Open Research Newcastle
Browse

Real-world biologics response and super-response in the International Severe Asthma Registry cohort

Download (3.49 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-10, 21:35 authored by Eve 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.

History

Journal title

Allergy

Volume

79

Issue

10

Pagination

2700-2716

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing

School

School of Medicine and Public Health

Rights statement

© 2024 The Author(s). Allergy published by European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.

Usage metrics

    Publications

    Categories

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC