Literature DB >> 29628759

The development of AZD7624 for prevention of exacerbations in COPD: a randomized controlled trial.

Naimish R Patel1,2, Danen M Cunoosamy1, Malin Fagerås1, Ziad Taib1, Sara Asimus1, Tove Hegelund-Myrbäck1, Sofia Lundin1, Katerina Pardali1, Nisha Kurian1, Eva Ersdal1, Cecilia Kristensson1, Katarina Korsback1, Robert Palmér1, Mary N Brown3, Steven Greenaway4, Leonard Siew4, Graham W Clarke4,5, Stephen I Rennard6,7, Barry J Make8, Robert A Wise9, Paul Jansson1.   

Abstract

Background: p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) plays a central role in the regulation and activation of pro-inflammatory mediators. COPD patients have increased levels of activated p38 MAPK, which correlate with increased lung function impairment, alveolar wall inflammation, and COPD exacerbations.
Objectives: These studies aimed to assess the effect of p38 inhibition with AZD7624 in healthy volunteers and patients with COPD. The principal hypothesis was that decreasing lung inflammation via inhibition of p38α would reduce exacerbations and improve quality of life for COPD patients at high risk for acute exacerbations.
Methods: The p38 isoform most relevant to lung inflammation was assessed using an in situ proximity ligation assay in severe COPD patients and donor controls. Volunteers aged 18-55 years were randomized into the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) challenge study, which investigated the effect of a single dose of AZD7624 vs placebo on inflammatory biomarkers. The Proof of Principle study randomized patients aged 40-85 years with a diagnosis of COPD for >1 year to AZD7624 or placebo to assess the effect of p38 inhibition in decreasing the rate of exacerbations.
Results: The p38 isoform most relevant to lung inflammation was p38α, and AZD7624 specifically inhibited p38α and p38β isoforms in human alveolar macrophages. Thirty volunteers were randomized in the LPS challenge study. AZD7624 reduced the increase from baseline in sputum neutrophils and TNF-α by 56.6% and 85.4%, respectively (p<0.001). In the 213 patients randomized into the Proof of Principle study, there was no statistically significant difference between AZD7624 and placebo when comparing the number of days to the first moderate or severe exacerbation or early dropout.
Conclusion: Although p38α is upregulated in the lungs of COPD patients, AZD7624, an isoform-specific inhaled p38 MAPK inhibitor, failed to show any benefit in patients with COPD.

Entities:  

Keywords:  COPD; inflammation; p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29628759      PMCID: PMC5877500          DOI: 10.2147/COPD.S150576

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis        ISSN: 1176-9106


Plain language summary

Despite optimal treatment, patients with COPD often experience exacerbations. Anti-inflammatory drugs such as inhaled corticosteroids can reduce the incidence of exacerbations. p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) plays a central role in the regulation and activation of key pro-inflammatory mediators, and COPD patients have increased levels of activated p38 MAPK in alveolar macrophages and other key inflammatory cells compared with cells from healthy smokers. A number of oral p38 inhibitors have been tested in COPD with a mix of background therapies. These studies have generally assessed lung function, not exacerbations, with no meaningful clinical improvement. In this set of studies, we identified the p38α isoform as being activated in patients with severe COPD in both lung macrophages and epithelial cells. We also identified p38α as the predominant isoform activated in the human alveolar macrophage response to LPS stimulation in vitro and AZD7624 as a specific inhibitor of p38α, with less activity against p38β. AZD7624 decreased LPS-stimulated cytokine release in human alveolar macrophages in vitro, and decreased systemic and lung inflammatory markers after inhaled LPS challenge. However, AZD7624 failed to provide any benefit in a 3-month study of COPD exacerbations.

Introduction

Patients with COPD are susceptible to acute exacerbations at an increasing rate as the severity of COPD worsens,1 and frequent exacerbations are associated with an increased rate of lung function decline and death.2–4 Despite the current standard of care, a significant proportion of patients will continue to experience frequent exacerbations,5 and new drugs are needed to prevent exacerbations and reduce the associated morbidity in COPD. Exacerbations are associated with increased lung inflammation, in part because of increased bacterial or viral infections, or a combination of the two.6,7 The risk of exacerbations is correlated with markers of inflammation,8–10 and although the nature of the inflammatory response in COPD exacerbations is somewhat varied, it is usually associated with increased numbers of inflammatory cells and markers in the airways, as well as increased serum concentrations of fibrinogen and C-reactive protein (CRP). Anti-inflammatory drugs such as inhaled corticosteroids11 and roflumilast12 can decrease the incidence of exacerbations in COPD. Importantly, the addition of roflumilast to inhaled corticosteroids further reduces exacerbations, suggesting that anti-inflammatory agents work by complementary mechanisms and that additional benefit may result from novel anti-inflammatory approaches. p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) plays a central role in the regulation and activation of key pro-inflammatory mediators.13,14 COPD patients have increased levels of activated p38 MAPK in alveolar macrophages and other key inflammatory cells compared with cells from healthy smokers.13 Furthermore, p38 MAPK activation correlates with the degree of lung function impairment and alveolar wall inflammation.15 Oral p38 inhibitors have been tested in COPD, but were assessed primarily for an effect on lung function rather than exacerbations.16,17 In addition, oral p38 inhibitors have been associated with systemic toxicities such as increased liver enzymes and rash.18 We used a step-wise approach of experiments to identify p38α as the isoform most relevant to lung inflammation and developed an inhaled compound, AZD7624, to inhibit this isoform. The mechanism of p38α inhibition with AZD7624 was then tested clinically in healthy volunteers via inhaled lipopolysaccharide (LPS) challenge. Finally, the principal hypothesis was evaluated: that decreasing lung inflammation via inhibition of p38α would reduce exacerbations and improve quality of life for COPD patients at high risk for acute exacerbations.

