| Literature DB >> 33445830 |
Abstract
Eosinophils are a type of granulocyte with eosinophilic granules in the cytoplasm that play an important role in allergic and parasitic diseases. Eosinophils are important in the pathogenesis of asthma, and many studies have examined the relationship between them. In allergic eosinophilic asthma, eosinophils act not only as important effector cells but also as antigen-presenting cells in allergic inflammatory reactions. In nonallergic eosinophilic asthma, type 2 innate lymphoid cells in the airways play an important role in eosinophil activation. Direct methods, including bronchial biopsy, bronchoalveolar lavage, and the induced sputum test, are used to evaluate eosinophilic inflammatory reactions in patients with asthma, however, because of difficulty with their implementation, they are sometimes replaced by measurements of blood eosinophils, fraction of exhaled nitric oxide, and serum periostin level. However, these tests are less accurate than direct methods. For the treatment of patients with severe eosinophilic asthma, anti-interleukin-5 preparations such as mepolizumab, reslizumab, and benralizumab have recently been introduced and broadened the scope of asthma treatment. Although eosinophils are already known to play an important role in asthma, we expect that further studies will reveal more details of their action.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-IL-5; Asthma; Child; Eosinophil; Pathogenesis
Year: 2021 PMID: 33445830 PMCID: PMC7873389 DOI: 10.3345/cep.2020.00717
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Exp Pediatr ISSN: 2713-4148
Clinical studies on eosinophils and childhood asthma
| Source | Theme | Methods | Main results | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ross et al. [ | Prognosis of severe asthma | Children with severe asthma were assessed annually for 3 years. | At baseline, 111 children (59%) had severe asthma. | Half of the children with severe asthma no longer had severe asthma after 3 years. |
| After 3 years, only 30% of subjects met the criteria for severe asthma. | Peripheral eosinophilia predicted resolution. | |||
| The odds ratio in favor of resolution of severe asthma was 2.75 (95% CI, 1.02–7.43) for those with a peripheral eosinophil count of greater than 436 cells/mL. | ||||
| Teague et al. [ | BAL patterns and clinical pheno types | BAL for cell count and differ ential, bacterial and viral studies, spirometry, and blood test were done. | Pauci-granulocytic BAL was the most prevalent granulocyte category (52%), and children with pauci-granulocytic BAL had less postbronchodilator airflow limitation, less blood eosinophilia, and less detection of BAL enterovirus. | In 32% of children evaluated, BAL revealed corticosteroid-refractory eosinophilic infiltration amenable to anti-TH2 biological therapies, and in 12%, a treatable bacterial pathogen. |
| Outcomes were compared among 4 BAL granulocyte patterns. | Children with mixed granulocytic BAL and isolated eosinophilia BAL took more maintenance prednisone, and had greater blood eosinophilia and allergen sensitization compared with those with pauci-granulocytic BAL. | |||
| Wang et al. [ | Predictors of as thma remission | 2 Remission definitions: a clini cal definition/a strict defini tion | By adulthood, 26.0% of 879 participants were in clinical remission, and 15.0% of 741 participants were in strict remission. | A considerable minority of patients with persistent childhood asthma will have disease remission by adulthood. |
| Both included normal lung func tion and the absence of symptoms, exacerbations, and medication use. | The degree of FEV1/FVC ratio impairment and decreased airways responsiveness were the predictor of asthma remission. | Clinical prognostic indicators of asthma remission, including baseline lung function, can be seen from an early age. | ||
| The strict definition also includ ed normal airways respon siveness. | The combination of normal FEV1/FVC ratio, airways responsiveness, and serum eosinophil count at baseline yielded greater than 80% probability of remission by adulthood. | |||
| Kansal et al. [ | Induced sputum eosinophil and clinical parame ters | 91 Children aged 718 years with newly diagnosed mild or moderate persistent as thma | Sputum eosinophil percentage was high (3.1%±0.515%) at the time of enrollment which reduced significantly after 3 months of inhaled budesonide therapy. | Eosinophil levels in induced sputum correlate well with clinical asthma parameters and asthma severity in children. |
