Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
  • Asthma
  • COPD
Type
Interventional
Phase
Phase 2
Design
Allocation: RandomizedIntervention Model: Parallel AssignmentMasking: Double (Participant, Investigator)Primary Purpose: Treatment

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 18 years and 125 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

Acute exacerbations of asthma and COPD are an important cause of hospital admission and the main cause of annual winter bed shortages; responsible for the majority of asthma and COPD exacerbations. Despite current guideline recommendations, treatment with oral corticosteroids (for both asthma and CO...

Acute exacerbations of asthma and COPD are an important cause of hospital admission and the main cause of annual winter bed shortages; responsible for the majority of asthma and COPD exacerbations. Despite current guideline recommendations, treatment with oral corticosteroids (for both asthma and COPD exacerbations) and antibiotics (for COPD exacerbations) is not wholly adequate, whilst a significant number of patients suffer side effects from these medicines. Furthermore, almost 40% of patients with an exacerbation, treated in a standard way with oral prednisolone, do not respond and require further treatment or re-treatment, and depressingly following a severe COPD exacerbation, 10% die within 30 days. The risk of death in patients with asthma is especially high in those who have poorly controlled asthm5. These events are all by definition treatment failures or non-response and impact on patient outcomes. In patients with COPD the outlook is particularly bleak following a second hospital admission with a significant increase in mortality. Inflammation in exacerbations of asthma and COPD It is now recognised that there are two dominant patterns of airway inflammation in patients presenting with an acute wheezing illness: 1. infection associated neutrophilic airway inflammation; and 2. non-infection related eosinophilic airway inflammation; both related to asthma and COPD, with a predominance of non-infection related eosinophilic inflammation in patients with asthma. These patterns of airway inflammation are very rarely seen together and cannot be distinguished reliably by clinical categories (i.e. asthma or COPD) or a standard clinical assessment. They can however be identified by the peripheral blood eosinophil count, which is ?2% in 90% of patients with eosinophilic airway inflammation and <2% in a similar proportion of patients with infection associated neutrophilic airway inflammation. Furthermore, these types of inflammation are consistent within patients, whether assessed when in the stable state or in the setting of an acute attack. Furthermore, patients with eosinophilic inflammation have been repeatedly shown to have more exacerbations and that incomplete suppression of eosinophilic inflammation leads to an accelerated time to next exacerbation in COPD. These findings raise important questions about our current 'one size fits all' approach to management of acute wheezing illnesses in patients with asthma and COPD and suggest that targeted treatment based on effective reduction of inflammation would result in more efficient and effective management. Treatment of exacerbations A key component of treatment of the acute exacerbation event in patients with asthma and COPD is systemic corticosteroids i.e. oral prednisolone often at a dose of between 30-50mg once per day for 5 to 14 days. This is especially the case in patients with eosinophilic inflammation at the onset of the exacerbation event. However, even in patients with the right pattern of airway inflammation the beneficial effects of prednisolone have to be offset against a high potential for harm. One study using systemic corticosteroids in the exacerbation setting in patients with COPD estimated the number needed to treat (NNT) to reduce 1 treatment failure episode as 10 whilst simultaneously reporting that the number needed to harm (NNH) as 5. Adverse effects include significant hyperglycaemia, leading to diabetes in approximately 8% of patients' treated; osteoporosis with recurrent prescription; and treatment induced psychosis. Moreover, in a recent retrospective analysis of hospital prescriptions for systemic corticosteroids, excluding patients with airways disease, the incidence of patients with adverse events and harm in the first 30 days of a short course prednisolone prescription was significantly high, with an incidence rate (95%CI) of sepsis of 5.3 (3.8 to 7.1); venous thromboembolism of 3.3 (2.8 to 4.0); and fracture rate of 1.9 (1.7 to 2.1). Additional difficulties with prednisolone include the short duration of action and the requirement for treatment adherence. These factors increase the chance of relapse as a result of recurrent eosinophilic airway inflammation and has been shown to be associated with an increased time to next exacerbation in a single centre study of 230 COPD patients. Alternative treatments that have a more secure, selective and prolonged beneficial effect are thus needed. Benralizumab, an IL5 receptor alpha monoclonal antibody: benefit risk considerations and dose justification Benralizumab is a humanized afucosylated monoclonal antibody (mAb) directed towards the human interleukin-5 (IL5) alpha receptor sub-unit, found on eosinophils and basophils. Afucosylation confers enhanced antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) which results in highly efficient eosinophil depletion by apoptosis22. Single and repeated doses of benralizumab in mild to severe asthma patients' results in rapid and sustained depletion of blood eosinophils; repeat doses of benralizumab subcutaneously (SC) also markedly reduced airway mucosal/submucosal and sputum eosinophil levels. Benralizumab 30 mg SC every 8 weeks is currently approved for severe eosinophilic asthma patients age ? 