| Literature DB >> 29682504 |
Abstract
Improved understanding of the contribution of eosinophils to various chronic inflammatory conditions, most notably allergic asthma, has encouraged development of monoclonal antibodies specifically targeting mediators and surface receptors involved in eosinophil expansion and activation. The pivotal role of interleukin-5 (IL-5) in eosinophil biology, its high specificity for this leukocyte subset, and its involvement in the majority of eosinophilic conditions make it a very enticing target for treatment of eosinophil-mediated disorders. Two types of antibodies have been developed to target eosinophils: antibodies against IL-5 (mepolizumab and reslizumab), and an antibody against the IL-5-receptor-alpha-chain (IL-5Rα) (benralizumab). Both types of antibodies prevent IL-5 from engaging its receptor and in addition, anti-IL-5Rα antibodies induce target-cell lysis. They have been shown to reduce circulating eosinophil counts rapidly in humans with various disorders. Herein, a brief overview of the role of IL-5 in eosinophil biology will be presented, followed by a description of the development and characteristics of antibodies targeting IL-5 or its receptor. Results of clinical trials evaluating the efficacy and safety of these new antibodies in diseases (other than eosinophilic asthma) with prominent tissue eosinophilia are reviewed, followed by safety considerations and potential future applications.Entities:
Keywords: benralizumab; eosinophilic esophagitis; eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis; hypereosinophilic syndrome; interleukin-5; mepolizumab; nasal polyposis; reslizumab
Year: 2018 PMID: 29682504 PMCID: PMC5897501 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2018.00049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Antibodies targeting IL-5 and its receptor.
| Mepolizumab | Reslizumab | Benralizumab | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trade name | Nucala | Cinquair (USA), Cinquaero (EU) | Fasenra |
| Other names | SB-240563 | SCH55700 | MEDI-563 |
| Company | GlaxoSmithKline | Teva | AstraZeneca/Medimmune |
| Regulatory approval | 2015: FDA 4 Nov, EMA 2 Dec (asthma) | 2016: FDA 23 Mar, EMA 16 Aug | 2017: FDA Nov 14 |
| Vial strength | 100 mg | 25 and 100 mg | 30 mg (pre-filled syringe) |
| Route of administration | SC (formerly IV) | IV | SC |
| Dosing (approved in asthma) | 100 mg SC/4 wks | 3 mg/kg IV/4 wks | 30 mg/4 wks (first 3 doses), then /8 wks |
| Dosing (other) | EGPA, HES: 300 mg | – | – |
| Type of Ig | IgG1, kappa humanized | IgG4, kappa humanized | IgG1, kappa humanized |
| Mechanism of action | Neutralizes free IL-5: prevents binding to IL-5Rα | Neutralizes free IL-5: prevents binding to IL-5Rα | Binds to IL-5Rα: interferes with binding of IL-5 and induces ADCC |
| Time to response, blood eos | 1 day | 1 day | 1 day |
| Elimination half-life | SC: 16–26 days, IV: 28 days | 24 days | 15 days |
ADCC, antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity; EGPA, eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis; EMA, European Medicines Agency; eos, eosinophils; FDA, Federal Drug Administration; HES, hypereosinophilic syndrome; Ig, immunoglobulin; IL, interleukin; IL-5, interleukin-5; IV, intravenous; SC, subcutaneous; wk, week.
Clinical trials evaluating anti-IL-5 antibodies in mucosal eosinophilic disorders other than asthma.
