharyngitis | 250 mg (hydrocephalus/cerebrovascular disorder, constipation, and gastrointestinal disturbance), 750 mg (asthma exacerbation) |
| Castro et al. ( | ⇩ Exacerbations | Worsening of asthma symptoms, upper respiratory tract infections, nasopharyngitis | 2 anaphylactic reactions | |
| Castro et al. ( | ⇩ Exacerbations (less than other study) | ⇩ Blood and sputum eosinophils, especially in patients with nasal polyposis | Nasopharyngitis | Pneumonia, worsening of asthma |
| Bleecker et al. ( | ⇩ Exacerbations | ⇧ FEV1 | Nasopharyngitis, worsening of asthma | Allergic granulomatous angiitis, panic attack, paresthesia, injection-site erythema |
| FitzGerald et al. ( | ⇩ Exacerbations | ⇧ FEV1 | Nasopharyngitis, worsening of asthma | Urticaria, asthma, herpes zoster, chest pain |
| Nowak et al. ( | ⇩ Exacerbations | ⇩ Blood eosinophils | Asthma, headache, dizziness, cough, pyrexia, bronchitis, anxiety, muscle spasms, and hyperhidrosis | Pyrexia, tachycardia, and anxiety |
| Castro et al. ( | ⇩ 40% Exacerbations in 100 mg group, but not in the 2 mg and the 20 mg groups | Dose–response findings | Nasopharyngitis and injection-site reactions | 100 mg: acute cholecystitis, herpes zoster, polyarteritis nodosa, and uterine leiomyoma |
| Laviolette et al. ( | ⇩ Exacerbations | Nasopharyngitis, nausea | Thyroid storm with hospitalization | |