Titration of anti-IL-5 biologics in severe asthma: an open-label randomised controlled trial (the OPTIMAL study)

Author:

Soendergaard Marianne BaastrupORCID,Bjerrum Anne-Sofie,Rasmussen Linda Makowska,Lock-Johansson Sofie,Hilberg OleORCID,Hansen SusanneORCID,von Bulow Anna,Porsbjerg Celeste

Abstract

BackgroundAnti-interleukin (IL)-5 biologics effectively reduce exacerbations and the need for maintenance oral corticosteroids (mOCS) in severe eosinophilic asthma. However, it is unknown how long anti-IL-5 treatment should be continued. Data from clinical trials indicate a gradual but variable loss of control after treatment cessation. In this pilot study of titration, we evaluated a dose-titration algorithm in patients who had achieved clinical control on an anti-IL-5 biologic.MethodsIn this open-label randomised controlled trial conducted over 52 weeks, patients with clinical control (no exacerbations or mOCS) on anti-IL-5 treatment were randomised to continue with unchanged intervals or have dosing intervals adjusted according to a titration algorithm that gradually extended dosing intervals and reduced them again at signs of loss of disease control. The OPTIMAL algorithm was designed to down-titrate dosing until signs of loss of control, to enable assessment of the longest dosing interval possible.ResultsAmong 73 patients enrolled, 37 patients were randomised to the OPTIMAL titration arm; 78% of patients tolerated down-titration of treatment. Compared to the control arm, the OPTIMAL arm tended to have more exacerbations during the study (32%versus17%; p=0.13). There were no severe adverse events related to titration, and lung function and symptoms scores remained stable and comparable in both study arms throughout.ConclusionThis study serves as a proof of concept for titration of anti-IL-5 biologics in patients with severe asthma with clinical control on treatment, and the OPTIMAL algorithm provides a potential framework for individualising dosing intervals in the future.

Funder

Danmarks Lungeforening

Danish Regions Medicines Fund

Publisher

European Respiratory Society (ERS)

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