Thomas B Casale1, Maud Pacou2, Laura Mesana3, Gaelle Farge2, Shawn X Sun4, Mario Castro5. 1. Division of Allergy and Immunology, University of South Florida, Tampa, Fla. Electronic address: tbcasale@health.usf.edu. 2. Amaris, Paris, France. 3. Amaris, London, United Kingdom. 4. Global Health Economics and Outcomes Research, Teva Pharmaceuticals, Frazer, Pennsylvania, Pa. 5. Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Departments of Medicine and Pediatrics, Washington University, St Louis, Mo.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The interaction of IL-5 with its receptor on eosinophils increases the activation and maintenance of eosinophils; blocking this interaction reduces asthma symptoms in patients with the eosinophilic phenotype. Reslizumab, which binds to IL-5, and benralizumab, which targets the IL-5 receptor α subunit, have not been compared in head-to-head trials. OBJECTIVE: To indirectly compare reslizumab with benralizumab in similar patient populations using a network meta-analysis. METHODS: A systematic literature review was conducted and a network meta-analysis was performed on eligible studies using the Markov Chain Monte-Carlo simulation method and a Bayesian statistical framework. RESULTS: Eleven studies were identified, 4 of which evaluated clinically relevant doses and had outcomes at similar time points. To control for population differences, subgroups were selected for the base-case efficacy analysis: a benralizumab subgroup with blood eosinophil levels of greater than or equal to 300 cells/μL (n = 1537) and a reslizumab subgroup in Global Initiative for Asthma step 4/5 with 2 or more previous exacerbations and greater than or equal to 400 eosinophils/μL (n = 318). Safety was analyzed in the full population (N = 3462). Reslizumab significantly improved Asthma Control Questionnaire (ACQ) and Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (AQLQ) scores compared with benralizumab once every 4 weeks and there were reasonably high posterior probabilities that reslizumab is superior to benralizumab once every 4 weeks and once every 8 weeks for ACQ score, AQLQ score, FEV1, and clinical asthma exacerbations. CONCLUSIONS: This indirect comparison suggests that reslizumab may be more efficacious than benralizumab in patients with eosinophilic asthma in Global Initiative for Asthma step 4/5 with elevated blood eosinophil levels (benralizumab, ≥300/μL; reslizumab, ≥400/μL) and 2 or more exacerbations in the previous year.
BACKGROUND: The interaction of IL-5 with its receptor on eosinophils increases the activation and maintenance of eosinophils; blocking this interaction reduces asthma symptoms in patients with the eosinophilic phenotype. Reslizumab, which binds to IL-5, and benralizumab, which targets the IL-5 receptor α subunit, have not been compared in head-to-head trials. OBJECTIVE: To indirectly compare reslizumab with benralizumab in similar patient populations using a network meta-analysis. METHODS: A systematic literature review was conducted and a network meta-analysis was performed on eligible studies using the Markov Chain Monte-Carlo simulation method and a Bayesian statistical framework. RESULTS: Eleven studies were identified, 4 of which evaluated clinically relevant doses and had outcomes at similar time points. To control for population differences, subgroups were selected for the base-case efficacy analysis: a benralizumab subgroup with blood eosinophil levels of greater than or equal to 300 cells/μL (n = 1537) and a reslizumab subgroup in Global Initiative for Asthma step 4/5 with 2 or more previous exacerbations and greater than or equal to 400 eosinophils/μL (n = 318). Safety was analyzed in the full population (N = 3462). Reslizumab significantly improved Asthma Control Questionnaire (ACQ) and Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (AQLQ) scores compared with benralizumab once every 4 weeks and there were reasonably high posterior probabilities that reslizumab is superior to benralizumab once every 4 weeks and once every 8 weeks for ACQ score, AQLQ score, FEV1, and clinical asthma exacerbations. CONCLUSIONS: This indirect comparison suggests that reslizumab may be more efficacious than benralizumab in patients with eosinophilic asthma in Global Initiative for Asthma step 4/5 with elevated blood eosinophil levels (benralizumab, ≥300/μL; reslizumab, ≥400/μL) and 2 or more exacerbations in the previous year.
Authors: Nora Drick; Katrin Milger; Benjamin Seeliger; Jan Fuge; Stephanie Korn; Roland Buhl; Maren Schuhmann; Felix Herth; Benjamin Kendziora; Juergen Behr; Nikolaus Kneidinger; Karl-Christian Bergmann; Christian Taube; Tobias Welte; Hendrik Suhling Journal: J Asthma Allergy Date: 2020-11-11
Authors: Hans-Uwe Simon; Shida Yousefi; Nina Germic; Isabelle C Arnold; Angela Haczku; Alexander V Karaulov; Dagmar Simon; Helene F Rosenberg Journal: Int Arch Allergy Immunol Date: 2019-11-29 Impact factor: 2.749
Authors: Moritz Z Kayser; Nora Drick; Katrin Milger; Jan Fuge; Nikolaus Kneidinger; Stephanie Korn; Roland Buhl; Jürgen Behr; Tobias Welte; Hendrik Suhling Journal: J Asthma Allergy Date: 2021-07-12