Methods

Study design and participants

The in situ proximity ligation assay (isPLA) was used to delineate relevant p38 isoforms by measuring expression of p38 on lung tissue specimens obtained from nine COPD Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) stage IV19 patients who underwent lung transplantation and four donor controls. p38 expression was measured in explanted lungs of patients with severe COPD to provide evidence that activated (phosphorylated) p38 is upregulated in patients with severe COPD. Post-surgical formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) lung tissue from the COPD patients and the four control donor lungs were sectioned at 2 µm, dried overnight at 37°C, and rehydrated by incubating for 2×5 min in xylene, 2×1 min in 99% ethanol, 1 min in 95% ethanol, 1 min in 70% ethanol, 1 min in 50% ethanol, and 5 min in double-distilled water. Antigen retrieval was performed by incubating the sections at 98°C for 47 min in a Tris–HCl buffer (pH 7.8) containing 1 mM EDTA. All assessments were performed blind to the source of tissue and repeated on two separate occasions (further details in Supplementary material). Furthermore, alveolar macrophages, obtained from lung tissues of patients undergoing lung resection surgery by flushing with PBS, were incubated with 10 ng/mL LPS (#L4516; Sigma Aldrich, St Louis, MO, USA) for 1 h, pelleted, and fixed in formalin. The cell pellets were resuspended in Histogel™ (#HG-4000-012; Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA), allowed to solidify, and processed for dehydration using standard methodology. The FFPE cell pellets were sectioned as above. For the cytokine release assay, human alveolar macrophages were stimulated with LPS from Escherichia coli (Sigma) at a final concentration of 100 ng/mL, and the cells were incubated for 18 h at 37°C. Unstimulated cells were included in all assays as control. Following stimulation, the supernatants were collected, and tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) and IL-6 levels were determined by multiplex immunoassay from MSD™ (Meso Scale Discovery, Rockville, MD, USA) (further details in Supplementary material). Using a structure-based design, AZD7624, a potent and selective competitive inhibitor against p38α/β, was developed with predicted chemistry to support once-daily dosing and optimized for inhaled delivery. A randomized controlled, double-blind, two-period, crossover LPS challenge study was undertaken in healthy volunteers as Proof of Mechanism to investigate the effect of AZD7624 vs placebo on inflammatory biomarkers in induced sputum and blood. Healthy male and female volunteers of non-childbearing potential aged 18–55 years were screened to ensure that adequate samples could be collected by sputum induction.20 In total, 30 volunteers were randomized to one of two treatment sequences (AZD7624 followed by placebo or vice versa) in a 1:1 ratio consisting of a single inhaled lung-deposited dose of AZD7624 (1,200 µg) or placebo 30 min before LPS challenge administered via a SPIRA nebulizer (Spira Respiratory Care Center, Hameenlinna, Finland). For the LPS challenge, 45,000 endotoxin units of LPS was delivered by a breath-activated Mefar dosimeter. There was a minimum of a 28-day washout period between the treatment sequences. Sputum induction was performed 6 h post-challenge (6.5 h post-dose) for measurement of inflammatory biomarkers (Figure S1). Blood samples were collected 0.25, 6.5, 12, and 24 h after AZD7624 or placebo dosing for the analysis of biomarkers. The first participant was enrolled on October 18, 2013, and the last participant’s last visit was on April 29, 2014. The COPD Proof of Principle study was a prospective, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, parallel-group, superiority trial vs placebo conducted at 39 centers in the USA, the Netherlands, South Africa, Argentina, Chile, and Peru. Between October 20, 2014, and December 11, 2015, participants between 40 and 85 years of age were recruited who had a diagnosis of COPD according to the GOLD 2014 guidelines for more than 1 year. Eligible participants had a post-bronchodilator ratio of FEV1 to FVC of ≤0.70, an FEV1 after bronchodilators of ≤70% of predicted normal,21 a smoking history (current or former smoker) of at least 10 pack-years, and a history of two or more moderate or severe COPD exacerbations in the previous year (with at least one exacerbation on current maintenance therapy). A seasonal recruitment strategy in the fall and winter months was used to recruit patients at a time when they were at highest risk of developing pulmonary exacerbations.22 Participants had to be stable on regular maintenance inhaler therapy, defined as at least an inhaled corticosteroid/long-acting β2-agonist combination in the previous 2 months and throughout the study. There was no restriction on additional COPD maintenance treatments such as long-acting muscarinic antagonists (LAMAs). Among the exclusion criteria were any exacerbation (defined as use of oral corticosteroids or antibiotics or hospital admission) related to COPD or respiratory infection within 6 weeks of randomization, and long-term use of oral steroids before and during treatment (apart from prescribed steroids at run-in and for treatment of an exacerbation). The Supplementary material lists all the exclusion criteria and drugs not allowed during the study. Participants meeting all eligibility criteria started a 2-week run-in period with oral steroids (30 mg/day oral prednisolone or equivalent) added to regular COPD maintenance therapy. The oral corticosteroid run-in was used to decrease intra- and inter-patient variability before randomization.23–25 After the run-in period, oral steroids were discontinued and the patients were randomly assigned to a 12-week treatment period in a 1:1 ratio to receive AZD7624 (1.0 mg delivered dose) or matching placebo administered once daily via two inhalations using a novel Aqueous Droplet Inhaler (Scandinavian Health AB, Nacka Strand, Sweden). Study schema are available in the Supplementary material (Figure S2). The trials were approved by the ethics committee at each trial center (details provided in Supplementary material) and performed in accordance with the ethical principles that have their origin in the Declaration of Helsinki and that are consistent with the International Conference on Harmonization guidelines for Good Clinical Practice. All participants provided written informed consent.