| Reference Drug |
Study design Dose Route # Injections Interval | Patients | Response to | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (yrs) | Nbr | Baseline disease characteristics | Primary EP | Blood EOS | Tissue EOS | Clinical (symptoms/signs) | Other endpoints/findings | ||
| Stein et al. ( | Open label 10 mg/kg (max 750) IV 3× 4 wks | 18–41 | 4 | Sympt >9 yrs | – | Mean sixfold decrease (444 to 69.5/mm3) | Mean ninefold decrease | Variable symptom improvement (4/4): reduced dysphagia, vomiting, food impactions, pain, and diet advancement | Endoscopy improved in 3/4 (persistent thickening and furrowing in 1) |
| Straumann et al. ( | RDB PC 750 (2×) then 1,500 (2×) mg IV 4× d0, d7, wk5, wk9 | >18, mean 33 | 11 | Peak EsoEOS > 20/hpf | Peak esoEOS < 5/hpf 4 wks after 2× 750 mg: 0/5 patients | Decreased at wk1, and 12 wks after last infusion (up to 10-fold) | No patients below 15 eos/hpf | No significant difference btw MEPO and PLAC | Endoscopy: 3/5 showed improvement with MEPO versus 2/6 with PLAC |
| No significant differences in endoscopic response btw groups | |||||||||
| Assa’ad et al. ( | RDB (no PLAC) 0.55, 2.5, and 10 mg/kg (3 arms) IV 3× 4 wks | 2–17, mean 10.4 | 59 | Peak EsoEOS ≥ 20/hpf | Peak EsoEOS < 5/hpf 4 wks after 3rd infusion:8.8% patients (no dose response) | Decreased at d1, wk12 | 4 wks after 3rd infusion:
Peak EsoEOS fell to <20/hpf in 32% subjects (all 3 doses) Peak/Mean EsoEOS decreased threefold/fourfold | No significant changes in symptoms | Endoscopy: reduced erythema, vertical lines, furrows in PR (EsoEOS < 20/hpf), and CR (EsoEOS < 5/hpf) |
| 16 wks after 3rd infusion: Peak/Mean EsoEOS remained below BL; lowest in 10 mg/kg group | |||||||||
| Spergel et al. ( | RDB PC 1, 2, and 3 mg/kg (4 arms) IV 4× 4 wks | 5–18 | 226 | Peak EsoEOS ≥ 24/hpf | 1. % Change peak EsoEOS count: twofold reduction | Not reported | Few patients had <5 EsoEOS/hpf at end of study: 2 PLAC, 8 RESLI (1 and 2 mg/kg arms) (all CR had peak BL EsoEOS < 60/hpf) | Symptomatic improvement in all groups (PLAC and RESLI): physician GAS, patient predominant EoE symptom score | Endoscopy not reported |
| Followed by open-label extension study NCT00635089 evaluating long-term safety and efficacy (no published results) | |||||||||
| Gevaert et al. ( | Phase I, PoC, RDB PC 1 and 3 mg/kg (3 arms) IV 1× | 18–63 | 24 | Severe CRSwNP, with bilateral grade 3/4 polyps, or recurrence after surgery | Nasal polyp score at wk12: significant decrease only in the RESLI1 mg/kg arm | Reduced at d1, wk8 | Not assessed | No improvement in symptom scores or nasal PIF | 50% patients had ≥1-point reduction in NP score (up to wk4) |
| Gevaert et al. ( | RDB PC PLAC 750 mg IV 2× 4 wks | Mean 48 | 30 | Severe CRSwNP with grade 3/4 polyps, or recurrence after surgery, refractory to topical CS | Change from BL in total NP score 4 wks after 2nd infusion: −1.30 (PLAC 0.00, | Reduced at wk1 (NS), wk4, wk8 | Not assessed | No significant improvement in symptom scores or nasal PIF | 60% patients had ≥1-point reduction in NP score at wk8 (versus 10% PLAC) |
| > 50% had improved CT findings (versus <20% PLAC) | |||||||||
| In responders (≥1-point reduction NP score), effect maintained 36 wks after last infusion | |||||||||
| Bachert et al. ( | RDB PC 750 mg IV 6× 4 wks | 18–70 | 105 | Severe NP requiring surgery (nasal polyp score ≥3 + VAS symptom score >7) | Need for surgery 4 wks after 6th infusion: 30% reduction (PLAC 10%, | Reduced from GM 500 to 80/mm3 after 1 wk, 50/mm3 4 wks after 6th infusion | Not assessed | Improvement in VAS score for NP severity (-1.8 after 6 infusions) | Sixfold increased probability of having improved NP score after the 2nd infusion |
| 50% patients had ≥1-point reduction NP score (versus 27% PLAC) | |||||||||
| No association btw baseline eos counts and reduction of NP score | |||||||||
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BL, baseline; btw, between; CR, complete response(ders); CRSwNP, chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyposis; CS, corticosteroid; d, day; EoE, eosinophilic esophagitis; eos, eosinophil; EP, endpoint; EsoEOS, esophageal epithelial eosinophils; GAS, global assessment score; GM, geometric mean; hpf, high-power field; IL-5, interleukin-5; IV, intravenous; MEPO, mepolizumab; mo, month; Nbr, number; NP, nasal polyposis; NS, non-significant; PIF, peak inspiratory flow; PLAC, placebo; PoC, proof of concept; PR, partial responders; RDB PC, randomized double-blind placebo-controlled; RESLI, reslizumab; SC, subcutaneous; SNOT, sinonasal outcome test; SOC, standard of care; Tx, treatment; VAS, visual analogy scale; wk, week; yr, year.
