| Literature DB >> 35698581 |
Claire Hopkins1, Kathleen M Buchheit2, Enrico Heffler3,4, Noam A Cohen5, Heidi Olze6, Asif H Khan7, Jérôme Msihid8, Shahid Siddiqui9, Scott Nash9, Juby A Jacob-Nara10, Paul J Rowe10, Yamo Deniz9.
Abstract
Patients with asthma frequently have comorbid chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) with or without nasal polyps, increasing disease burden and complicating treatment. These post hoc analyses investigated disease-specific health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and general health status in the randomized, placebo-controlled QUEST study (NCT02414854) in patients treated with dupilumab for moderate-to-severe asthma with comorbid CRS. Patients received 300 mg of dupilumab or placebo every 2 weeks for 52 weeks. CRS HRQoL was assessed by the 22-item Sino-Nasal Outcome Test (SNOT-22; items scored 0-5). The 22 items are categorized into 5 domains (nasal, ear/facial, sleep, function, and emotion), and patients report the top 5 most important items affecting their health. General health status was assessed by Euro-QoL visual analog scale (EQ-VAS). Of 1902 patients, 382 (20.1%) self-reported comorbid CRS; 193 patients receiving dupilumab 300 mg q2w or matched placebo were included in this analysis. At baseline, the most impacted SNOT-22 domain was nasal, and general health status was below population norms. Patients rated "decreased sense of taste/smell," "nasal blockage," "cough," "reduced productivity," and "wake up tired" as the 5 most important SNOT-22 items affecting their health. Percentage change from baseline in SNOT-22 total score was significantly greater for dupilumab vs placebo at Weeks 24, 36, and 52 (all p < 0.05). Improvements from baseline were significantly greater for dupilumab vs placebo at Week 52 for all SNOT-22 domains (p < 0.05), except emotion. At Week 52, significant changes from baseline with dupilumab vs placebo were observed for all 5 most important SNOT-22 items affecting their health (all p < 0.05). EQ-VAS was significantly improved with dupilumab vs placebo by Week 12, with improvements sustained to Week 52 (all p < 0.01). In patients with moderate-to-severe asthma who self-reported comorbid CRS, dupilumab treatment vs placebo improved CRS-specific HRQoL and general health status.Entities:
Keywords: SNOT-22; asthma; chronic rhinosinusitis; dupilumab; health-related quality of life; nasal polyps
Year: 2022 PMID: 35698581 PMCID: PMC9188334 DOI: 10.2147/JAA.S363527
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Asthma Allergy ISSN: 1178-6965
Figure 1LS mean percentage change from baseline in SNOT-22 total score (A), LS mean change from baseline in top 5 important SNOT-22 items: (B) decreased sense of smell/taste, (C) nasal blockage, (D) cough, (E) reduced productivity, and (F) wake up tired, in patients with asthma with comorbid CRS.
Figure 2LS mean change from baseline in SNOT-22 domain (nasal, ear/facial, sleep, function, emotion) scores dupilumab vs placebo at Week 52 in patients with asthma with comorbid CRS.