| The induced sputum eosino phil percentage was ob tained at the time of enroll ment and 3 months after treatment with inhaled budesonide. | Children with moderate persistent asthma had significantly higher values of sputum eosinophil levels than children with mild persistent asthma but the difference was not significant after 3 months of ICS therapy. | |||
| A significant negative correlation was found between reduction in sputum eosinophil levels and improvement in FEV1. | ||||
| Guiddir et al. [ | BAL patterns in steroidrefrac tory asthma and cluster analysis | Children with moderateto severe asthma and pre school children with mode ratetosevere recurrent wheeze were enrolled. | Cluster 1, Neutrophilic steroid-refractory recurrent wheeze phenotype, with 138 children uncontrolled despite high-dose ICS, with more history of pneumonia, more gastroesophageal reflux disease, and the highest blood neutrophil counts; | Inflammation pathway of asthma and recurrent wheeze are related to eosinophil cells in older children and neutrophil cells in younger children. |
| They underwent standardized clinical and blood workup, and BAL evaluation. | Cluster 2, Severe recurrent wheeze with sensitization to a single aeroallergen, with 104 children controlled with high-dose ICS; | |||
| Cluster analysis was applied to 350 children with 34 vari ables. | Cluster 3, Eosinophilic steroid-refractory asthma phenotype, with 108 children uncontrolled despite high-dose ICS with more allergic rhinitis, atopic dermatitis, and food allergies. | |||
| They also had a higher blood eosinophil count and a higher percentage of BAL eosinophil. | ||||
| Ullmann et al. [ | Blood eosinophil counts rarely reflect airway eosinophilia | All patients underwent blood tests, FeNO, sputum induc tion, BAL and EB. | 86% had normal blood eosinophils, but of these, 84% had airway eosinophilia. | Peripheral blood counts are not reliable in characterizing airway inflammation in severe asthmatic children exposed to high-dose steroid therapy, therefore bronchoscopy with BAL should be considered. |
| In children with STRA blood eosinophilia was associated with airway eosinophilia. | ||||
| However, normal blood eosinophil levels did not exclude airway eosinophilic inflammation. | ||||
| Fleming et al. [ | Use of sputum eosinophil counts to guide management of asthma | 55 Children (7–17 years) with severe asthma were ran domized to either a conven tional symptombased management strategy or to an inflammation based strategy. | The annual rate of exacerbations was nonsignificantly lower in the inflammatory management group compared with the symptom management group. | Incorporating the control of sputum eosinophils into the management did not significantly reduce exacerbations or improve asthma control. |
| Significantly fewer subjects in the inflammatory management group experienced an exacerbation within 28 days of a study visit. | Exacerbations were reduced in the short term, suggesting that more frequent measurements would be needed for a clinically useful effect. | |||
| There was no significant difference in the ICS dose. |
CI, confidence interval; BAL, bronchoalveolar lavage; EB, endobronchial biopsy; FeNO, exhaled nitric oxide; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 second; FVC, forced vital capacity; ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; STRA, severe therapy-resistant asthma.
Clinical studies of antieosinophil (anti-IL-5) drugs in children
| Drug (Target) | Type of study | Subjects | Dose & route | Main Results | AEs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mepolizumab (IL5) | A randomized doubleblind placebo-controlled trial [ | 135 Patients, 16–74 years old with severe eosinophilic asthma | Mepolizumab 100 mg subcutaneously every 4 weeks for 20 weeks | The likelihood of a reduction in the glucocorticoid-dose stratum was 2.39 times greater in the mepolizumab group | The safety profile of mepolizumab was similar to that of placebo. |
| The median percentage reduction from baseline in the glucocorticoid dose was 50% in the mepolizumab group | |||||
| Reduced exacerbations, and improved control of asthma symptoms | |||||
| A randomized, doubleblind placebo-controlled trial [ | 576 Patients, 12-82 years old with uncontrolled eosinophilic asthma | Two doses of mepolizumab (75 mg IV, 100 mg SC injection) for 32 weeks at 4-week intervals | Acute exacerbations were reduced (IV group: 47%, SC group: 53%) compared with the placebo group. | The safety profile of mepolizumab was similar to that of placebo. | |
| Acute exacerbations decreased by 32% in the IV group and 61% in the SC group. | |||||
| Both the IV and the SC groups had improved ACQ scores compared with the placebo group. | |||||
