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The role of a soluble Tnf-A receptor fusion protein (etanercept) in corticosteroid-refractory asthma: a double blind, randomised placebo-controlled trial.

The role of a soluble Tnf-A receptor fusion protein (etanercept) in corticosteroid-refractory asthma: a double blind, randomised placebo-controlled trial.
The role of a soluble Tnf-A receptor fusion protein (etanercept) in corticosteroid-refractory asthma: a double blind, randomised placebo-controlled trial.
Rationale: TNF-alpha is a cytokine recognized as a therapeutic target in chronic inflammatory diseases. Objectives and METHODS: We report a randomised double-blind placebo-controlled parallel group trial of etanercept (an IgG1-TNF p75 receptor fusion protein), administered once weekly for 12 weeks in 39 patients with symptomatic corticosteroid refractory asthma. Efficacy was measured by change from the pre-treatment baseline in Asthma Related Quality of Life (AQLQ) and Asthma Control (ACQ) Questionnaires scores (the primary end-points), lung function, PEF and bronchial hyperresponsiveness (BHR). We also assessed sputum and serum inflammatory cells and cytokines, serum albumin and C-reactive protein as biomarkers of inflammation. MAIN RESULTS: There was a small but significant difference in reduction of ACQ scores between treatment and placebo (-1.11 (95%CI -1.56, -0.75) and -0.52 (95%CI -0.97, -0.07) respectively, p=0.030). There was no significant difference in improvements in AQLQ scores between groups (p=0.084), though sub group analyses restricted to 29 patients not taking antidepressants revealed significant improvements in both AQLQ and ACQ. There were no differences in lung function, PEF, BHR or exacerbation rates between groups. Minor adverse events including injection site pain and skin rashes were more frequent with etanercept. There was a significant reduction in sputum macrophages and CRP, and increases in serum TNF-alpha and albumin following treatment, but not in other laboratory parameters. CONCLUSION: Etanercept therapy over 12 weeks demonstrated only a small but significant improvement in asthma control and systemic inflammation as measured by serum albumin and CRP. Larger randomised placebo-controlled trials are required to clarify the role of TNF-alpha antagonism in subjects with severe refractory asthma.
0040-6376
584-591
Morjaria, J.B.
3feae9e2-8d5a-4ab1-8736-f8fe8feaddb2
Chauhan, A.J.
80ced09a-aebc-4540-82f1-eef6cb8e7f2d
Babu, K.S.
b21f201e-3285-4943-9347-a1a3c8727a00
Polosa, R.
34c9ef10-2fea-44a4-9521-63098d4c2571
Davies, D.E.
7de8fdc7-3640-4e3a-aa91-d0e03f990c38
Holgate, S.T.
2e7c17a9-6796-436e-8772-1fe6d2ac5edc
Morjaria, J.B.
3feae9e2-8d5a-4ab1-8736-f8fe8feaddb2
Chauhan, A.J.
80ced09a-aebc-4540-82f1-eef6cb8e7f2d
Babu, K.S.
b21f201e-3285-4943-9347-a1a3c8727a00
Polosa, R.
34c9ef10-2fea-44a4-9521-63098d4c2571
Davies, D.E.
7de8fdc7-3640-4e3a-aa91-d0e03f990c38
Holgate, S.T.
2e7c17a9-6796-436e-8772-1fe6d2ac5edc

Morjaria, J.B., Chauhan, A.J., Babu, K.S., Polosa, R., Davies, D.E. and Holgate, S.T. (2008) The role of a soluble Tnf-A receptor fusion protein (etanercept) in corticosteroid-refractory asthma: a double blind, randomised placebo-controlled trial. Thorax, 63 (7), 584-591. (doi:10.1136/thx.2007.086314).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Rationale: TNF-alpha is a cytokine recognized as a therapeutic target in chronic inflammatory diseases. Objectives and METHODS: We report a randomised double-blind placebo-controlled parallel group trial of etanercept (an IgG1-TNF p75 receptor fusion protein), administered once weekly for 12 weeks in 39 patients with symptomatic corticosteroid refractory asthma. Efficacy was measured by change from the pre-treatment baseline in Asthma Related Quality of Life (AQLQ) and Asthma Control (ACQ) Questionnaires scores (the primary end-points), lung function, PEF and bronchial hyperresponsiveness (BHR). We also assessed sputum and serum inflammatory cells and cytokines, serum albumin and C-reactive protein as biomarkers of inflammation. MAIN RESULTS: There was a small but significant difference in reduction of ACQ scores between treatment and placebo (-1.11 (95%CI -1.56, -0.75) and -0.52 (95%CI -0.97, -0.07) respectively, p=0.030). There was no significant difference in improvements in AQLQ scores between groups (p=0.084), though sub group analyses restricted to 29 patients not taking antidepressants revealed significant improvements in both AQLQ and ACQ. There were no differences in lung function, PEF, BHR or exacerbation rates between groups. Minor adverse events including injection site pain and skin rashes were more frequent with etanercept. There was a significant reduction in sputum macrophages and CRP, and increases in serum TNF-alpha and albumin following treatment, but not in other laboratory parameters. CONCLUSION: Etanercept therapy over 12 weeks demonstrated only a small but significant improvement in asthma control and systemic inflammation as measured by serum albumin and CRP. Larger randomised placebo-controlled trials are required to clarify the role of TNF-alpha antagonism in subjects with severe refractory asthma.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 1 February 2008
Published date: July 2008
Organisations: Infection Inflammation & Immunity

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 59381
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/59381
ISSN: 0040-6376
PURE UUID: 488167fb-e82e-405f-9e11-788e9a61467c
ORCID for D.E. Davies: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5117-2991

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Date deposited: 16 Sep 2008
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:35

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Contributors

Author: J.B. Morjaria
Author: A.J. Chauhan
Author: K.S. Babu
Author: R. Polosa
Author: D.E. Davies ORCID iD
Author: S.T. Holgate

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