| Literature DB >> 35046670 |
Andrew N Menzies-Gow1, Claire McBrien2, Bindhu Unni3, Celeste M Porsbjerg4, Mona Al-Ahmad5, Christopher S Ambrose6, Karin Dahl Assing7, Anna von Bülow4, John Busby8, Borja G Cosio9, J Mark FitzGerald10, Esther Garcia Gil11, Susanne Hansen12, Liam G aHeaney8, Mark Hew13,14, David J Jackson15,16, Maria Kallieri17, Stelios Loukides17, Njira L Lugogo18, Andriana I Papaioannou17, Désirée Larenas-Linnemann19, Wendy C Moore20, Luis A Perez-de-Llano21, Linda M Rasmussen22, Johannes M Schmid23, Salman Siddiqui24, Marianna Alacqua25, Trung N Tran6, Charlotte Suppli Ulrik26, John W Upham27, Eileen Wang28,29, Lakmini Bulathsinhala3,30, Victoria A Carter3,30, Isha Chaudhry3,30, Neva Eleangovan3,30, Ruth B Murray3,30, Chris A Price3,30, David B Price3,30,31.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: International registries provide opportunities to describe use of biologics for treating severe asthma in current clinical practice. Our aims were to describe real-life global patterns of biologic use (continuation, switches, and discontinuations) for severe asthma, elucidate reasons underlying these patterns, and examine associated patient-level factors.Entities:
Keywords: biologics; cohort study; international; management; prescribing; severe asthma
Year: 2022 PMID: 35046670 PMCID: PMC8763264 DOI: 10.2147/JAA.S328653
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Asthma Allergy ISSN: 1178-6965
Figure 1Subject disposition and pattern of biologic use of patients enrolled into ISAR or CHRONICLE.
Figure 2Proportion of patients with severe asthma enrolled into ISAR or CHRONICLE (n= 3531) on each biologic (first use) by year.
Pattern of Biologic Use Overall and by Country for Patients with Severe Asthma Enrolled into ISAR and CHRONICLE
| Year in Which ≥2 Biologics Became Available | Population or Country | Continued n (%) | Stopped n (%) | Switched n (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total (n=3531) | 2791 (79.0) | 356 (10.2) | 384 (10.8) | |
| eCRF (n=2656) | 2237 (84.2) | 139 (5.3) | 280 (10.5) | |
| USA only (n=2127) | 1575 (74.1) | 279 (13.1) | 273 (12.8) | |
| Non-USA (n=1404) | 1216 (86.6) | 77 (5.5) | 111 (7.9) | |
| Japan (n=17) | 11 (64.7) | 3 (17.7) | 3 (17.7) | |
| Kuwait (n=139) | 119 (85.6) | 2 (1.4) | 18 (13.0) | |
| Bulgaria (n=30) | 27 (90.0) | 1 (3.3) | 2 (6.7) | |
| Canada (n = 57) | 46 (80.7) | 3 (5.3) | 8 (14.0) | |
| Denmark (n=132) | 112 (84.9) | 0 (0.0) | 20 (15.2) | |
| 2016 Strata (n=219) | 185 (84.5) | 4 (1.8) | 30 (13.7) | |
| Italy (n=523) | 492 (94.1) | 11 (2.1) | 20 (3.8) | |
| South Korea (n=5) | 3 (60.0) | 0 (0.0) | 2 (40.0) | |
| Spain (n=188) | 161 (85.6) | 22 (11.7) | 5 (2.7) | |
| Greece (n=10) | 9 (90.0) | 0 (0.0) | 1 (10.0) | |
| UK (n=303) | 236 (77.9%) | 35 (11.6) | 32 (10.6) | |
| USA (n=2127) | 1575 (74.1) | 279 (13.1) | 273 (12.8) | |
| 2015 Strata (n=3156 | 2476 (78.5) | 347 (11.0) | 333 (10.6) | |
Abbreviations: eCRF, electronic case report form; ISAR, International Severe Asthma Registry.
Figure 3Time to biologic cessation for patients with severe asthma enrolled into ISAR or CHRONICLE who stopped or switched biologic (from 2018 onwards).
Figure 4Pattern of biologic switch for patients with severe asthma enrolled into ISAR or CHRONICLE those who switched once (n=377). Patterns are mutually exclusive; │: or, <, >: sequence of switch; +: add-on use.
