Abstract
Patients with uncontrolled, allergic severe asthma may be prescribed biologic therapies to reduce exacerbations and improve disease control. Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of these therapies have differed in design, with varying results overall and by baseline blood eosinophil count (BEC). This study describes published annualized asthma exacerbation rate (AAER) reductions from RCTs in patients with allergic severe asthma, overall and by baseline BEC category. A literature search was performed to identify published phase 3 RCT data of US Food and Drug Administration-approved biologics for severe asthma in patients with severe, uncontrolled asthma and confirmed sensitization to perennial aeroallergens. Analyses focused on AAER reduction versus placebo in the overall population and/or in those with an elevated or low BEC at baseline or screening. Baseline serum total immunoglobulin E levels varied between RCT populations. In patients with allergic severe asthma across all BEC categories, data were available for tezepelumab, dupilumab, benralizumab and omalizumab only; the greatest AAER reduction was observed with tezepelumab. In patients with allergic severe asthma and BECs of ≥ 260 cells/µL or ≥ 300 cells/μL, AAER reductions were observed with all biologics (tezepelumab, dupilumab, mepolizumab, benralizumab and omalizumab); the greatest AAER reduction was observed with tezepelumab and the smallest AAER reduction was observed with omalizumab. In patients with allergic severe asthma and BECs of < 260 cells/µL or < 300 cells/μL (regardless of historical BEC), an AAER reduction was observed with tezepelumab but not with benralizumab or omalizumab. Differential mechanisms of action may explain the differences in results observed between biologics. Among patients with allergic severe asthma, the efficacy of biologics in RCTs varied considerably overall and by BEC. Tezepelumab was the only biologic to demonstrate AAER reductions consistently across all subgroups. These differences can inform provider treatment decisions when selecting biologic treatments for patients with allergic severe asthma.
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Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of biologics in patients with severe asthma have demonstrated that efficacy varies in the overall allergic population and according to baseline blood eosinophil count (BEC). |
In the absence of head-to-head trials evaluating efficacy in patients with allergic severe asthma to date, a literature review was conducted to describe the effects of biologics on the annualized asthma exacerbation rate (AAER) in the overall allergic severe asthma population and by elevated and low baseline BEC in placebo-controlled, phase 3 RCTs. |
Among patients with allergic severe asthma, all biologics demonstrated efficacy in reducing the AAER in the overall population; greater reductions in the AAER were observed with higher baseline BEC. |
Efficacy in reducing the AAER varied between individual biologics, likely due to their differing mechanisms of action, and differences in study design, study populations and inclusion/exclusion criteria between trials. |
The findings in this study can help clinicians to compare efficacy data as well as inform provider treatment decisions when selecting biologic treatments for patients with allergic severe asthma overall and for those with or without coexisting eosinophilic inflammation. |
Introduction
Allergic asthma is a common phenotype of asthma [1]; it is present in up to approximately 60% of adult patients with moderate-to-severe asthma [2], and its prevalence is increasing [3]. The Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) guidelines recommend biologics as add-on therapies in patients with uncontrolled, allergic severe asthma to improve disease control [4]. Of the six current US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved biologics for moderate or severe asthma, four have indications for patients with an eosinophilic phenotype (benralizumab, mepolizumab, reslizumab and dupilumab [dupilumab is also indicated for oral corticosteroid-dependent asthma]) [5,6,7,8], one (omalizumab) is indicated for allergic asthma [9], and one (tezepelumab) has no restriction by asthma phenotype [10]. Benralizumab (Fasenra, AstraZeneca), mepolizumab (Nucala, GSK) and reslizumab (Cinqair, Teva Pharmaceuticals) target the interleukin (IL)-5/eosinophil pathway [5, 6, 8], while dupilumab (Dupixent, Sanofi/Regeneron) inhibits the activity of IL-4 and IL-13 [7]. Omalizumab (Xolair, Genentech/Novartis Pharmaceuticals) targets circulating immunoglobulin E (IgE), preventing IgE from interacting with mast cells and basophils [9]. Tezepelumab (Tezspire, Amgen/AstraZeneca) targets thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) and therefore inhibits the activity of multiple type 2 inflammatory pathways such as IL-4, IL-5 and IL-13, and tezepelumab has also been shown to reduce airway hyperresponsiveness, likely due to effects on mast cells and smooth muscle [10,11,12,13].