Clinical trials evaluating anti-IL-5 antibodies in systemic hypereosinophilic disorders.
| Reference Drug | Study design Dose Route # Injections Interval | Patients | Response to | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (yrs) | Nbr | Baseline Disease Characteristics | Primary EP | Blood EOS | Tissue EOS | Clinical (symptoms/signs) | Other endpoints/findings | ||
| Plotz et al. ( | Open-label 750 mg IV Variable (2, 8, and 10) d1, wk2, then monthly | 60, 62, and 82 | 3 | OCS-resistant eosinophilic dermatitis | – | Reduced at d1 post-Tx | Disappearance of skin EOS 1 wk after 2nd infusion | Resolution of pruritus and skin lesions (delay 3 d to 3 wks) | Prolonged 17-month remission after 2 infusions in 1 patient |
| 4- to 37-fold reduction 1 wk after 2nd infusion | |||||||||
| Twofold to eightfold reduction skin ECP+ cells | |||||||||
| Garrett et al. ( | Open-label 10 mg/kg (max 750) IV 3× 4 wks | 40, 48, and 55 | 3 | Systemic F/P− HES | – | Reduced in all 3 patients from wk2 to 12 wks after 3rd dose | Not assessed | Improved in all patients: skin, nasal congestion | |
| Klion et al. ( | Open-label 1 mg/kg IV Single dose; +5 doses if response 4 wks | 32–52 | 4 | Systemic HES1 F/P+ patient | – | Rapid reduction in 3 patients | Not assessed | Improved in 2 patients: rash, mucosal ulcerations, angioedema, and arthromyalgia | F/P+ patient: no biological or clinical response |
| +5 doses to 2 patients with biological (>30 d) and clinical response: magnitude and duration of response decreased | |||||||||
| BM 4 wks post-Tx: no effect on eosinophilia and cellularity | |||||||||
| Stein et al. ( | Open-label 10 mg/kg (max 750) IV 3× 4 wks | 19–57 | 19 | Systemic HES1 imatinib-resistant F/P+ patient | Evaluation of impact on immune function (Table | Reduced in 18 patients 4 wks after 3rd dose | Not assessed | Not assessed | 3 cohorts on the basis of % reduction in BL HES Tx during study: A 0%, B 25%, and C 50% |
| F/P+ patient responded to MEPO, EOS counts normal until wk28 | |||||||||
| The only non-responder had highest IL-13 levels in PHA-stimulated-PBMC supernatants | |||||||||
| Rothenberg et al. ( | RDB PC (OCS tapering) 750 mg IV 12× 4 wks | Adults, mean 48.1 | 85 | Systemic F/P− OCS-responsive HES (Chusid’s definition) | PDN dose ≤10 mg for ≥8 wks: 84 versus 43% | Eos < 0.6 G/L for ≥8 wks: 95 versus 45%If BL PDN > 30 mg: 100 versus 8% | Not assessed | Not assessed | difference in primary EP achievement btw MEPO and PLAC more pronounced in patients requiring > 30 mg PDN at BL: 77 versus 8% |
| Ability to taper down OCS while maintaining disease stability considered surrogate for clinical response | |||||||||
| daily PDN dose decreased from roughly 30 mg at BL (mean in all patients) to 6.2 mg with MEPO and 21.8 mg with PLAC | |||||||||
| tapered off OCS until study completion: 47 versus 5% | |||||||||
| Roufosse et al. ( | Open-label (extension of MHE100185) 750 mg IV 5 yrs 4 wks (stage 1), then variable (stages 2 and 3) | 18–75, median 50 | 78 | Eligible if participated in MHE100185 (completed or received at least 2 doses of study Tx) | Long-term safety:safety confirmed, No recurrent drug-related AEs/SAEs leading to Tx interruption | Mean EOS < 0.5 G/L in all but 1 patient in stage 2(1 non-responder, EOS count unchanged) | Not assessed | 5 withdrawals due to lack of efficacy on HES symptoms/signs54 continued until end of study | Study design with 3 stages: (1) tapering of background Tx to minimal effective dose, assessment of EOS response, (2) determination of optimal dosing interval in responders (re-dosing if EOS > 0.6 G/L or disease manifestations present), (3) dosing at fixed intervals |
| Kim et al. ( | Open-label (OCS tapering) 750 mg IV 4× (28-wk FU) 4 wks | 28–62, mean 45 | 7 | OCS-depend EGPA, PDN ≥ 10 mg | PDN dose reduction: mean 4.6 mg 4 wks after 4th dose (64% reduction) | Reduced mean EOS to 0.8% at end of active Tx | Not assessed (no change in Fe | Decreased exacerbation rate during active Tx (compared with washout and FU) | Prolonged PDN dose reduction:mean 5 mg 12 wks after 4th dose |
