Back to Search Start Over

A Randomized Trial of Otilimab in Severe COVID-19 Pneumonia (OSCAR)

Authors :
M Layton
Bruno François
Shahid Z
L Schifano
Albertus Beishuizen
Charlotte Summers
Inman D
Sprinz E
Boughanmi H
Ruiz Xb
Kostina N
Cahn A
Terzi N
Gerard J. Criner
Mark Tidswell
Davy K
Julia Smith
Fernandes S
Plantefeve G
Jarvis E
McEvoy C
Neisen J
Hatlen T
Shirano M
de-Miguel-Díez J
Jean-Claude Lacherade
Muñoz-Bermúdez R
Duncan Wyncoll
John D. Isaacs
Gupta A
Schwab L
Hanrott K
Martinez-Ayala P
J Patel
Williamson R
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

BACKGROUNDIncreasing age is a risk factor for COVID-19 severity and mortality; emerging science implicates GM-CSF and dysregulated myeloid cell responses in the pathophysiology of severe COVID-19.METHODSWe conducted a large, global, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study evaluating a single 90 mg infusion of otilimab (human anti-GM-CSF monoclonal) plus standard of care in adults hospitalized with severe COVID-19 respiratory failure and systemic inflammation, stratified by age and clinical status. Primary outcome was the proportion of patients alive and free of respiratory failure at Day 28; secondary endpoints included all-cause mortality at Day 60.RESULTSOverall, 806 patients were randomized (1:1); 71% of patients receiving otilimab were alive and free of respiratory failure at Day 28 versus 67% receiving placebo, although this did not reach statistical significance (model-adjusted difference 5.3% [95% CI −0.8, 11.4]; p=0.09). However, there was a benefit in the pre-defined ≥70-year age group (model-adjusted difference 19.1% [95% CI 5.2, 33.1]; nominal p=0.009); these patients also had a reduction of 14.4% (95% CI 0.9, 27.9%; nominal p=0.04) in model-adjusted all-cause mortality at Day 60. Safety findings were comparable between otilimab and placebo, and consistent with severe COVID-19.CONCLUSIONSAlthough not statistically significant in the overall population, otilimab demonstrated a substantial benefit in patients aged ≥70, possibly reflecting a population that could benefit from therapeutic blocking of GM-CSF in severe COVID-19 where myeloid cell dysregulation is predominant. These findings are being confirmed in a further cohort of patients aged ≥70 in Part 2 of this study. (ClinicalTrials.gov number: NCT04376684).

Details

ISSN :
04376684
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f880ef80fac147d92e96e394901bad4d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.04.14.21255475