Allergic asthma is generally defined by sensitization to a perennial aeroallergen and is associated with elevated serum IgE levels; eosinophilic airway inflammation is also commonly present. As a result, patients with allergic asthma often have elevated blood and sputum eosinophil levels [14]. The allergic and eosinophilic asthma phenotypes are not mutually exclusive, and there is a high degree of overlap between these phenotypes in the population. It can be challenging to treat patients with severe asthma who have complex and overlapping asthma phenotypes, because they are likely to be eligible for multiple biologic treatments. The IDEAL observational study found that, in patients not currently receiving omalizumab, there was a 27–73% overlap in eligibility for mepolizumab (eosinophilic asthma) and omalizumab (allergic asthma) [15]. Similarly, a pooled analysis of clinical trials of patients with moderate-to-severe asthma found that approximately 40% of patients with allergic severe asthma have elevated blood eosinophil counts (BECs; ≥ 300 cells/µL) [16]. An International Severe Asthma Registry study found that a large proportion of adults with severe asthma had both elevated BECs and elevated serum total IgE levels [17]. In general, higher BECs in patients with asthma are associated with a better response to all of the available biologics [4, 18], including omalizumab treatment of allergic asthma [19]. In light of these considerations, providers face a difficult decision when selecting the most appropriate biologic therapy as an additional controller medication for patients with allergic severe asthma.
To date, no head-to-head trials of these biologic therapies in severe asthma have been conducted, meaning that judgments of comparative efficacy must be based on randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that differ in design. The efficacy of biologic therapies by BEC in severe asthma has been previously systematically summarized [20]; however, no such review has been conducted for patients with allergic severe asthma. For several of the available biologics, efficacy in patients with allergic severe asthma has only been described in post hoc subanalyses. Other complexities arise when attempting to compare trial data because of varying definitions of allergic severe asthma. Whereas the most relevant definition would be severe asthma with perennial aeroallergen sensitization for which regular allergen exposure drives the patient’s symptoms, few trials have collected or reported data on whether allergic symptoms were driving patients’ disease. Moreover, many RCT analyses have required specific levels of serum total IgE in addition to perennial aeroallergen sensitization, owing to the range of total IgE levels associated with approved omalizumab dosing regimens.
To increase our understanding of the efficacy of biologics in patients with allergic severe asthma, this review describes reductions in annualized asthma exacerbation rates (AAERs) in patients with allergic severe asthma analyzed in phase 3 RCTs. The review focuses on each biologic’s data in the broadest population of patients with confirmed sensitization to perennial aeroallergens for whom results have been published. Given that biologic efficacy has been shown to vary with BEC and the clinical challenge of treating patients with allergic and eosinophilic disease, we also summarize the extent to which AAER reduction in patients with allergic severe asthma varies according to baseline BEC levels.
Methods
A literature search of PubMed was performed on May 4, 2023, using the search string in Table S1 (see Supplementary Material) to identify peer-reviewed publications reporting phase 3 RCT data of FDA-approved biologics for severe asthma (omalizumab [9], benralizumab [8], mepolizumab [5], reslizumab [6], dupilumab [7] and tezepelumab [10]) in patients with uncontrolled, allergic severe asthma. The definition of severe, uncontrolled asthma was required to be consistent with the GINA 2023 report [4], and allergic asthma was defined as laboratory-confirmed sensitization to perennial aeroallergens. Early RCTs of omalizumab that enrolled a broad allergic asthma population that did not meet the GINA 2023 definition of severe asthma were excluded from this analysis. The literature search aimed to target studies containing data comparing AAER outcomes between the biologic and placebo in the overall allergic population and/or in those with an elevated or low BEC at baseline or screening; elevated and low BECs were defined as ≥ 300 cells/μL and < 300 cells/μL (or similar), respectively. If data for these specific groups were not available, the closest available subgroup was utilized (i.e., ≥ 260 cells/μL or < 260 cells/μL from the omalizumab EXTRA study) [19, 21]. Additionally, to ensure the standardization of reporting across studies, AAER outcomes were extracted and captured as rate ratios (biologic treatment:placebo). Data on other outcomes (such as lung function and asthma symptom and health-related quality of life scores) were not reported by BEC subgroups with sufficient consistency across studies to enable cross-trial comparisons. As a result, these data have not been included in this review, but they are available in the original publications.
There were no restrictions on how confirmed sensitization to perennial aeroallergens was defined (e.g., through results of a skin prick test or serum testing for allergen-specific IgE). If data for all patients with confirmed sensitization to perennial aeroallergens were not available for a specific biologic, published data for the most inclusive definition of allergic severe asthma were used (i.e., the population with the fewest restrictions to patient inclusion).
Lastly, when conducting the literature search, there were no publication date or language restrictions, nor were there any restrictions on patient age group or other aspects of the RCT design. This review is based on previously conducted studies and does not contain any new studies with human participants or animals performed by any of the authors.
Results
Characteristics of the Included Studies and Patient Populations
The literature search returned 45 results, which were reviewed for inclusion suitability. Forty articles did not meet the inclusion requirements, e.g., they did not report phase 3 RCT data or did not contain relevant AAER data. In addition to the five articles that met the inclusion criteria, there were two primary publications not captured in the focused literature search that were identified by the authors to contain relevant analyses. Data from the primary publications of the NAVIGATOR (tezepelumab) and EXTRA (omalizumab) trials were included to enable comparisons. Therefore, overall, a total of seven publications from six different RCTs were identified that contained analyses and/or subanalyses that met the inclusion criteria (Table 1) [18, 19, 21,22,23,24,25]. All biologics approved for severe asthma were represented except for reslizumab. The definitions of an asthma exacerbation used across analyses were similar (Table 1). Only omalizumab had a phase 3 RCT (the EXTRA trial) that exclusively recruited patients with uncontrolled, allergic severe asthma [21]. For the other trials, results in patients with allergic severe asthma were prespecified subanalyses or post hoc analyses.
Differences in the main eligibility criteria for patients enrolled in the phase 3 trials are summarized in Table 1. Patient populations in the reviewed trials of tezepelumab (NAVIGATOR) [18], dupilumab (LIBERTY ASTHMA QUEST) [26], omalizumab (EXTRA) [21] and benralizumab (SIROCCO/CALIMA) [27, 28] included patients with perennial allergy across all BEC thresholds (i.e., without any BEC exclusion criteria at enrollment). To the best of our knowledge, mepolizumab data for this overall allergic severe asthma patient population have not been reported because mepolizumab RCTs required an elevated historical BEC for enrollment (e.g., the mepolizumab MENSA trial required that all patients had a BEC of ≥ 150 cells/µL at screening or ≥ 300 cells/µL at some time during the previous year) [29].
Regarding the specific analyses or subanalyses for patients with allergic severe asthma, there were some differences in the definition of allergic sensitization (Table 1). The omalizumab analysis was the only one to allow perennial allergy to be assessed with a skin prick or radioallergosorbent test for aeroallergens [19]; all other analyses used a laboratory test such as a fluorescence enzyme immunoassay for serum allergen-specific IgE. The aeroallergen panels for omalizumab and mepolizumab did not include molds [21, 24]. The Phadiatop assay for benralizumab was a multiallergen test that combined perennial and seasonal allergens [30, 31]. Results for this mixed perennial and seasonal allergy population were included because they were the only data available for benralizumab in patients with allergic severe asthma.
Importantly, because of limitations in the panels of perennial aeroallergens used, none of the analyses would necessarily have captured all patients with perennial aeroallergen sensitization. Moreover, no analyses reported confirmation that such sensitization was a cause of asthma symptoms, except for one published estimate for tezepelumab [25]. There were no restrictions on patients’ baseline serum total IgE concentrations in the benralizumab, mepolizumab or tezepelumab analyses. For omalizumab, total IgE concentrations had to be 30–700 IU/mL, based on the dosing guidance in the US prescribing information. For the dupilumab analyses, total IgE concentrations had to be ≥ 30 IU/mL.
