Browsing by Subject "severe asthma"

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  • Agache, Ioana; Akdis, Cezmi; Akdis, Mubeccel; Canonica, Giorgio Walter; Casale, Thomas; Chivato, Tomas; Corren, Jonathan; Chu, Derek K.; Del Giacco, Stefano; Eiwegger, Thomas; Flood, Breda; Firinu, Davide; Gern, James E.; Hamelmann, Eckard; Hanania, Nicola; Hernandez-Martin, Irene; Knibb, Rebeca; Mäkelä, Mika; Nair, Parameswaran; O'Mahony, Liam; Papadopoulos, Nikolaos G.; Papi, Alberto; Park, Hae-Sim; Perez de Llano, Luis; Pfaar, Oliver; Quirce, Santiago; Sastre, Joaquin; Shamji, Mohamed; Schwarze, Jurgen; Palomares, Oscar; Jutel, Marek (2021)
    Severe asthma imposes a significant burden on patients, families and healthcare systems. Management is difficult, due to disease heterogeneity, co-morbidities, complexity in care pathways and differences between national or regional healthcare systems. Better understanding of the mechanisms has enabled a stratified approach to the management of severe asthma, supporting the use of targeted treatments with biologicals. However, there are still many issues that require further clarification. These include selection of a certain biological (as they all target overlapping disease phenotypes), the definition of response, strategies to enhance the responder rate, the duration of treatment and its regimen (in the clinic or home-based) and its cost-effectiveness. The EAACI Guidelines on the use of biologicals in severe asthma follow the GRADE approach in formulating recommendations for each biological and each outcome. In addition, a management algorithm for the use of biologicals in the clinic is proposed, together with future approaches and research priorities.
  • Agache, Ioana; Song, Yang; Rocha, Claudio; Beltran, Jessica; Posso, Margarita; Steiner, Corinna; Alonso-Coello, Pablo; Akdis, Cezmi; Akdis, Mubeccel; Canonica, Giorgio Walter; Casale, Thomas; Chivato, Tomas; Corren, Jonathan; del Giacco, Stefano; Eiwegger, Thomas; Firinu, Davide; Gern, James E.; Hamelmann, Eckard; Hanania, Nicola; Mäkelä, Mika; Martin, Irene Hernandez; Nair, Parameswaran; O'Mahony, Liam; Papadopoulos, Nikolaos G.; Papi, Alberto; Park, Hae-Sim; de Llano, Luis Perez; Quirce, Santiago; Sastre, Joaquin; Shamji, Mohamed; Schwarze, Jurgen; Canelo-Aybar, Carlos; Palomares, Oscar; Jutel, Marek (2020)
    Dupilumab, a fully human monoclonal antibody against interleukin-4 receptor alpha, is approved as add-on maintenance treatment for inadequately controlled type 2 severe asthma. This systematic review evaluated the efficacy, safety and economic impact of dupilumab compared to standard of care for uncontrolled severe asthma. PubMed, EMBASE and Cochrane Library were searched for RCTs and health economic evaluations. Critical and important asthma-related outcomes were evaluated. The risk of bias and the certainty of the evidence were assessed using GRADE. Three RCTs including 2735 subjects >12 years old and 24-52 weeks of follow-up were included. Dupilumab reduced with high certainty severe asthma exacerbations (Incidence rate ratio 0.51; 95% CI 0.45-0.59) and the percentage use of oral corticosteroid use (mean difference (MD) -28.2 mg/d; 95% CI -40.7 to -15.7). Asthma control (ACQ-5), quality of life (AQLQ) and rescue medication use [puffs/d] improved, without reaching the minimal important clinical difference: ACQ-5 MD -0.28 (95% CI -0.39 to -0.17); AQLQ MD +0.28 (95% CI 0.20-0.37); and rescue medication MD -0.35 (95% CI -0.73 to +0.02). FEV1 increased (MD +0.15; 95% CI +0.11 to +0.18) (moderate certainty). There was an increased rate of dupilumab-related adverse events (AEs) (moderate certainty) and of drug-related serious AEs (low certainty). The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of dupilumab versus standard therapy was 464 000$/QALY (moderate certainty). More data on long-term safety are needed both for children and for adults, together with more efficacy data in the paediatric population.