Outcomes

The objectives of the Proof of Mechanism study in healthy volunteers were to investigate the effect of a single dose of inhaled AZD7624 on neutrophils (primary) and TNF-α concentration (secondary) in induced sputum after inhalation of LPS, compared with placebo (details in Supplementary material). The effect of inhaled AZD7624 on additional inflammatory biomarkers in induced sputum and blood after oral inhalation of LPS was evaluated as an exploratory objective. Safety was also evaluated. The primary outcome of the Proof of Principle trial was time to first event of moderate or severe COPD exacerbations or early dropout related to worsening of COPD symptoms (composite endpoint referred to as “ExDo”). A moderate COPD exacerbation was defined as “worsening of COPD symptoms requiring treatment with systemic corticosteroid, antibiotics or both.”26 A severe COPD exacerbation was defined as “worsening of COPD symptoms requiring hospital admission.” Blinded adjudication of early dropout related to worsening of COPD symptoms was undertaken by the study team before database lock, and included discontinuations due to patient decision, worsening of COPD symptoms, lack of therapeutic effect, or patient lost to follow-up. Secondary outcomes included moderate to severe exacerbations, lung function assessments (FEV1, FVC, FEV1/FVC), and symptoms of COPD (St George’s Respiratory Questionnaire for COPD Patients [SGRQ-C], Baseline Dyspnea Index/Transition Dyspnea Index [BDI/TDI], and EXAcerbations of Chronic pulmonary disease Tool – Evaluating Respiratory Symptoms [EXACT E-RS™]). Blood biomarkers, of which high-sensitivity CRP, IL-6, and macrophage inflammatory protein-1β (MIP-1β) are reported here, were also measured. Prespecified subgroup analyses included stratification of blood eosinophils into ≤2% or >2% before oral corticosteroid run-in. Safety was also evaluated.

Statistical analysis

The human LPS challenge study was designed to randomize 26 volunteers to yield 20 volunteers with complete data, which corresponds to an 80% power to detect a 10.8% change from baseline in sputum neutrophils between AZD7624 and placebo at the 5% one-sided significance level. The expected within-volunteer SD was set to 12.5%. It was assumed that about 25% of the randomized volunteers would have one period with no data owing to dropouts. Analyses of percentage change in neutrophils and TNF-α were performed using a covariance model with fixed effects for treatment and sequence, and neutrophil percentage differential (or TNF-α) at baseline as a continuous covariate. In the COPD Proof of Principle study, the randomization codes were computer generated by AstraZeneca R&D using the validated AZ Global Randomization system (GRand) and loaded into an Interactive Voice Response System/Interactive Web Response System (IVRS/IWRS) database. Randomization codes were generated in blocks to ensure approximate balance (1:1) between the two treatment arms. The randomization was stratified by country and use of LAMA maintenance treatment. The IVRS/IWRS allocated randomization codes sequentially within each center as patients became eligible for randomization. For each patient randomized, the IVRS/IWRS provided the investigator with a unique Kit ID number matching the treatment arm assigned to the patient. The primary and safety analysis for the COPD Proof of Principle study was conducted with data from a modified intention-to-treat population, which included all participants who received at least one dose of study drug. It was assumed that 56% of participants in the control group would be exacerbation free during the study (3 months), and with 80% power to detect a 45% reduction in hazard rate (time to first event of ExDo and time to first exacerbation) compared with the control group, this led to a sample size estimate of 106 patients per treatment arm with the addition of a conservative group sequential approach with one interim analysis. A reduction of 45% in hazard rate at 3 months is assumed to correspond to a 25% reduction in hazard rate at 12 months.27 For the primary analysis, a Cox proportional hazard model was fitted with treatment arm, country, LAMA maintenance treatment, age, and gender as covariates. Results are reported as the HR, 95% CI, and p-value. Time to first ExDo event is presented as a Kaplan–Meier plot. The secondary endpoint of time to event of moderate or severe exacerbation was analyzed by a Cox proportional hazard model, and the rate of moderate and severe exacerbations was determined by the negative binomial method using the same covariates. Other secondary endpoints, including FEV1, FVC, FEV1/FVC, SGRQ-C, BDI/TDI, EXACT E-RS, and night-time awakenings, were analyzed using a mixed-effects repeated measures model, with treatment, country, LAMA maintenance treatment, and visit as fixed effects; patient as a random effect; and baseline vales as a continuous covariate. Further details of the statistical analysis are available in the Supplementary material. These trials are registered with ClinicaTrials.gov (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT01937338 and NCT02238483).