The published baseline characteristics of patients in the analyses reviewed are summarized in Table 2. Of note, there was a broad distribution of serum total IgE concentrations within each trial, as well as differences between trial populations, consistent with the total IgE ranges required for enrollment. Patients participating in trials of benralizumab and mepolizumab generally had a higher mean number of exacerbations in the 12 months before study commencement (in both the treatment and placebo arms [27,28,29]; placebo data not shown in Table 2) than those participating in trials of omalizumab and dupilumab, which is also consistent with differences in study inclusion criteria. For tezepelumab, like benralizumab and mepolizumab, patients were required to have ≥ two exacerbations in the 12 months before study commencement [18]. The median baseline BEC of the analyzed study populations was highest for benralizumab (384 cells/µL for all patients with atopy), followed by tezepelumab and dupilumab (group medians ranged from 240 cells/µL to 290 cells/µL); this measure was not reported for the overall study population in the omalizumab EXTRA study. The mean baseline BEC for the mepolizumab study population was 310 cells/µL (geometric mean).
AAER Outcomes in Patients with Allergic Severe Asthma (All Baseline BECs)
In patients with perennial allergy and any BEC, omalizumab, benralizumab, dupilumab and tezepelumab were all associated with a significantly lower AAER after treatment for approximately 1 year compared with placebo (data for mepolizumab were not available; Fig. 1). Although direct comparisons between studies should be made with caution owing to differing study designs, the benefit of tezepelumab over 1 year was greater than that of the other biologics. While 95% confidence intervals (CIs) overlapped for the AAER ratios versus placebo between tezepelumab and dupilumab 300 mg and 200 mg doses, respectively, as shown in Fig. 1, there was no overlap in the 95% CIs for the AAER rate ratio versus placebo between tezepelumab (rate ratio: 0.42 [95% CI 0.33–0.53], corresponding to a 58% [47–67%] reduction in AAER) and benralizumab (rate ratio: 0.66 [95% CI 0.54–0.81]) or omalizumab (rate ratio: 0.75 [95% CI 0.61–0.92]). Indeed, the rate ratio of 0.75 for omalizumab versus placebo is on the borderline of being clinically meaningful [32]. An exploratory analysis of the tezepelumab data demonstrated that AAER reductions versus placebo were very similar in patients in whom perennial aeroallergen sensitization had a confirmed relationship with asthma symptoms (rate ratio: 0.40 [95% CI 29–57]) [25].
AAER Outcomes in Patients with Allergic Severe Asthma and Elevated Baseline BECs
All biologics demonstrated efficacy in reducing the AAER in patients with allergic severe asthma and elevated baseline BECs (≥ 300 cells/µL or ≥ 260 cells/µL) (Fig. 2). The high efficacy in this population is consistent with the positive association between BECs and treatment efficacy rates observed in patients with severe asthma in general [20]. The rank order trend of these biologics remained the same as demonstrated for all baseline BECs: tezepelumab had the lowest rate ratio (0.31 [95% CI 0.21–0.44]), corresponding to the greatest efficacy, and omalizumab had the highest rate ratio (0.68 [95% CI 0.52–0.89]), corresponding to the lowest efficacy, with the two separated by non-overlapping CIs. The rate ratios for dupilumab were 0.38 and 0.43 for the 300 mg and 200 mg doses, respectively (95% CIs were not reported). Mepolizumab and benralizumab reduced the AAER by a similar magnitude (rate ratios: 0.57 [95% CI 0.34–0.96] and 0.60 [95% CI 0.47–0.77], respectively).
