ERJ Open Research (Oct 2023)

A randomised phase 2a study to investigate the effects of blocking interleukin-33 with tozorakimab in patients hospitalised with COVID-19: ACCORD-2

  • Tom Wilkinson,
  • Anthony De Soyza,
  • Miles Carroll,
  • James D. Chalmers,
  • Michael G. Crooks,
  • Gareth Griffiths,
  • Manu Shankar-Hari,
  • Ling-Pei Ho,
  • Alex Horsley,
  • Chris Kell,
  • Beatriz Lara,
  • Biswa Mishra,
  • Rachel Moate,
  • Clive Page,
  • Hitesh Pandya,
  • Jason Raw,
  • Fred Reid,
  • Dinesh Saralaya,
  • Ian C. Scott,
  • Salman Siddiqui,
  • Andy Ustianowski,
  • Natalie van Zuydam,
  • Ashley Woodcock,
  • Dave Singh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00249-2023
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 5

Abstract

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Background Increased serum interleukin (IL)-33 predicts poor outcomes in patients hospitalised with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). We examined the efficacy and safety of tozorakimab, a monoclonal antibody that neutralises IL-33, in improving outcomes in ACCORD-2 (EudraCT: 2020-001736-95). Methods ACCORD-2 was an open-label, phase 2a study in adults hospitalised with COVID-19. Patients were randomised 1:1 to tozorakimab 300 mg plus standard of care (SoC) or SoC alone. The primary end-point was time to clinical response (sustained clinical improvement of ≥2 points on the World Health Organization ordinal scale, discharge from hospital or fit for discharge) by day 29. Other end-points included death or respiratory failure, mortality and intensive care unit admission by day 29, and safety. Serum IL-33/soluble stimulated-2 (sST2) complex levels were measured by high-sensitivity immunoassay. Results Efficacy analyses included 97 patients (tozorakimab+SoC, n=53; SoC, n=44). Median time to clinical response did not differ between the tozorakimab and SoC arms (8.0 and 9.5 days, respectively; HR 0.96, 80% CI 0.70–1.31; one-sided p=0.33). Tozorakimab was well tolerated and the OR for risk of death or respiratory failure with treatment versus SoC was 0.55 (80% CI 0.27–1.12; p=0.26), while the OR was 0.31 (80% CI 0.09–1.06) in patents with high baseline serum IL-33/sST2 complex levels. Conclusions Overall, ACCORD-2 results suggest that tozorakimab could be a novel therapy for patients hospitalised with COVID-19, warranting further investigation in confirmatory phase 3 studies.