| Moosig et al. ( | Open-label (OCS tapering) 750 mg IV 9× 4 wks | 43–78, mean 62 | 10 | Relapsing/refractory EGPA despite PDN ≥ 12.5 mg and IS (ANCA status unknown) | BVAS 0 with daily PDN<7.5 mg: achieved by 8/10 patients | Mean 0.026 at end of active Tx phase (for the 9/10 patients that completed) | Not assessed | No exacerbations during active Tx period | PDN dose reduction:From median daily PDN dose 19 mg at BL to 4 mg at time of 9th dose |
| Wechsler et al. ( | RDB PC 300 mg IV 8× 4 wks | Mean 48.5 | 136 | Daily PDN dose required to control EGPA 7.5–50 mg | Accrued REM ≥ 24 wks: 28 versus 3% REM at wks 36 + 48: 32 versus 3% | Significant decrease in active Tx arm only (not detailed) | Not assessed | Twofold lower relapse rate in MEPO arm (1.14 versus 2.27) | PDN dose reduction: |
| Higher proportion of patients experienced REM in MEPO arm (53 versus 19%) | |||||||||
| Treatment benefit significant only in patients with BL blood EOS > 0.15 G/L: 33 versus 0% had REM ≥ 24 wks | |||||||||
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abd, abdominal; ACQ, asthma control questionnaire; (S)AE, (serious) adverse event; ANCA, antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody; BL, baseline; BM, bone marrow; btw, between; BVAS, Birmingham vasculitis activity score; (O)CS, (oral) corticosteroid; d1, day 1; ECP, eosinophil cationic protein; EGPA, eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis; EOS, eosinophil; EP, endpoint; FeNO, fractional exhaled nitric oxide; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 s; F/P, FIP1L1–PDGFRA; FU, follow-up; HES, hypereosinophilic syndrome; IL-5, interleukin-5; IS, immunosuppressor; IV, intravenous; MEPO, mepolizumab; mo, month; MTX, methotrexate; Nbr, number; OCS, oral corticosteroids; PBMC, peripheral blood mononuclear cells; PDN, prednisone; PE, primary endpoint; PHA, phytohemagglutinin; PLAC, placebo; RDB PC, randomized double-blind placebo-controlled; REM, remission; RESLI, reslizumab; SAE, serious adverse events; SC, subcutaneous; Tx, treatment; wk, week; yr, year.
Ongoing and planned clinical trials in eosinophilic disorders other than asthma using IL-5 targeted therapy.
| Drug | Dosing | Design | Primary endpoint | Comments | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reslizumab | 1–3 mg/kg IV every 4 wks | Open-label | Long-term safety and efficacy | Study completed, not published112/190 enrolled subjects completed the study; 28/78 withdrawals due to lack of efficacy | NCT00635089 |
| Mepolizumab | 100 mg SC every 4 wks (13 doses) | Phase 3, RDB PC | Endoscopic nasal polyp score | 6-mo extension study for half of the patients | NCT03085797 |
| Reslizumab | 3 mg/kg IV every 4 wks (6 doses) | Phase 3, RDB PC | Change in NP CT score (imaging) | NCT02799446 | |
| Benralizumab | Not available | Phase 2, RDB PC | Change in NP score (endoscopy) | NCT02772419 | |
| Mepolizumab | Initially 750 mg IV (250 mg vials), variable interval | Compassionate use program for life-threatening HES with documented failure of/intolerance to ≥3 standard Tx Long-term access program for patients who participated in a previous HES study | Support provision of mepolizumab until commercially available for HES | Subjects ≥12 yrs | NCT00244686 |
| Mepolizumab | 300 mg SC every 4 weeks (9 doses) | Phase 3, RDB PC | Proportion of patients who experience a flare | Adolescents ≥12 yrs eligible | NCT02836496 |
| Benralizumab | 30 mg SC every 4 wks (total study duration 1 yr) | Phase 2, RDB PC (3 mo) followed by active Tx in all Refractory HES (EOS > 1 G/L despite Tx) | 50% reduction blood EOS on stable HES background Tx at wk12 | Study completed, results awaited | NCT02130882 |
| Mepolizumab | 300 mg SC every 4 wks | Open-label | Systemic CS use | Long-term access program for MEA115921 participants who require ≥5 mg PDN | NCT03298061 |
| Benralizumab | 30 mg SC, 5 injections over 32 wks | Open-label | Safety | NCT03010436 | |
| Reslizumab | 3 mg/kg IV every 4 wks (7 doses) | Open-label | Safety | NCT02947945 | |
(O)CS, (oral) corticosteroid; EOS, eosinophil; IL-5, interleukin-5; IV, intravenous; mo, month; NP, nasal polyposis; OCS, oral corticosteroids; PDN, prednisone; RDB PC, randomized double-blind placebo-controlled; SC, subcutaneous; Tx, treatment; VAS, visual analog scale; wk, week; yr, year.