AAER Outcomes in Patients with Allergic Severe Asthma and Low Baseline BECs
In patients with allergic severe asthma and low baseline BECs (< 300 cells/µL or < 260 cells/µL), tezepelumab was effective in reducing the AAER relative to placebo to a clinically meaningful extent (rate ratio: 0.55 [95% CI 0.40–0.75]). Benralizumab demonstrated a numerical trend of reducing the AAER, but the upper limit of the 95% CI exceeded one (rate ratio: 0.74 [95% CI 0.54–1.02]). Omalizumab did not demonstrate a meaningful AAER reduction relative to placebo (rate ratio: 0.91 [95% CI 0.66–1.24]). There were no data matching our inclusion criteria for this patient population in dupilumab or mepolizumab analyses (Fig. 3). However, in a post hoc analysis of the MENSA trial (a mepolizumab study that required enrolled patients to have a BEC of ≥ 150 cells/µL at screening or ≥ 300 cells/µL during the previous year) [24], the exacerbation rate ratios for patients with atopic asthma with baseline BECs of ≥ 150–300 cells/µL and under 150 cells/µL were 0.58 (95% CI 0.22–1.58) and 0.22 (95% CI 0.07–0.65), respectively. Of note, the patient numbers in these subgroups were small (BEC ≥ 150–300 cells/µL, n = 39; BEC < 150 cells/µL, n = 38), and all patients with BECs < 150 cells/µL would have had a recent history of BECs of ≥ 300 cells/µL per the study enrollment criteria for the MENSA trial.
Discussion
The varying magnitudes of the AAER reductions observed across biologics can be explained in part by their different mechanisms of action [33, 34]. Specifically, benralizumab (anti-IL-5 receptor) and mepolizumab (anti-IL-5) directly affect eosinophilic inflammation [5, 8] but there is no robust evidence to suggest they affect other pathways or biomarkers such as fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) [35, 36] or serum total IgE levels. Omalizumab binds free IgE and consequently blocks the interaction of IgE with high-affinity IgE receptors on mast cells and basophils; however, omalizumab has limited effects on other pathways, as evidenced by small reductions in BECs and FeNO levels [9, 19]. Dupilumab (anti-IL-4 receptor) blocks the activity of IL-4 and IL-13 [7] but has no direct effect on IL-5-driven inflammation, as evidenced by transient elevations in BEC rather than reductions [37], and no demonstrable impact on airway eosinophil levels [38]. Interestingly, an analysis of the dupilumab QUEST RCT data demonstrated a consistent trend of lower efficacy with dupilumab treatment among patients with evidence of allergic asthma than in patients without evidence of allergic asthma: among patients with a baseline BEC of ≥ 150 cells/μL, AAER reductions versus placebo for those receiving dupilumab 200 mg and 300 mg were 42% and 55% in those with allergic asthma and 71% and 63% in those not meeting the definition of allergic asthma, respectively [23]. Finally, tezepelumab (anti-TSLP) has broad suppressive effects on type 2 inflammatory pathways, reducing the activity of IL-4, IL-5 and IL-13, as evidenced by reductions in blood and airway eosinophil counts, and FeNO and serum total IgE levels [10, 11]. Tezepelumab has also been shown to reduce airway hyperresponsiveness [12, 13], likely through type 2-dependent and -independent effects on airway smooth muscle and mast cell activation [39,40,41]. In addition to varying mechanisms of action of the biologics discussed, differences in study design, study populations and inclusion/exclusion criteria between trials could also contribute to the observed differences in AAER reductions.
Whereas all biologics demonstrated efficacy in patients with allergy and elevated baseline BECs, the magnitude of the efficacy was proportional to the breadth of the biologic’s mechanism of action, with tezepelumab and dupilumab (300 mg dose) demonstrating the highest exacerbation reductions and omalizumab demonstrating the lowest. These findings are supported by a recent Bayesian meta-analysis of biologic efficacy in eosinophilic severe asthma, which concluded that tezepelumab and dupilumab had the greatest efficacy of the biologics evaluated (tezepelumab, dupilumab, benralizumab and mepolizumab); additionally, a recent real-world comparative study demonstrated lower efficacy with omalizumab compared with anti-IL-5/5R biologics (benralizumab, mepolizumab and reslizumab) among patients with allergic and eosinophilic disease [42, 43]. Meanwhile, in patients with allergic severe asthma and a low baseline BEC, only tezepelumab was effective in reducing the AAER relative to placebo. This difference is likely derived from the distinct mechanism of action of tezepelumab compared with other current asthma biologics. Tezepelumab blocks the activity of TSLP, and the broad effects of TSLP blockade, including effects on mast cells, may be particularly relevant among patients with allergic severe asthma in whom mast cell activation may play a central role in disease.