Role of the funding source

The Proof of Mechanism trial in healthy volunteers was funded and designed by AstraZeneca and Quintiles. The COPD Proof of Principle trial was funded and designed by AstraZeneca and the academic partners. In the Proof of Principle study, AstraZeneca performed trial monitoring and reporting, provided oversight, and verified key results provided from the statistical analyses, which were performed by Quintiles on behalf of, and with oversight by, employees of AstraZeneca. A Data Monitoring Committee (for membership, see Supplementary material), independent of the study team, monitored safety throughout the study. The corresponding author had full access to all the data in the study and had final responsibility for the decision to submit for publication.

Results

Preclinical selection of p38 isoform target

Using isPLA, we observed elevation of activated (phosphorylated) p38α MAPK associated with alveolar macrophages (Figure 1A) and bronchial epithelium (Table S1) in lung tissue sections from COPD patients compared with samples from healthy controls. Following exposure of in vitro alveolar macrophages to LPS, there were marked increases in the total levels of p38β and p38γ MAPK isoforms, while p38α MAPK was the only isoform that displayed increased phosphorylation (Figure S3). AZD7624, tested against α, β, γ, and δ isoforms of human p38 MAPK, achieved a 15-fold selectivity for p38α vs p38β MAPK and >10,000-fold selectivity vs p38γ and p38δ MAPK (Table S2). In human alveolar macrophages, AZD7624 produced concentration-dependent inhibition of LPS-induced TNF-α (Figure 1B) and IL-6 (Figure S4) release, with negative log half-maximal inhibitory concentration (pIC50) values of −9.2±0.4 and −8.8±0.7, respectively.
Figure 1

(A) isPLA of phosphorylated p38α in alveolar macrophages of lung tissue from COPD patients and controls. Data are representative of two experiments. (B) AZD7624 inhibition of LPS-stimulated pro-inflammatory cytokine TNF-α in human alveolar macrophages. Data are presented as mean ± SEM of n=4. AZD7624 attenuation of (C) sputum neutrophil % differential and (D) TNF-α changes from baseline compared with placebo in the human LPS challenge study. Data are presented as mean ± SEM of 24–27 subjects per treatment group. ap<0.001 vs placebo.

Abbreviations: isPLA, in situ proximity ligation assay; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; SEM, standard error of the mean; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor-α.

Clinical Proof of Mechanism

In the healthy volunteer LPS challenge study, 21 of 30 subjects randomized completed the study. Six discontinuations were due to insufficient sputum samples. The baseline demographic characteristics of the study population can be found in Table S3. AZD7624 reduced the increase from baseline in sputum neutrophil percentages and TNF-α following LPS challenge by 56.6% (p<0.001) (Figure 1C) and 85.4% (p<0.001) (Figure 1D), respectively. AZD7624 also significantly reduced additional inflammatory biomarkers from blood (neutrophil percentage, IL-6, MIP-1β, and CRP) and sputum (IL-6, IL-8, and MIP-1β) (Table S4). The incidence of adverse events (AEs) was similar across treatment groups, and the most commonly reported AE was upper respiratory tract infection (Table 1). Overall, 13 (43.3%) of the 30 volunteers reported at least one AE. Six (22.2%) of the 27 volunteers who received AZD7624 reported at least one AE, while nine (37.5%) of the 24 volunteers who received placebo reported at least one AE. One participant on placebo discontinued the study because of an AE of severe pyrexia in the first treatment sequence. No deaths or serious adverse events (SAEs) were reported in this study.
Table 1

Adverse events, Proof of Mechanism studya

VariablebAZD7624
Placebo
Total
(n=27)(n=24)(N=30)
Participants with any AE6 (22.2)9 (37.5)13 (43.3)
Gastrointestinal disorders1 (3.7)01 (3.3)
 Dry mouth1 (3.7)01 (3.3)
General disorders and administration site conditions03 (12.5)3 (10.0)
 Influenza-like illness01 (4.2)1 (3.3)
 Pyrexia02 (8.3)2 (6.7)
Infections and infestations2 (7.4)2 (8.3)4 (13.3)
 Folliculitis01 (4.2)1 (3.3)
 Upper respiratory tract infection2 (7.4)1 (4.2)3 (10.0)
Injury, poisoning, and procedural complications01 (4.2)1 (3.3)
 Arthropod bite01 (4.2)1 (3.3)
Nervous system disorders1 (3.7)2 (8.3)3 (10.0)
 Dizziness01 (4.2)1 (3.3)
 Headache01 (4.2)1 (3.3)
 Presyncope1 (3.7)01 (3.3)

Notes: Data are shown as number (%) of participants.

The safety analysis included patients who received a drug during the treatment period.

Events were coded according to preferred terms in MedDRA, a standardized dictionary for clinical trials.38

Abbreviation: AE, adverse event.

Clinical Proof of Principle

Of the total 327 participants screened for the study, 213 were randomized and 114 were not, mainly because of screening failure (Figure 2). Eighty-six participants came from the northern hemisphere (USA and the Netherlands), and 126 participants came from the southern hemisphere (Argentina, Peru, Chile, and South Africa). Baseline patient characteristics were similar between the two treatment arms (Table 2).
Figure 2

Patient disposition. aInformed consent received. bOne patient was excluded from the analysis following review of protocol deviations owing to a lack of source data and Good Clinical Practice compliance. cPatient withdrawal recorded as “other” by study site investigators; one patient was unable to complete the study visits owing to terminal illness of family member; another patient was withdrawn by the study site investigator after a reassessment of patient eligibility (on day 4 after randomization). dCompletion status of two patients was not recorded.

Table 2

Baseline demographics, COPD Proof of Principle study

CharacteristicAZD7624 1.0 mg
Placebo
(n=107)d(n=105)
Age (years)65.4±8.764.2±8.7
Female gender40 (37.4)36 (34.3)
BMI (kg/m2)27.9±5.927.5±5.4
Ethnicity
 White85 (79.4)88 (83.8)
 Black7 (6.5)2 (1.9)
 Native American3 (2.8)4 (3.8)
 Other12 (11.2)11 (10.5)
Peripheral oxygen saturation (%)95.6±2.295.9±2.0
Former smoker66 (61.7)73 (69.5)
Pre-bronchodilator FEV1 (L)1.14±0.481.15±0.46
Post-bronchodilator FEV1 (L)1.22±0.491.29±0.50
Predicted post-bronchodilator FEV1 (%)44.5±15.644.5±14.9
COPD severity (GOLD)a
 GOLD 222 (20.6)20 (19.0)
 GOLD 349 (45.8)46 (43.8)
 GOLD 435 (32.7)39 (37.1)
Exacerbations in the past 12 months
 279 (73.8)81 (77.0)
 321 (19.6)11 (10.5)
 >36 (5.6)11 (10.5)
SGRQ-Cb56.5±0.160.4±18.4
BDIc5.3±2.25.6±2.0
Concomitant LAMA41 (38.3)40 (38.1)

Notes: Data are shown as mean ± SD or n (%).

The severity of COPD was determined on the basis of the 2015 GOLD grading of airflow limitation in patients with FEV1/FVC <0.70 using post-bronchodilator spirometry, based on which GOLD 2: moderate with 50%

Scores on the SGRQ-C range from 0 to 100, with higher scores indicating worse health status.

The BDI assesses breathlessness in patients with COPD. Scores range from 0 to 12. The lower the score, the worse the severity of dyspnea.

One patient was excluded from the analysis following a review of protocol deviations owing to a lack of source data and Good Clinical Practice compliance.

Abbreviations: BDI, Baseline Dyspnea Index; BMI, body mass index; GOLD, Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease; LAMA, long-acting muscarinic antagonist; SGRQ-C, St George’s Respiratory Questionnaire for COPD Patients.

Primary results

No statistically significant difference between AZD7624 and placebo was observed when comparing the number of days to the first ExDo event (HR =1.39, 95% CI 0.81, 2.40) (Figure 3A). Similarly, no statistically significant difference was seen when analyzing the number of days to the first exacerbation (Figure 3B). Overall, there was a trend toward more exacerbations in the group treated with AZD7624. As detailed in Table 3, there was no statistically significant difference in change from baseline comparing the AZD7624 and placebo arms with respect to FEV1, FVC, quality of life (SGRQ-C), dyspnea index (TDI), symptoms (as defined by EXACT E-RS), use of reliever medications, or night-time awakenings. In the predefined subgroups of baseline blood eosinophils, AZD7624 performed worse in participants with >2% eosinophils (HR =2.20, 95% CI 0.95, 5.09, p=0.07) than in patients with ≤2% (HR =0.93, 95% CI 0.42, 2.05; p=0.85) (Figure 3C and D). The lack of treatment effect of AZD7624 on exacerbations was also observed in subgroups stratified by country, baseline FEV1, eosinophils, CRP, IL-6, fibrinogen, smoking status, bronchodilator response, or presence of chronic bronchitis.
Figure 3

(A) Time to first event of ExDo (HR =1.39, 95% CI 0.81, 2.40; p=0.24). (B) Time to first moderate or severe COPD exacerbation (HR =1.53, 95% CI 0.85, 2.76; p=0.15). (C) Time to first event of ExDo ≤2% eosinophils (HR =0.93, 95% CI 0.42, 2.05; p=0.85). (D) Time to first event of ExDo >2% eosinophils (HR =2.20, 95% CI 0.95, 5.09; p=0.07).

Abbreviation: ExDo, time to first event of moderate or severe COPD exacerbations or early dropout related to worsening of COPD symptoms.

Table 3

Key secondary endpoints, COPD Proof of Principle study

Secondary endpointAZD7624 1.0 mg (n=107a)
Placebo (n=105)
AZD7624 vs placebo
Change from baselineChange from baselinep-valueb
Number of ExDo events40290.25
Number of moderate or severe exacerbations38240.13
Number of moderate or severe exacerbations according to Anthonisen criteria fulfilled17150.75
Number of symptom-defined exacerbations as defined by EXACT daily dairy42500.44
Post-bronchodilator FEV1 (L)−0.003 (0.26)−0.03 (0.23)0.51
Post-bronchodilator FVC (L)−0.045 (0.40)−0.018 (0.39)0.05
FEV1/FVC0.04 (0.06)−0.007 (0.05)0.15
SGRQ-C−4.0 (19.6)−5.1 (17.8)0.52
TDI1.6 (3.2)1.7 (3.2)0.49
EXACT E-RS−0.2 (6.4)−0.2 (6.3)0.55
Use of reliever medication (average puffs per day)−0.13 (2.27)−0.29 (2.12)0.22
Night-time awakenings (% of days during a 2-week period)−8.98 (32.53)−11.65 (33.90)0.66

Secondary endpointAZD7624 (n=107a) vs placebo (n=105)
HR95% CIp-valueb

Time to first moderate or severe exacerbations according to Anthonisen criteria fulfilled0.930.43, 2.010.85
Time to symptom-defined exacerbations as defined by EXACT daily dairy0.860.54, 1.380.54

Notes:

One patient was excluded from the analysis following a review of protocol deviations owing to a lack of source data and Good Clinical Practice compliance.

Mixed-effects repeated measures analysis, fitting treatment, country, LAMA maintenance treatment, visit, gender, smoking history, and treatment by visit interaction as fixed effects; patient as a random effect; and baseline assessment, age, BMI, and height as continuous covariates.

Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; E-RS, Evaluating Respiratory Symptoms; ExDo, time to first event of moderate or severe COPD exacerbations or early dropout related to worsening of COPD symptoms; EXACT, EXAcerbations of Chronic pulmonary disease Tool; LAMA, long-acting muscarinic antagonist; SGRQ-C, St George’s Respiratory Questionnaire for COPD Patients; TDI, Transition Dyspnea Index.

Secondary results

No statistically significant difference was observed in any of the secondary efficacy endpoints between AZD7624 and placebo (Table 3). At study end, there was no statistically significant difference between AZD7624 and placebo in CRP, IL-6, and MIP-1β (Table S5). In the placebo group, CRP increased after steroid withdrawal at day 15 post-randomization. This was not evident in the AZD7624 group (Figure S5).

Safety

The most commonly reported AE was COPD, followed by dyspnea and cough. AZD7624 was well tolerated, although for the majority of reported categories of AEs (Table 4), the incidence was higher for participants in the AZD7624 treatment arm compared with placebo. Overall, 13 participants discontinued the investigational product owing to an AE: nine in the AZD7624 arm and four on placebo. The number of participants with SAEs was similar between the two treatment groups. One participant treated with AZD7624 died from cardiac arrest during the study. The event was not considered related to the study drug by the site physician.
Table 4

AEs and serious AEs, COPD Proof of Principle studya

VariablebAZD7624 1.0 mgPlaceboTotal

(n=108)

(n=105)

(N=213)
Participants with ≥1% AEs71 (65.7)48 (45.7)119 (55.9)
AE that occurred in ≥2% of either treatment group
 COPD31 (28.7)23 (21.9)54 (25.4)
 Cough8 (7.4)2 (1.9)10 (4.7)
 Dyspnea8 (7.4)4 (3.8)12 (5.6)
 Dysgeusia5 (4.6)1 (1.0)6 (2.8)
 Influenza5 (4.6)3 (2.9)8 (3.8)
 Back pain4 (3.7)1 (1.0)5 (2.3)
 Bronchitis4 (3.7)2 (1.9)6 (2.8)
 Nasopharyngitis4 (3.7)4 (3.8)8 (3.8)
 Fatigue3 (2.8)03 (1.4)
 Hypertension3 (2.8)2 (1.9)5 (2.3)
 Productive cough3 (2.8)03 (1.4)
 Asthenia2 (1.9)4 (3.8)6 (2.8)
 Sinusitis1 (0.9)3 (2.9)4 (1.9)
 Peripheral edema03 (2.9)3 (1.4)
 Pain in extremity03 (2.9)3 (1.4)
Serious AE11 (10.2)11 (10.5)22 (10.3)
Death1 (0.9)01 (0.5)
Participants who discontinued because of an AE9 (8.3)4 (3.8)13 (6.1)

Notes: Data are shown as number (%) of participants.

The safety analysis included patients who received a drug during the treatment period.

Events were coded according to preferred terms in MedDRA, a standardized dictionary for clinical trials.38

Abbreviation: AE, adverse event.