Demographic and Clinical Characteristics of Patients with Severe Asthma Enrolled into ISAR or CHRONICLE, Prior to First Biologic, According to Pattern of First Biologic Use
| Biologic Utilisation Group | Continued 2791 | Stopped 356 | Switched 384 | Stoppers vs Continuers: P-valuea | Switchers vs Continuers: P-valuesa |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2776 | 350 | 379 | 0.086 | 0.065 | |
| 18–34, n (%) | 312 (11.2) | 54 (15.4) | 50 (13.2) | ||
| 35–54, n (%) | 1054 (38.0) | 121 (34.6) | 164 (43.3) | ||
| 55–79, n (%) | 1352 (48.7) | 165 (47.1) | 157 (41.4) | ||
| ≥80, n (%) | 58 (2.1) | 10 (2.9) | 8 (2.1) | ||
| 2787 | 356 | 383 | 0.916 | 0.154 | |
| Male | 1002 (36.0) | 129 (36.2) | 152 (39.7) | ||
| Female | 1785 (64.0) | 227 (63.8) | 231 (60.3) | ||
| 2724 | 355 | 378 | 0.701 | 0.310 | |
| Caucasian, n (%) | 2147 (78.8) | 280 (78.9) | 283 (74.9) | ||
| Asian, n (%) | 73 (2.7) | 9 (2.5) | 13 (3.4) | ||
| African, n (%) | 221 (8.1) | 34 (9.6) | 39 (10.3) | ||
| Mixed/Other/Unknown, n (%) | 283 (10.4) | 32 (9.0) | 43 (11.4) | ||
| 1292 | 240 | 172 | 0.804 | 0.876 | |
| Current smoker, n (%) | 24 (1.9) | 6 (2.5) | 4 (2.3) | ||
| Ex-smoker, n (%) | 356 (27.6) | 66 (27.5) | 49 (28.5) | ||
| Never Smoked, n (%) | 912 (70.6) | 168 (70.0) | 119 (69.2) | ||
| 2057 | 125 | 261 | 0.560 | 0.959 | |
| <12, n (%) | 521 (25.3) | 37 (29.6) | 64 (24.5) | ||
| ≥12–29, n (%) | 510 (24.8) | 30 (24.0) | 65 (24.9) | ||
| ≥30, n (%) | 1026 (49.9) | 58 (46.4) | 132 (50.6) | ||
| 1306 | 261 | 188 | 0.295 | 0.590 | |
| Underweight, n (%) | 25 (1.9) | 6 (2.3) | 3 (1.6) | ||
| Normal weight, n (%) | 368 (28.2) | 68 (26.1) | 48 (25.5) | ||
| Overweight, n (%) | 425 (32.5) | 74 (28.4) | 57 (30.3) | ||
| Obese, n (%) | 488 (37.4) | 113 (43.3) | 80 (42.6) | ||
| 514 | 109 | 77 | 0.026 | 1.000 | |
| Ever, n (%) | 467 (90.9) | 106 (97.2) | 70 (90.9) | ||
| 676 | 55 | 67 | 0.608 | 0.493 | |
| Ever, n (%) | 32 (4.7) | 4 (7.3) | 5 (7.5) | ||
| 684 | 73 | 101 | <0.001 | 0.020 | |
| CRSwNP, n (%) | 411 (60.1) | 28 (38.4) | 63 (62.4) | ||
| eCRS, n (%) | 75 (11.0) | 28 (38.4) | 20 (19.8) | ||
| CRSsNP, n (%) | 27 (3.9) | 12 (16.4) | 3 (3.0) | ||
| None | 171 (25.0) | 5 (6.8) | 15 (14.9) | ||
| 865 | 166 | 153 | |||
| Not on long-term OCS | 771 | 150 | 134 | 0.411 | 0.011 |
| <300, n (%) | 326 (42.3) | 58 (38.7) | 41 (31.1) | ||
| ≥300, n (%) | 445 (57.7) | 92 (61.3) | 93 (68.9) | ||
| On long-term OCS | 94 | 16 | 18 | 0.064 | 0.083 |
| <300, n (%) | 47 (50.0) | 4 (25.0) | 5 (27.8) | ||
| ≥300, n (%) | 47 (50.0) | 12 (75.0) | 13 (72.2) | ||
| 0.663 | 0.007 | ||||
| 0-<25, n (%) | 357 (44.9) | 62 (49.2) | 28 (29.8) | ||
| ≥25 - <50, n (%) | 250 (31.4) | 37 (29.4) | 32 (34.0) | ||
| ≥50, n (%) | 188 (23.6) | 27 (21.4) | 34 (36.2) | ||
| 1417 | 207 | 209 | 0.158 | 0.462 | |
