| Literature DB >> 33329598 |
Corrado Pelaia1, Claudia Crimi2, Alessandro Vatrella3, Caterina Tinello4, Rosa Terracciano5, Girolamo Pelaia6.
Abstract
Asthma is a heterogeneous respiratory disease characterized by usually reversible bronchial obstruction, which is clinically expressed by different phenotypes driven by complex pathobiological mechanisms (endotypes). Within this context, during the last years several molecular effectors and signalling pathways have emerged as suitable targets for biological therapies of severe asthma, refractory to standard treatments. Indeed, various therapeutic antibodies currently allow to intercept at different levels the chain of pathogenic events leading to type 2 (T2) airway inflammation. In addition to pro-allergic immunoglobulin E (IgE), that chronologically represents the first molecule against which an anti-asthma monoclonal antibody (omalizumab) was developed, today other targets are successfully exploited by biological treatments of severe asthma. In particular, pro-eosinophilic interleukin 5 (IL-5) can be targeted by mepolizumab or reslizumab, whereas benralizumab is a selective blocker of IL-5 receptor. Moreover, dupilumab behaves as a dual receptor antagonist of pleiotropic interleukins 4 (IL-4) and 13 (IL-13). Besides these drugs that are already available in medical practice, other biologics are under clinical development such as those targeting innate cytokines, also including the alarmin thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP), which plays a key role in the pathogenesis of type 2 asthma. Therefore, ongoing and future biological therapies are significantly changing the global scenario of severe asthma management. These new therapeutic options make it possible to implement phenotype/endotype-specific treatments, that are delineating personalized approaches precisely addressing the individual traits of asthma pathobiology. Such tailored strategies are thus allowing to successfully target the immune-inflammatory responses underlying uncontrolled T2-high asthma.Entities:
Keywords: IL-13; IL-4; IL-5; IgE; T2-high asthma; monoclonal antibodies
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33329598 PMCID: PMC7734054 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.603312
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Molecular targets of current and future biological therapies of severe type 2 asthma. The targets of approved add-on biologic treatments (highlighted in blue color) of severe asthma include IgE (omalizumab), IL-5 (mepolizumab and reslizumab), IL-5 receptor (benralizumab), and IL-4/IL-13 receptor complex (dupilumab). Moreover, experimental drugs (highlighted in dark magenta color) such as tezepelumab, REGN3500 and fevipiprant target TSLP, IL-33 and the CRTH2 receptor of PGD2, respectively. This original figure was created by the authors using “BioRender.com”.
Licensed biological therapies for severe asthma.
| Licensed biological therapies | Targets | Molecular mechanisms of action | Effects in the control of severe asthma |
|---|---|---|---|
| Omalizumab | IgE | Generation of IgE/anti-IgE immune complexes that inhibit IgE-mediated allergic cascade | ↓ Exacerbations |
| Mepolizumab | IL-5 | Prevention of IL-5 binding to IL-5Rα | ↓ Blood and sputum eosinophils |
| Reslizumab | IL-5 | Prevention of IL-5 binding to IL-5Rα | ↓ Blood and sputum eosinophils |
| Benralizumab | IL-5Rα | Blockade of IL-5Rα | ↓ Blood eosinophils |
| Dupilumab | IL-4Rα | Dual receptor antagonism of IL-4/IL-13 | ↓ Exacerbations |
New potential targets of emerging anti-asthma therapies.
| New potential targets | New potential drugs | Molecular mechanisms of action | Effects in the control of severe asthma |
|---|---|---|---|
| TSLP | Tezepelumab | Prevention of TSLP binding to its receptor complex | ↓ Blood eosinophils |
| IL-33 | REGN3500 | Prevention of IL-33 binding to ST2 receptor | ↑ Quality of life and symptom control |
| PGD2 | Fevipiprant | Selective antagonism of CRTH2 receptor | Weak FEV1 increase |