| FEV1 increased in the IV group and in the SC group compared with the placebo group. | |||||
| Open-label, uncontrolled, repeat-dose extension study [ | Children aged 6 to 11 years with severe asthma with blood eosinophil counts ≥150 cells/mL at screening or ≥300 cells/mL in the previous year | SC mepolizumab of 40 mg (<40 kg) or 100 mg (≥40 kg) over 52 weeks | Compared to baseline, mepolizumab treatment reduced blood eosinophil counts and asthma exacerbations and improved asthma control. | 27% Experienced adverse events (including headache, upper abdominal pain, and pyrexia) and the majority of them were moderate in intenity. | |
| Reslizumab (IL5) | A randomized, double blind placebocon trolled trial [ | 931 Patients, aged 12–75 years with inadequately controlled asthma with elevated blood eosinophils (≥ 400/mL) stratified by age of asthma onset (early-onset: <40, late-onset: >40 years) | Reslizumab IV 3 mg/kg every 4 weeks | Reslizumab produced a 75% relative reduction in asthma exacerbations compared to placebo. | The adverse event profile of reslizumab was similar in patients with early- or late-onset asthma. |
| Late-onset asthma (≥40 years old) showed higher reduction of asthma exacerbations than early-onset asthma. | |||||
| A randomized, dou bleblind placebo controlled trial [ | 315 Patients aged 12 to 75 years with asthma inadequately controlled by at least a medium-dose inhaled corticosteroid and with a blood eosinophil count ≥400 cells/mL. | Reslizumab 0.3 or 3.0 mg/kg or placebo administered once every 4 weeks for 16 weeks | Reslizumab significantly improved FEV1 and Clinically meaningful increases in FVC and FEF25%–75% were observed. | The most common AEs were worsening of asthma, headache, and nasopharyngitis; most events were mild to moderate in severity. | |
| Reslizumab improved scores on ACQ and AQLQ. | |||||
| A randomized, dou bleblind placebo controlled trial [ | 953 Patients, aged 12–75 years with eosinophilic asthma inadequately controlled | IV reslizumab (3.0 mg/kg) or placebo every 4 weeks for 1 year | A significant reduction in the frequency of asthma exacerbations | Common AEs on reslizumab were similar to placebo. | |
| An international mul ticenter, nonrando mized, openlabel extension study [ | 1,051 Patients aged 12–77 years | Reslizumab 3.0 mg/kg IV every 4 weeks for up to 24 months. | Reslizumab-experienced patients maintained improved lung function and asthma control. | Worsening of asthma and nasopharyngitis was most common. | |
| After participation in 1 of 3 placebo-controlled, phase III trials patients received reslizumab 3.0 mg/kg IV every 4 weeks for up to 24 months. | Blood eosinophil counts appeared to be returning to baseline after reslizumab discontinuation. | ||||
| Initial improvements in lung function and asthma control were maintained for up to 2 years. | |||||
| Benralizumab (IL-5 receptor) | A randomized, double-blind, parallelgroup, placebocontrolled phase 3 study [ | Patients (aged 12–75 years) with at least 2 exacerbations while on high-dosage ICS and long-acting β2-agonists in the previous year | Randomly assigned (1:1:1) to benralizumab 30 mg either Q4W or Q8W or placebo | Benralizumab reduced the annual asthma exacerbation rate over 48 weeks when given Q4W or Q8W. | The most common adverse events were worsening asthma and nasopharyngitis. |
| Both benralizumab dosing regimens significantly improved prebronchodilator FEV1 | |||||
| Asthma symptoms were improved by the Q8W regimen, but not the Q4W regimen. | |||||
| A randomized, double-blind, placebocontrolled phase 3 trial [ | Patients aged 12–75 years with severe asthma uncontrolled by medium dosage to high-dosage ICS plus longacting β₂-agonists. | Patients were randomly assigned (1:1:1) to receive 56 weeks of benralizumab 30 mg Q4W, benralizumab 30 mg Q8W, or placebo (all SC). | Benralizumab resulted in significantly lower annual exacerbation rates with the Q4W regimen and Q8W regimen compared with placebo. | The most common adverse events were nasopharyngitis and worsening asthma. | |
| Benralizumab also significantly improved pre-bronchodilator FEV1 (Q4W and Q8W) and total asthma symptom score (Q8W only) in these patients. |
IL, interleukin; SC, subcutaneous; SGRQ, St George’s Respiratory Questionnaire; AEs, adverse events; IV, intravenous; ACQ, Asthma Control Questionnaire; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 second; FVC, forced vital capacity; FEF25%–75%, forced expiratory flow 25%–75%; AQLQ, Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire; ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; SABA, short-acting beta-agonists; Q4W, every 4 weeks; Q8W, every 8 weeks.