Journal of Asthma and Allergy (Aug 2018)

Benralizumab does not impair antibody response to seasonal influenza vaccination in adolescent and young adult patients with moderate to severe asthma: results from the Phase IIIb ALIZE trial

  • Zeitlin PL,
  • Leong M,
  • Cole J,
  • Mallory RM,
  • Shih VH,
  • Olsson RF,
  • Goldman M

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 11
pp. 181 – 192

Abstract

Read online

Pamela L Zeitlin,1 Mila Leong,2 Jeremy Cole,3 Raburn M Mallory,4 Vivian H Shih,5 Richard F Olsson,6 Mitchell Goldman5 On behalf of the ALIZE study investigators 1Department of Pediatrics, National Jewish Health, Denver, CO, USA; 2Pediatric Pulmonary and Asthma Associates, Northfield, NJ, USA; 3OK Clinical Research, LLC, Edmond, OK, USA; 4MedImmune LLC, Gaithersburg, MD, USA; 5AstraZeneca, Gaithersburg, MD, USA; 6AstraZeneca, Gothenburg, Sweden Background and objectives: Benralizumab is a humanized, afucosylated monoclonal antibody against the IL-5Rα. Initial monthly followed by every-other-month injections result in rapid and nearly complete eosinophil depletion. We evaluated whether three doses of benralizumab modifies antibody response to seasonal influenza vaccination for adolescent/young adult patients with moderate to severe asthma.Methods: ALIZE (NCT02814643) was a Phase IIIb randomized controlled trial of patients aged 12–21 years receiving medium- to high-dosage inhaled corticosteroids/long-acting β2-agonists. Patients received benralizumab 30 mg or placebo at Weeks 0, 4, and 8, plus tetravalent influenza vaccination at Week 8. At Week 12, strain-specific antibody responses following vaccination were assessed for four influenza antigens by hemagglutination inhibition (HAI) and microneutralization (MN) assays.Results: A total of 103 patients were randomized and received benralizumab (n=51) or placebo (n=52). There were no consistent differences in HAI or MN antibody responses at Week 12 between patients receiving benralizumab or placebo. HAI geometric mean fold rises (GMFRs) for all influenza strains tested were 3.3–4.2 for benralizumab vs 3.4–3.9 for placebo; MN GMFRs were 2.8–5.1 for benralizumab vs 3.2–4.4 for placebo. A ≥4-fold rise in HAI from Weeks 8 to 12 occurred in 44.0%–56.0% and 30.6%–49.0% of patients receiving benralizumab and placebo, respectively. At Week 12, 78.0%–100% vs 79.6%–100% of patients receiving benralizumab and placebo, respectively, achieved a ≥40 HAI antibody titer. There were no significant safety findings.Conclusion: Benralizumab did not impair the antibody response to seasonal virus vaccination in adolescents and young adult patients with moderate to severe asthma. Keywords: benralizumab, interleukin-5, interleukin-5 receptor, influenza vaccination, eosinophils, antibody response, asthma

Keywords