Journal of Respiration (Jul 2022)

Use of Mepolizumab in Children and Adolescents with Asthma in the USA

  • Jaclyn Davis,
  • Pamela M. McMahon,
  • Emily Welch,
  • Cheryl McMahill-Walraven,
  • Aziza Jamal-Allial,
  • Tancy Zhang,
  • Christine Draper,
  • Anne Marie Kline,
  • Leslie Koerner,
  • Jeffrey S. Brown,
  • Melissa Van Dyke,
  • Ann Chen Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jor2030010
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
pp. 123 – 128

Abstract

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Introduction: Pediatric asthma affects 5.5 million US children and is the leading cause of pediatric chronic illness globally. Those with severe asthma have significantly higher healthcare costs compared to those with non-severe disease. Biologics are the newest class of anti-asthma therapy approved for use in patients with severe asthma > 6 years with the eosinophilic phenotype. Objective: The goals of this study were to (1) describe the baseline characteristics of new US pediatric mepolizumab users between 2015 and end dates that varied by data partner (6/30/19–5/31/21), (2) describe asthma medication use in the 12 months preceding and following mepolizumab initiation in this group and (3) assess adherence and persistence to mepolizumab in the 12 months following initiation. Methods: Through an observational cohort study using insurance claim databases, we studied children with a diagnosis of asthma in the preceding 12 months who started mepolizumab and had 12 months of follow-up data. Results: Baseline characteristics of the 72 children who initiated mepolizumab showed variable comorbidities, the most common being allergic rhinitis (88%) and recurrent respiratory infections (71%), as well as varied medication dispensings and patterns of healthcare utilization prior to initiating mepolizumab. Half met the criteria for severe asthma per the GINA guidelines. Comparing weighted averages of treatments dispensed in the 12 months prior to versus following mepolizumab initiation, we observed no significant change in asthma treatments dispensed. Conclusion: This study demonstrates that pediatric patients prescribed mepolizumab have variable previous treatment history and severity of disease, and we found no evidence that mepolizumab alters other asthma medications dispensed in the first 12 months following initiation.

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