To the best of our knowledge, this is the first literature review to summarize biologic efficacy data for patients with allergic severe asthma in the overall patient population (all BECs) and by baseline BEC. Additional data for patients with different BEC categories would be valuable because some baseline BEC subgroups were not available for some FDA-approved biologics. As noted previously, the multiple differences between trials are an important limitation of this study; these differences included the specific definitions used to identify patients with allergic severe asthma. While comparisons of available published data provide useful mechanistic and clinical insights, the results presented in this review are not equivalent to the findings of head-to-head, randomized studies using the same patient population. It would be beneficial if future trials describe the efficacy of biologics in patients with severe asthma whose symptoms are clinically confirmed to be driven by perennial aeroallergen sensitization and exposures; these patients comprise the allergic severe asthma population in its truest sense. To date, such data are only available for tezepelumab [25].
Conclusion
An effective treatment is needed for patients with allergic severe asthma and elevated or low baseline BECs. Many patients with allergic asthma have concurrent eosinophilia, but there is also a sizable number of patients with allergic asthma and low baseline BECs [16]. The efficacy of biologics in reducing the AAER in RCTs varied considerably overall and by baseline BEC. All biologics with available data were effective in patients with perennial allergy and baseline BECs of ≥ 300 cells/μL, and greater efficacy was seen with biologics with broader mechanisms of action. Only tezepelumab demonstrated a meaningful AAER reduction in patients with allergic severe asthma regardless of baseline BEC. The differences between biologics observed in this study can help to inform provider treatment decisions when selecting biologic treatments for patients with allergic severe asthma, overall and for those with or without coexisting eosinophilic inflammation.
Data Availability
All data and materials used in this research are freely available. References have been provided.
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Acknowledgements
Medical Writing and Editorial Assistance
Medical writing support was provided by Lisa Simpson, PhD, of PharmaGenesis London, London, UK, with funding from AstraZeneca and Amgen Inc.
Funding
This study and the journal’s Rapid Service and Open Access Fees were funded by AstraZeneca, Wilmington, DE, USA, and Amgen Inc., Thousand Oaks, CA, USA.
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Christopher S. Ambrose contributed to the design, literature search string and data acquisition. A medical writer performed the literature search, article screening and data extraction. Christopher S. Ambrose and Jean-Pierre Llanos contributed to the data analysis. All authors significantly contributed to the data interpretation and development of the manuscript content, and critically reviewed each draft of the manuscript. All authors approved the final version of the submitted manuscript and were responsible for the decision to publish the manuscript. All named authors meet the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors criteria for authorship for this article, take responsibility for the integrity of the work as a whole and have given their approval for this version to be published.
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Jonathan A. Bernstein has served as a consultant for Amgen, AstraZeneca, Genentech, Merck, Novartis and Sanofi Regeneron; has participated in research with Amgen, AstraZeneca, Genentech, Merck, Novartis and Sanofi Regeneron; and has received speaker fees from AstraZeneca, Genentech, GSK, Novartis, Optinose and Sanofi Regeneron. Jean-Pierre Llanos is an employee of Amgen and owns stock in Amgen. Gillian Hunter, Neil Martin and Christopher S. Ambrose are employees of AstraZeneca and may own stock or stock options in AstraZeneca.
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This article is based on previously conducted studies and does not contain any new studies with human participants or animals performed by any of the authors.
Additional information
Prior Presentation: Findings from this literature review were previously presented in an oral presentation at the American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology Annual Meeting, November 10–14, 2022, Louisville, KY, USA; however, the literature search dates for this manuscript differ from the published abstract (Bernstein JA et al. Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol 2022;129:S3) and oral presentation.
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Bernstein, J.A., Llanos, JP., Hunter, G. et al. Efficacy of Biologics in Patients with Allergic Severe Asthma, Overall and by Blood Eosinophil Count: A Literature Review. Adv Ther 40, 4721–4740 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12325-023-02647-2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12325-023-02647-2