Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Dupilumab is a monoclonal anti-IL-4/13Rα antibody developed for severe asthma (SA). In France, mepolizumab was commercialized in February 2018. Before this date, many SA patients had reached a therapeutic dead end, with uncontrolled disease despite maximal available treatment. Upon the request of lung specialists involved in SA, French health authorities approved an early access program (temporary Use Authorization) allowing early access to dupilumab (before EMA's decision) from September 2017 to January 2018, for SA patients demonstrating unacceptable steroids side effects and/or life-threatening exacerbations, irrespective of their T2 status.The aim of this retrospective study was to describe the characteristics of SA patients included in the early access program and to assess changes in asthma control after a 12 months treatment.


Clinical Trial Description

Introduction:

Asthma is a worldwide burden affecting more than 300 millions patients. Although the vast majority of asthma patients suffer from mild to moderate diseases whose symptoms can be assessed with inhaled corticosteroids (CSI) and bronchodilators, 3.7% of them present with severe asthma (SA). SA is defined as an asthma remaining uncontrolled despite adherence with maximal optimized therapy and treatment of contributory factors, or that worsens when high dose treatment is decreased. SA represents a small proportion of patients but the very heart of the asthma problem with tremendous health costs, high morbidity and significant mortality. Thus it has been the center of therapeutic research interest for the past decade and different treatments have achieved development and reglementary approvals. Among them, dupilumab is a fully human monoclonal antibody targeting the alpha subunit of the interleukin 4 receptor, blocking both IL-4 and IL -13 pathways. It is therefore interacting with the type 2 inflammation response observed in eosinophilic asthma. The French Ministry of Health therefore opened a window of appeals for TUA from September 2017 to January 2018, allowing early access to dupilumab for SA patients demonstrating unacceptable steroids side effects and/or life-threatening exacerbations, irrespective of their T2 status. By that time indeed, phase 3 randomized clinical trials (RCT) on eosinophilic patients had not yet been published.

In this phase IV real-life study with no placebo group, the investigators aimed to describe patients' characteristics and to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Dupilumab on non-selected SA patients.

Method:

This multicenter retrospective observational real-life study was conducted at 13 public teaching hospitals across the country. All French SA patients who received dupilumab under the TUA between September 2017 and January 2018 were included in the survey, as long as they had received at least one injection and completed at least one follow-up visit in the first 12 months of treatment. No inclusion criteria were required, but patients' files had previously been screened through by health authorities and validated by Sanofi to allow dupilumab TUA. Physicians had had to certify that patients had SA with no other treatment available at that time, and that poor asthma control and/or severe steroid side effects required scaling up treatment. Patients were not required to have eosinophilia. However, patients were excluded from the TUA if they presented with previous hypereosinophilia > 1500/mm3, as symptomatic hypereosinophilia has previously been described with dupilumab in this particular population.

Investigators were free to decide on the frequency of visits, blood tests and function assessments, as to define the tools of control assessment, in adequacy with their usual practice. On line and paper questionnaires were retrospectively filled.

Main objective of the study was to describe asthma control at 12 months and secondary objectives were descriptive data of the population, efficacy, safety and tolerability of dupilumab treatment. Statistics of patients' characteristics were compiled. Efficacy was assessed in the per-protocol population, defined as all the patients who completed visits at 3, 6 and/or 12 months. Differences between baseline and follow-up visits were compared by Wilcoxon signed-rank test and rank-sum test. ACT evolution during study was assessed with a mixed linear model.

Response was eventually assessed by each investigator using the GETE score (5 categories, graded from 1 to 5, respectively defining the disease control as excellent - good - moderate - poor and worsening). Categories 1 and 2 are considered as good response.

Clinical response was defined as gain of ACT score of more than 5 points compared to previous assessment or ACT > 18. Time to first clinical response was evaluated using Kaplan-Meier curves.

Safety and tolerability were evaluated on the basis of each investigator notifications The protocol was approved by the institutional review boards of the French learned society for respiratory medicine - Société de Pneumologie de Langue Française and of the Paris University Hospitals - Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris. The independent Committee for the protection of persons (CPP) gave a favourable opinion. All patients provided oral consent to the collection of their data. As a non interventional retrospective study, no written consent was required. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04022447
Study type Observational
Source Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris
Contact
Status Completed
Phase
Start date August 10, 2018
Completion date April 2, 2019

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT05018299 - Evaluate the Efficacy and Safety of FB704A in Adult With Severe Asthma Phase 2
Recruiting NCT05472324 - Evaluate the Efficacy and Safety of TQC2731 Injection in Patients With Severe Asthma. Phase 2
Recruiting NCT04914078 - Severe Asthma Exacerbations and Mepolizumab Treatment
Completed NCT05576454 - Evaluate the Pharmacokinetics of BAT2606 Injection in Healthy Chinese Male Subjects Phase 1
Recruiting NCT04438408 - National Survey on Care Pathway and Quality of Life in Patients With Severe Asthma According to Their Phenotype.
Recruiting NCT04520165 - Effect of Biologicals on Alternative Functions of Eosinophils in Severe Asthma
Not yet recruiting NCT04463836 - Phenotyping Circulating and Lung Resident Eosinophils in Severe Asthma (P-CLESA)
Recruiting NCT03377920 - Predictive Value of Spirometric PIF to Produce PIF Rate Needed for the Use of Current DPI's. N/A
Recruiting NCT04565483 - Predictive Signature of Benralizumab Response Phase 4
Recruiting NCT04045587 - International Severe Asthma Registry: Canadian Cohort
Completed NCT05616338 - Modeling Bronchial Epithelium in Severe Asthma With Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells (iPSC) N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT02038374 - Clinico-biological Correlation of Severe Asthma in Children N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT02114034 - Cohort Analysis of Clinical and Biological Severe Childhood Asthma
Recruiting NCT06035289 - Register Schweres Asthma - German Asthma Net e.V.
Not yet recruiting NCT03532685 - Clinical, Inflammatory and Functional Evaluation of a Population of Severe and Obese Asthmatics: Follow up N/A
Completed NCT03931954 - Prevalence of the Eosinophilic Phenotype Among Severe Asthma Patients
Recruiting NCT03984253 - Swiss Severe Asthma Register
Recruiting NCT03435237 - Phenotyping Asthma for Bronchial Thermoplasty
Recruiting NCT03476109 - Study of Magnitude and Prediction of Response to Omalizumab and Mepolizumab in Adult Severe Asthma. Phase 4
Active, not recruiting NCT06389058 - Using NLP and Neural Networks to Autonomously Identify Severe Asthma and Determine Study Eligibility in a Large Healthcare System