Biological effects of IL-5(R) targeted therapy other than eosinophil depletion in diseases other than asthma.
| Eosinophils | T cells | Mast cells | Remodeling | Serum/mediators | Tissue/mediators | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stein et al. ( | No change in CCR3 expression by blood EOS | Twofold decrease Eso MC (in 3 out of 4 patients) | Decreased epithelial hyperplasia (in 3 out of 4 patients) | |||
| Straumann et al. ( | Unchanged expression of IL-5Rα by blood EOS | No effect on Eso CD3 T cells | No effect on Eso MC (tryptase+) | Reduced epithelial TGFβ1 + tenascin C (effect delayed, most marked 4 wks after 4th dose) | Decreased ECP + EDN | Reduced EDN+ cells and extracellular EDN deposition>60% reduction eotaxin-1,2,3 and IL-5 positive cells in esophagus |
| Otani et al. ( | Reduced Eso EOS degranulation and clusters | Decreased Eso MC in 77% patients after 3rd infusion | Responders*: Reduced epithelial IL-9+ cells (NS reduction non-EOS IL-9+ cells) | |||
| Gevaert et al. ( | Reduced sIL-5Rα and ECP | Nasal secretions: | ||||
| Gevaert et al. ( | Reduced sIL-5Rα and ECP | Nasal secretions: | ||||
| Plotz et al. ( | Modest reduction in skin T cells (CD4 and CD8) | Reduced ECP, IL-5, TARC, eotaxin | ||||
| Kim et al. ( | Unchanged survival | Unchanged % of IL-5, IL-3, GM-CSF, IFN-γ-expressing PMA/iono-stimulated T cells | Unchanged IL-2, IL-3, IL-8, IL-15, GM-CSF, IFNγ, TNFy | |||
| IL-5 decreased 2–3 d post-Tx (3 patients), then increased at 1 mo (5/6 patients) | ||||||
| Stein et al. ( | Increased expression of IL-5Rα (unchanged CCR3) by blood EOS | Increased % IL-5 expressing PMA/iono-stimulated T cells in 8 (CD4) and 7 (CD8) out of 12 patients | Increased IL-5 in 60% subjects: high MW, precipitated by protein A/G (complexed with immunoglobulin) | Increased production IL-13 by PHA-stimulated PBMC in 13 out of 20 patients (no change in IL-4, IL-5, IFNγ, IL-10, AND GM-CSF) | ||
| Rothenberg et al. ( | Decreased EDN | |||||
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btw, between; ccl, conclusion; d, day; ECP, eosinophil cationic protein; EDN, eosinophil-derived neurotoxin; EGID, eosinophilic gastrointestinal disease; EOS, eosinophil; Eot, eotaxin; Eso, esophageal epithelial; FC, flow cytometry; GM-CSF, granulocyte macrophage colony stimulating factor; gp, group; hpf, high-power field; IL-5, interleukin-5; iono, ionomycin; MC, mast cell; MEPO, mepolizumab; MPO, myeloperoxidase; MW, molecular weight; NS, non-significant; PBMC, peripheral blood mononuclear cells; PHA, phytohemagglutinin; PMA, phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate; RESLI, reslizumab; TARC, thymus- and activation-regulated chemokine; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; Tx, treatment; wk, week.