Discussion

In this set of studies, we identified the p38α isoform as being activated in patients with severe COPD in both lung macrophages and epithelial cells. We also identified p38α as the predominant isoform activated in the human alveolar macrophage response to LPS stimulation in vitro and AZD7624 as a specific inhibitor of p38α with less activity against p38β. Furthermore, AZD7624 decreased LPS-stimulated cytokine release in human alveolar macrophages in vitro, and decreased systemic and lung inflammatory markers after inhaled LPS challenge. However, AZD7624 failed to provide any benefit in a 3 month COPD exacerbation study. Several oral p38 inhibitors, including losmapimod (GlaxoSmithKline) and PH-797804 (Pfizer), both potent inhibitors of p38 MAPK α/β,28,29 have been tested in COPD on top of a mix of background COPD therapies. These studies have generally assessed lung function, not exacerbations, with no meaningful clinical improvement.16,17 Notably, a post hoc subgroup analysis of losmapimod suggested that p38 inhibition may reduce the frequency of exacerbations among participants with ≤2% blood eosinophils at baseline.30 The current study is the first published study of an inhaled p38 inhibitor in COPD patients with a primary exacerbation-based endpoint. The results of our study suggest that, although inhaled delivery of a p38 inhibitor can avoid the described systemic toxicities of oral p38 inhibitors,18 p38 inhibition provides no benefit with respect to reduction of exacerbations. Although LPS challenge has been proposed as a model of airway inflammation that can be used to evaluate drugs for COPD,31–33 our results demonstrate the limited value of LPS challenge in predicting the benefit for COPD. In the current study, the findings that systemic biomarkers (CRP, IL-6, MIP-1β) were decreased by AZD7624 after LPS challenge were not reproduced in COPD patients. The differential effect on CRP after steroid withdrawal suggested biological activity of AZD7624. However, this did not translate into benefit, as evidenced by an early higher exacerbation rate in the AZD7624 group, at a time when CRP was lower compared with the placebo (Figure S5). Prior studies of anti-inflammatories have shown superior effect in subgroups of COPD compared with limited benefit in unselected patient populations. Roflumilast did not show benefit in an unselected COPD patient population,34 but did benefit patients with chronic bronchitis12 and a CXCR235 inhibitor only showed benefit in active smokers. Evidence suggests that inhaled corticosteroids are more effective in a subset of COPD patients with higher baseline blood eosinophils.36 In the current study, not only did p38 inhibition fail to show benefit, but there was also a trend toward increased exacerbations in patients treated with AZD7624. This trend was largely observed in patients with baseline blood eosinophils >2%. Whereas other anti-inflammatory agents have only demonstrated benefit in subpopulations of COPD, our data suggest that some anti-inflammatories may have undesirable effects in COPD subpopulations. This stresses the importance of understanding the underlying biology and identifying subtypes of COPD so that effective therapy can be developed. Although significant attempts to categorize COPD patients according to radiographic findings and/or clinical findings are ongoing,35,37 the link to biology and pathogenesis remains poorly understood and more research is required. Our study is limited, in that the design of the clinical COPD study contains a number of nonstandard elements designed to allow testing of exacerbations in a relatively small and short study. Although more research is required to validate this new study design, the absence of any signal in secondary endpoints supports the conclusions on the lack of efficacy of AZD7624. The lack of sputum biomarkers in the COPD study limited our ability to understand the specific biological effects of AZD7624 in the lung. The possibility of COPD subgroups which respond to p38α inhibition cannot be ruled out, although the absence of any favorable subgroup response in the current study makes this unlikely. In conclusion, although p38α is upregulated in lungs of COPD patients, AZD7624, an isoform-specific inhaled p38 MAP kinase inhibitor, failed to show any benefit in patients with COPD. As COPD is one of the leading causes of mortality worldwide, new medicines are needed to help treat this expanding global health problem. Incomplete knowledge of the drivers of COPD and exacerbations continues to hamper drug development, and more research is needed to understand COPD and its subtypes of patients.
  36 in total

1.  Inhaled LPS challenges in smokers: a study of pulmonary and systemic effects.

Authors:  Raminder Aul; Jane Armstrong; Annelyse Duvoix; David Lomas; Brian Hayes; Bruce E Miller; Chris Jagger; Dave Singh
Journal:  Br J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2012-12       Impact factor: 4.335

Review 2.  Exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Authors:  B R Celli; P J Barnes
Journal:  Eur Respir J       Date:  2007-06       Impact factor: 16.671

3.  Seasonality and determinants of moderate and severe COPD exacerbations in the TORCH study.

Authors:  C R Jenkins; B Celli; J A Anderson; G T Ferguson; P W Jones; J Vestbo; J C Yates; P M A Calverley
Journal:  Eur Respir J       Date:  2011-07-07       Impact factor: 16.671

4.  Randomised, double blind, placebo controlled study of fluticasone propionate in patients with moderate to severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: the ISOLDE trial.

Authors:  P S Burge; P M Calverley; P W Jones; S Spencer; J A Anderson; T K Maslen
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2000-05-13

5.  Evaluation of oral corticosteroids and phosphodiesterase-4 inhibitor on the acute inflammation induced by inhaled lipopolysaccharide in human.

Authors:  Olivier Michel; Mieke Dentener; Didier Cataldo; Brigitte Cantinieaux; Françoise Vertongen; Catherine Delvaux; Robert D Murdoch
Journal:  Pulm Pharmacol Ther       Date:  2006-09-14       Impact factor: 3.410

6.  Indices of airway inflammation in induced sputum: reproducibility and validity of cell and fluid-phase measurements.

Authors:  E Pizzichini; M M Pizzichini; A Efthimiadis; S Evans; M M Morris; D Squillace; G J Gleich; J Dolovich; F E Hargreave
Journal:  Am J Respir Crit Care Med       Date:  1996-08       Impact factor: 21.405

7.  Once-daily inhaled fluticasone furoate and vilanterol versus vilanterol only for prevention of exacerbations of COPD: two replicate double-blind, parallel-group, randomised controlled trials.

