ERJ Open Research (May 2023)

Characteristics of severe asthma patients on biologics: a real-life European registry study

  • Stefania Principe,
  • Levi B. Richards,
  • Simone Hashimoto,
  • Johannes Anthon Kroes,
  • Job J.M.H. Van Bragt,
  • Susanne J. Vijverberg,
  • Jacob K. Sont,
  • Nicola Scichilone,
  • Kristina Bieksiene,
  • Anneke Ten Brinke,
  • Zsuzsanna Csoma,
  • Barbro Dahlén,
  • Bilun Gemicioglu,
  • Ineta Grisle,
  • Piotr Kuna,
  • Zorica Lazic,
  • Florin Mihaltan,
  • Sanja Popović-Grle,
  • Sabina Škrgat,
  • Alessandro Marcon,
  • Marco Caminati,
  • Ratko Djukanovic,
  • Celeste Porsbjerg,
  • Anke-Hilse Maitland Van Der Zee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00586-2022
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 3

Abstract

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Background The use of anti-interleukin-5 (IL5) for severe asthma is based on criteria from randomised controlled trials (RCTs), but in real-life patients might not fulfil the eligibility criteria but may benefit from biologics. We aimed to characterise patients starting anti-IL5(R) in Europe and evaluate the discrepancies between initiation of anti-IL5(R) in real life and in RCTs. Materials and methods We performed a cross-sectional analysis with data from the severe asthma patients at the start of anti-IL5(R) in the Severe Heterogeneous Asthma Research collaboration Patient-centred (SHARP Central) registry. We compared the baseline characteristics of the patients starting anti-IL5(R) from 11 European countries within SHARP with the baseline characteristics of the severe asthma patients from 10 RCTs (four for mepolizumab, three for benralizumab and three for reslizumab). Patients were evaluated following eligibility criteria from the RCTs of anti-IL5 therapies. Results Patients starting anti-IL5(R) in Europe (n=1231) differed in terms of smoking history, clinical characteristics and medication use. The characteristics of severe asthma patients in the SHARP registry differed from the characteristics of patients in RCTs. Only 327 (26.56%) patients fulfilled eligibility criteria of all the RCTs; 24 patients were eligible for mepolizumab, 100 for benralizumab and 52 reslizumab. The main characteristics of ineligibility were: ≥10 pack-years, respiratory diseases other than asthma, Asthma Control Questionnaire score ≤1.5 and low-dose inhaled corticosteroids. Conclusion A large proportion of patients in the SHARP registry would not have been eligible for anti-IL5(R) treatment in RCTs, demonstrating the importance of real-life cohorts in describing the efficacy of biologics in a broader population of patients with severe asthma.