| Literature DB >> 31334840 |
Aernout van Haarst1, Lorcan McGarvey2, Sabina Paglialunga1.
Abstract
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) remains a leading cause of death worldwide, yet only one new drug class has been approved in the last decade. However, resurgence in COPD treatment has been recently fueled by a greater understanding of the pathophysiology and natural history of the disease, as well as a growing prevalence and an aging population. Currently, there are nearly 25 novel drug targets in development. Furthermore, the indication has undergone some fundamental changes over the last couple of years, including an updated diagnosis paradigm, validation, and approval of patient-reported outcome questionnaires for clinical trials, and drug development tools, such as a prognostic biomarker for patient selection. In the context of clinical trials, this review aims to summarize recent changes to the diagnosis and evaluation of COPD and to provide an overview of US and European regulatory guidance.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31334840 PMCID: PMC6896238 DOI: 10.1002/cpt.1540
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Pharmacol Ther ISSN: 0009-9236 Impact factor: 6.875
Figure 1Timeline of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) drug approvals. The timeline depicts the COPD drugs by class and year of first approval in either the US and/or the European Union market. Publication year of regulatory guidance is also shown. ABECB, acute bacterial exacerbations of chronic bronchitis; E‐RS‐COPD, evaluating respiratory symptoms in COPD; EXACT, Exacerbations of Chronic Pulmonary Disease Tool; ICS, inhaled corticosteroids; LABA, long‐acting β2‐adrenoreceptor; LAMA, long‐acting muscarinic antagonists; PDE4, phosphodiesterase type 4; SABA, short‐acting β2‐adrenoreceptor agonist; SAMA, short‐acting muscarinic antagonist; SGRQ, St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire.
GOLD diagnosis of COPD and initial treatment options
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| History of 0 or 1 moderate exacerbation (not requiring hospitalization) | History of 0 or 1 moderate exacerbation (not requiring hospitalization) |
| CAT < 10 | CAT ≥ 10 |
| mMRC 0–1 | mMRC ≥ 2 |
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Bronchodilator |
LABA LAMA |
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| History of ≥2 moderate exacerbations or ≥1 requiring hospitalization | History of ≥2 moderate exacerbations ≥1 requiring hospitalization |
| CAT < 10 | CAT ≥ 10 |
| mMRC 0–1 | mMRC ≥ 2 |
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LAMA |
LAMA |
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LAMA + LABA (suggested when CAT > 20) | |
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LABA + ICS (suggested when eosinophils > 300) |
Adapted from GOLD guidelines2 with permission.
CAT, COPD Assessment Test; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; GOLD, Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease; ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; LABA, long‐acting β2‐adrenoreceptor agonist; LAMA, long‐acting muscarinic antagonist; mMRC, modified Medical Research Council.
COPD maintenance medication
| Drug | Device | Formulation | Strength US | Strength EU |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SABA | ||||
| Levalbuterol | MDI | Aerosol, metered | 45 mcg | Not available |
| Nebulizer | Solution | 0.31 mg/3 mL, 0.63 mg/3 mL, 1.25 mg/0.5 mL, 1.25 mg/3 mL | Not available | |
| Salbutamol (albuterol) | MDI | Aerosol, metered | 90 mcg | 100 mcg |
| SAMA | ||||
| Ipratropium bromide | MDI | Aerosol, metered | 17 mcg | 20 mcg |
| Nebulizer | Solution | 500 mcg/2.5 mL | 250 mcg/1 mL, 500 mcg/2 mL | |
| SABA + SAMA | ||||
| Fenoterol/ipratropium | Nebulizer | Solution | Not available | 0.5/1.25 mg/4 mL |
| MDI | Aerosol, metered | 20/50, 250/500 mcg | ||
| Salbutamol/ipratropium | SMI | Spray | 100/20 mcg | Not available |
| Nebulizer | Solution | Not available | 3/0.5 mg/2 mL | |
| LABA | ||||
| Arformoterol | Nebulizer | Solution | 15 mcg/2 mL | Not available |
| Formoterol | DPI | Capsule | 12 mcg | 4.5, 6, 9, 12 mcg |
| Nebulizer | Solution | 20 mcg/2 mL | Not available | |
| Indacaterol | DPI | Capsule | 75 mcg | 150, 300 mcg |
| Olodaterol | SMI | Spray, metered | 2.5 mcg | 2.5 mcg |