| <150, n (%) | 601 (42.4) | 80 (38.6) | 83 (39.7) | ||
| ≥150 - <400, n (%) | 388 (27.4) | 70 (33.8) | 54 (25.8) | ||
| ≥400, n (%) | 428 (30.2) | 57 (27.5) | 72 (34.4) | ||
| 1950 | 307 | 260 | 0.007 | 0.516 | |
| Use, n (%) | 228 (11.7) | 20 (6.5) | 34 (13.1) | ||
| 1950 | 307 | 260 | |||
| LAMA, n (%) | 326 (16.7) | 38 (12.4) | 33 (12.7) | 0.055 | 0.098 |
| Theophylline, n (%) | 26 (1.3) | 6 (2.0) | 10 (3.8) | 0.392 | 0.003 |
| LTRA, n (%) | 224 (11.5) | 19 (6.2) | 24 (9.2) | 0.005 | 0.279 |
| 728 | 46 | 73 | |||
| 503 (69.1) | 39 (84.8) | 62 (84.9) | 0.002 | 0.004 | |
| Median (IQR) | 4.0 (2, 6) | 5.0 (4, 8) | 4.5 (3, 8) | ||
| 101 (13.9) | 0 (0.0) | 8 (11.0) | Nc | 0.802 | |
| Median (IQR) | 2.0 (2, 4) | - | 2.5 (2, 6) | ||
| 715 | 42 | 67 | 0.002 | 0.079 | |
| ≥1, n (%) | 45 (6.3) | 8 (19.0) | 8 (11.9) | ||
| 450 | 47 | 65 | 0.142 | 0.010 | |
| ≥1, n (%) | 180 (40.0) | 24 (51.1) | 37 (56.9) | ||
| 639 | 45 | 63 | 0.004 | <0.001 | |
| ≥1, n (%) | 136 (21.3) | 18 (40.0) | 29 (46.0) | ||
| 1247 | 220 | 191 | 0.733 | 0.794 | |
| <80%, n (%) | 659 (52.8) | 119 (54.1) | 99 (51.8) | ||
| ≥80%, n (%) | 588 (47.2) | 101 (45.9) | 92 (48.2) | ||
| 1260 | 219 | 194 | 0.064 | 0.116 | |
| <0.7, n (%) | 503 (39.9) | 102 (46.6) | 89 (45.9) | ||
| ≥0.7, n (%) | 757 (60.1) | 117 (53.4) | 105 (54.1) | ||
Notes: #Variable that was further restricted to data ONLY within the 12 months preceding biologic therapy. aP-values from Pearson chi-square tests, applying Yates correction when the expected frequency was less than 5 in more than 20% of the sub-categories, for all variables except for exacerbation counts which were compared using the Wilcoxon score test.
Abbreviations: BEC, blood eosinophil count; CRSsNP, chronic rhinosinusitis without nasal polyps; CRSwNP, chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps; eCRS, eosinophilic chronic rhinosinusitis; FeNO, fractional exhaled nitric oxide; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in one second; FVC, forced vital capacity; IgE, Immunoglobulin E; IQR, inter-quartile range; LAMA, long-acting muscarinic antagonist; LTRA, leukotriene receptor antagonist; OCS, oral corticosteroid; NC, Not calculated (no patients on long-term OCS stopped their initial biologic).
Reasons Why eCRF Patients with Severe Asthma Enrolled into ISAR or CHRONICLE Stopped or Switched Their First Prescribed Biologic
| Reason | Stopped (n=139) | Switched (n=280) |
|---|---|---|
| Reason available n (%) | 113 | 183 |
| Insufficient Clinical Efficacy | 72 (63.7) | 158 (86.3) |
| Potential adverse outcomes | 18 (15.9) | 14 (7.7) |
| Biologic Access Restriction | 8 (7.1) | 5 (2.7) |
| Patient Preference | 4 (3.5) | 3 (1.6) |
| Other | 12 (10.6) | 11 (6.0) |
Abbreviations: eCRF, electronic case report form; ISAR, International Severe Asthma Registry.