Authors:  Mark T Dransfield; Jean Bourbeau; Paul W Jones; Nicola A Hanania; Donald A Mahler; Jørgen Vestbo; Andrew Wachtel; Fernando J Martinez; Frank Barnhart; Lisa Sanford; Sally Lettis; Courtney Crim; Peter M A Calverley
Journal:  Lancet Respir Med       Date:  2013-04-12       Impact factor: 30.700

8.  Infections and airway inflammation in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease severe exacerbations.

Authors:  Alberto Papi; Cinzia Maria Bellettato; Fausto Braccioni; Micaela Romagnoli; Paolo Casolari; Gaetano Caramori; Leonardo M Fabbri; Sebastian L Johnston
Journal:  Am J Respir Crit Care Med       Date:  2006-02-16       Impact factor: 21.405

9.  Inflammatory biomarkers and exacerbations in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Authors:  Mette Thomsen; Truls Sylvan Ingebrigtsen; Jacob Louis Marott; Morten Dahl; Peter Lange; Jørgen Vestbo; Børge G Nordestgaard
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2013-06-12       Impact factor: 56.272

10.  Blood eosinophils and inhaled corticosteroid/long-acting β-2 agonist efficacy in COPD.

Authors:  Ian D Pavord; Sally Lettis; Nicholas Locantore; Steve Pascoe; Paul W Jones; Jadwiga A Wedzicha; Neil C Barnes
Journal:  Thorax       Date:  2015-11-19       Impact factor: 9.139

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  12 in total

Review 1.  Identification and treatment of T2-low asthma in the era of biologics.

Authors:  Chris Kyriakopoulos; Athena Gogali; Konstantinos Bartziokas; Konstantinos Kostikas
Journal:  ERJ Open Res       Date:  2021-06-07

2.  Of Mice and Monkeys: Neuroprotective Efficacy of the p38 Inhibitor BIRB 796 Depends on Model Duration in Experimental Glaucoma.

Authors:  Wendi S Lambert; Silvia Pasini; John W Collyer; Cathryn R Formichella; Purnima Ghose; Brian J Carlson; David J Calkins
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-05-22       Impact factor: 4.379

3.  P38 inhibition reverses TGFβ1 and TNFα-induced contraction in a model of proliferative vitreoretinopathy.

Authors:  Lauren Schiff; Nathan C Boles; Marie Fernandes; Bar Nachmani; Ronald Gentile; Timothy A Blenkinsop
Journal:  Commun Biol       Date:  2019-05-03

Review 4.  Role of Dual-Specificity Phosphatase 1 in Glucocorticoid-Driven Anti-inflammatory Responses.

Authors:  Jessica Hoppstädter; Alaina J Ammit
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2019-06-26       Impact factor: 7.561

5.  Pseudomonas aeruginosa induces p38MAP kinase-dependent IL-6 and CXCL8 release from bronchial epithelial cells via a Syk kinase pathway.

Authors:  Matthew S Coates; Eric W F W Alton; Garth W Rapeport; Jane C Davies; Kazuhiro Ito
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-02-01       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 6.  Inhaled RNA Therapeutics for Obstructive Airway Diseases: Recent Advances and Future Prospects.

Authors:  You Xu; Aneesh Thakur; Yibang Zhang; Camilla Foged
Journal:  Pharmaceutics       Date:  2021-01-28       Impact factor: 6.321

Review 7.  Role of p38 Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase in Asthma and COPD: Pathogenic Aspects and Potential Targeted Therapies.

Authors:  Corrado Pelaia; Alessandro Vatrella; Luca Gallelli; Nicola Lombardo; Angela Sciacqua; Rocco Savino; Girolamo Pelaia
Journal:  Drug Des Devel Ther       Date:  2021-03-23       Impact factor: 4.162

Review 8.  Marine-Derived Compounds for the Potential Treatment of Glucocorticoid Resistance in Severe Asthma.

Authors:  Cristina Mihaela Ghiciuc; Andrei Gheorghe Vicovan; Celina Silvia Stafie; Sabina Antonela Antoniu; Paraschiva Postolache
Journal:  Mar Drugs       Date:  2021-10-20       Impact factor: 5.118

9.  Dual Role For A MEK Inhibitor As A Modulator Of Inflammation And Host Defense Mechanisms With Potential Therapeutic Application In COPD.

Authors:  Nisha Kurian; Taylor S Cohen; Lisa Öberg; Erica De Zan; Gabriel Skogberg; Stefan Vollmer; Engin Baturcam; Petter Svanberg; Britta Bonn; Paul D Smith; Outi Vaarala; Danen M Cunoosamy
Journal:  Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis       Date:  2019-11-26

Review 10.  Why new biology must be uncovered to advance therapeutic strategies for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Authors:  Jennifer M K Nguyen; Douglas N Robinson; Venkataramana K Sidhaye
Journal:  Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol       Date:  2020-11-11       Impact factor: 5.464

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