| Salmeterol | DPI | Powder, metered | 50 mcg | 25, 50 mcg |
| LAMA | ||||
| Aclidinium bromide | DPI | Powder, metered | 400 mcg | 322 mcg |
| Glycopyrronium bromide | DPI | Capsule | 15.6 mcg | 44 mcg |
| Tiotropium | DPI | Capsule | 18 mcg | Not available |
| SMI | Spray, metered | 1.25, 2.5 mcg | 2.5 mcg | |
| Umeclidinium | DPI | Powder, metered | 62.5 mcg | 55 mcg |
| LABA + LAMA | ||||
| Formoterol/Aclidinium | DPI | Powder, metered | 400/12 mcg | 340/12 mcg |
| Formoterol/Glycopyrronium | MDI | Aerosol, metered | 4.8/9 mcg | 5/7.2 mcg |
| Indacaterol/Glycopyrronium | DPI | Capsule | 27.5/15.6 mcg | 85/43 mcg |
| Vilanterol/Umeclidinum | DPI | Powder, metered | 25/62.5 mcg | 22/55 mcg |
| Olodaterol/Tiotropium | SMI | Spray, metered | 2.5/2.5 mcg | 2.5/2.5 mcg |
| LABA + ICS | ||||
| Formoterol/Beclomethasone | MDI | Aerosol | Not available | 6/100 mcg |
| DPI | Powder | Not available | 6/100 mcg | |
| Formoterol/Budesonide | MDI | Aerosol | 4.5/80, 4.5/160 mcg | 4.5/80, 4.5/160, 9/230 mcg |
| Formoterol/Momestasone | MDI | Aerosol | 5/100, 5/200 mcg | Not available |
| Vilanterol/Fluticasone | DPI | Powder, metered | 25/100, 25/200 mcg | 100/25 mcg, 200/25 mcg |
| Salmeterol/Fluticasone | DPI | Capsule | 50/100, 50/250, 50/500 mcg | 50/500 mcg |
| MDI | Aerosol, metered | 14/55, 14/113, 14/232, 21/45, 21/115, 21/230 mcg | Not available | |
| LABA + LAMA + ICS | ||||
| Vilanterol/Umeclidinium/Fluticasone | DPI | Powder, metered | 25/62.5/100 mcg | 22/55/92 mcg |
| Formoterol/Glycopyrronium/Beclometasone | MDI | Aerosol | Not available | 5/9/87 mcg |
| PDE4 Inhibitor | ||||
| Roflumilast | — | Tablet | 500 mcg | 500 mcg |
COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; DPI, dry powder inhaler; EU, European Union; ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; LABA, long‐acting β2‐adrenoreceptor agonist; LAMA, long‐acting muscarinic antagonist; MDI, metered dose inhaler; PDE4, phosphodiesterase type 4; SABA, short‐acting β2‐adrenoreceptor agonist; SAMA, short‐acting muscarinic antagonist; SMI, soft mist inhaler; US, United States.
Figure 2Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) drug pipeline. The COPD indication pipeline is robust with a number of novel mechanisms and targets. Listing obtained from Clarivate Analytics Cortellis (Philadelphia, PA) database and literature review.17 CFTR, cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator; MARCKS, myristoylated alanine‐rich C‐kinase substrate; NK, natural killer.
Common COPD clinical trial outcome measures and regulatory agency comments
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| ● Rate of (reduction in) COPD exacerbations |
| FDA: Historically, severity of exacerbations, delay in the occurrence of an exacerbation, and duration of exacerbations to be captured as secondary end points when reduction in exacerbations is the primary outcome |
| EMA: Requires supporting efficacy from secondary end points of function and symptoms or health status |
| ● Change from baseline FEV1 |
| FDA: Historically accepted end point with recommended serial measurements over the duration of the study to ensure that the beneficial effect is sustained over time |
| EMA: Additional evidence of efficacy must be demonstrated through the use of a coprimary end point, which should either be a symptom‐based or patient‐related end point |
| ● Change from baseline SGRQ |
| FDA: Coprimary or secondary end point |
| EMA: Coprimary end point with lung function measurements |
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| ● Change from baseline FVC |
| ● Change in symptom‐based or patient‐related end points; examples time to first COPD exacerbation, change in baseline CAT, 6MWT, SGRQ, etc. |
| ● Number of emergency visits |
| ● Number of hospitalizations |
| ● Number of subjects with TEAEs and/or SAEs |
| ● All‐cause mortality or time to all‐cause mortality |
| EMA: Should be considered a relevant safety end point |
Refer to FDA35 and EMA40 guidance documents for details.
6MWT, 6‐minute walk test; CAT, COPD Assessment Test; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; EMA, European Medicines Agency; FDA, US Food and Drug Administration; FEV1, forced expiratory volumes in 1 second; FVC, forced vital capacity; SAEs, serious adverse events; SGRQ, St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire; TEAEs, treatment‐emergent adverse events.