posted on 2025-05-10, 21:35authored byEve Denton, Mark Hew, Désirée Larenas-Linnemann, Ruth Murray, Carlos Andrés Celis-Preciado, Riyad Al-Lehebi, Manon Belhassen, Mohit Bhutani, Sinthia Z. Bosnic-Anticevich, Arnaud Bourdin, Guy G. Brusselle, John Busby, Matthew J. Peters, Giorgio Walter Canonica, E Heffler, KR Chapman, J Charriot, GC Christoff, LP Chung, BG Cosio, A Côté, RW Costello, B Cushen, John W. Upham, J Fingleton, JA Fonseca, Peter GibsonPeter Gibson, LG Heaney, EW-C Huang, T Iwanaga, DJ Jackson, MS Koh, L Lehtimäki, J Máspero, Lakmini Bulathsinhala, B Mahboub, AN Menzies-Gow, PD Mitchell, NG Papadopoulos, AI Papaioannou, L Perez-de-Llano, D-W Perng, PE Pfeffer, TA Popov, CM Porsbjerg, Trung N. Tran, CK Rhee, N Roche, M Sadatsafavi, S Salvi, JM Schmid, C-C Sheu, C Sirena, CA Torres-Duque, L Salameh, PH Patel, Neil Martin, CS Ulrik, E Wang, ME Wechsler, DB Price, ISAR LUMINANT Working Group, Celine Bergeron, Mona Al-Ahmad, Alan Altraja
Background: Biologic asthma therapies reduce exacerbations and long-term oral corticosteroids (LTOCS) use in randomized controlled trials (RCTs); however, there are limited data on outcomes among patients ineligible for RCTs. Hence, we investigated responsiveness to biologics in a real-world population of adults with severe asthma. Methods: Adults in the International Severe Asthma Registry (ISAR) with ≥24 weeks of follow-up were grouped into those who did, or did not, initiate biologics (anti-IgE, anti-IL5/IL5R, anti-IL4/13). Treatment responses were examined across four domains: forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) increase by ≥100 mL, improved asthma control, annualized exacerbation rate (AER) reduction ≥50%, and any LTOCS dose reduction. Super-response criteria were: FEV1 increase by ≥500 mL, new well-controlled asthma, no exacerbations, and LTOCS cessation or tapering to ≤5 mg/day. Results: 5.3% of ISAR patients met basic RCT inclusion criteria; 2116/8451 started biologics. Biologic initiators had worse baseline impairment than non-initiators, despite having similar biomarker levels. Half or more of initiators had treatment responses: 59% AER reduction, 54% FEV1 increase, 49% improved control, 49% reduced LTOCS, of which 32%, 19%, 30%, and 39%, respectively, were super-responses. Responses/super-responses were more frequent in biologic initiators than in non-initiators; nevertheless, ~40–50% of initiators did not meet response criteria.
Conclusions: Most patients with severe asthma are ineligible for RCTs of biologic therapies. Biologics are initiated in patients who have worse baseline impairments than non-initiators despite similar biomarker levels. Although biologic initiators exhibited clinical responses and super-responses in all outcome domains, 40–50% did not meet the response criteria.