18 whose asthma is poorly controlled by high dose ICS/LABA therapy based on 3 Phase III trials demonstrating improvements in the annual rate of asthma exacerbations, lung function, asthma symptoms, quality of life, and OCS-sparing in OCS-dependent asthma patients. More recently, the safety profile of benralizumab in severe eosinophilic asthma patients during a second year of treatment was shown to be similar to that of the first year of treatment, with no new safety concerns27. In the only other study where single intravenous doses of benralizumab were tested vs. placebo at the time of an asthma exacerbation, the proportion of patients with at least 1 exacerbation was not different from placebo. However, benralizumab reduced asthma exacerbation rates vs. placebo by 49% (3.59 vs 1.82; P=.01) and resulting in hospitalization by 60% (1.62 vs 0.65; P=.02) and was well tolerated. This may have been influenced by i) the lack of efficacy in treating non-eosinophilic exacerbations and ii) the additional harm from prednisolone. In a Phase 1 study in mild to moderate asthmatics with sputum eosinophilia (MI-CP166), a cohort of patients received 100 or 200 mg of benralizumab SC or placebo dosed every 4 weeks for 3 doses. In this study the incidence of all adverse events was similar between the placebo and benralizumab groups. In a Phase 2b, dose-ranging study in uncontrolled severe asthma (MI-CP220) compared the safety and efficacy of SC benralizumab at 2, 20 and 100 mg with placebo. Investigational product was dosed every 4 weeks for the first three doses and every 8 weeks for a further 4 doses. Both the benralizumab 20 mg and 100 mg treatment arms demonstrated efficacy to reduce exacerbations and improve lung function, symptoms and quality of life in patients with high blood eosinophils compared to placebo. Treatment-emergent adverse events were reported by a higher proportion of participants in the combined benralizumab groups (277 of 385, 72%) than in the placebo groups (143 of 221, 65%) and serious adverse events were reported by the same proportion of participants receiving benralizumab as for placebo at 10%. The Phase 2a study in moderate to very severe COPD patients with sputum eosinophilia (MI-CP196) compared the safety and efficacy of benralizumab 100 mg SC to placebo dosed every 4 weeks for the first three doses and every 8 weeks for a further 5 doses. Benralizumab demonstrated numerical, albeit non-significant, improvements in acute exacerbations, lung function and quality of life in a sub-set of patients with high blood eosinophils. There was little difference between groups in the total number of treatment-emergent adverse events, the proportion of patients who reported at least one treatment-emergent adverse event, and events with an incidence of 5% or greater. A higher incidence of serious treatment-emergent adverse events were recorded in patients in the benralizumab group than in those in the placebo group (14 vs 9 patients), although none of these events were considered by the investigator to be benralizumab related. The 100 mg SC dose of benralizumab was also extensively studied in two large Phase 3 trials32 [GALATHEA & TERRANOVA] in patients with moderate to very severe COPD. Both studies did not meet the primary endpoint of a statistically significant reduction of exacerbations. The safety and tolerability findings in the studies were consistent with those observed in previous trials with benralizumab. Rationale for the study design As discussed above, prednisolone is the main stay of treatment for all patients with an exacerbation of COPD. Previous work with a different IL-5 monoclonal antibody (mepolizumab) has shown efficacy in preventing COPD exacerbations in patients with a raised eosinophil count. As benralizumab is a novel agent for the treatment of COPD exacerbation, the trial will included a combination arm to assess the potential added benefit of benralizumab to prednisolone during an exacerbation of asthma and/or COPD. Patients with asthma and/or COPD can sometimes have variable stability of their raised blood eosinophil count34. The observational arm will thus have two purposes. The first aim of the observation group will be to observe the clinical response to prednisolone when the eosinophil count in not raised and to compare this to prednisolone alone treatment when the eosinophil count is raised. It is believed and there is previous data to suggest that corticosteroids are not beneficial for patients with a low eosinophil count and may be harmful, although this remains to be the standard treatment for these patients. The second aim of the observational group will be to allow us to maintain a pool of patients who could potentially have an eosinophilic exacerbation in the future. As will be described further in this protocol, patients would be eligible to consent if they have shown a raised blood eosinophil count in the 2 years prior to consenting at Visit 1. The observational arm will capture patients who did not have a raised eosinophil count at time of their first exacerbation. They will then be allowed up to 4 non-eosinophilic exacerbations in the observational group. Patients would be unlikely to have an eosinophilic exacerbation after 4 non-eosinophilic exacerbations and therefore would not continue to be tested during further exacerbations. Study Hypothesis The hypothesis being tested is that for patients with an exacerbation of asthma and/or COPD, who have a raised peripheral blood eosinophil count (?300 cells/uL), a single injection of Benralizumab alone or in combination with prednisolone, will increase the rate of recovery and reduce the rate of treatment failure, compared to prednisolone. This will also be compared this with an observational arm of prednisolone treatment (usual care) of non-eosinophilic exacerbations.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT04098718
Collaborators
Not Provided
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Mona Bafadhel, PhD, MBChB Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, UK