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INEXAS: A Phase 2 Randomized Trial of On‐demand Inhaled Interferon Beta‐1a in Severe Asthmatics

Authors :
Tim Harrison
Karin Karlsson
Anna Malmgren
Malin Aurell
Marita Olsson
Malin Fagerås
Richard Marsden
Phillip Monk
Anders Cavallin
Christopher McCrae
Jonathan Paraskos
Carla A. Da Silva
Per Gustafson
Cecilia Wingren
Source :
Clinical and Experimental Allergy
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wiley, 2020.

Abstract

Background Upper respiratory tract infections (URTIs) are important triggers for asthma exacerbations. We hypothesized that inhalation of the anti‐viral cytokine, interferon (IFN)‐β, during URTI, could prevent these exacerbations. Objective To evaluate the efficacy of on‐demand inhaled IFN‐β1a (AZD9412) to prevent severe asthma exacerbations following symptomatic URTI. Methods This was a randomized, double‐blind, placebo‐controlled trial in which patients with severe asthma (GINA 4‐5; n = 121) reporting URTI symptoms were randomized to 14 days of once‐daily nebulized AZD9412 or placebo. The primary endpoint was severe exacerbations during treatment. Secondary endpoints included 6‐item asthma control questionnaire (ACQ‐6) and lung function. Exploratory biomarkers included IFN‐response markers in serum and sputum, blood leucocyte counts and serum inflammatory cytokines. Results Following a pre‐planned interim analysis, the trial was terminated early due to an unexpectedly low exacerbation rate. Asthma worsenings were generally mild and tended to peak at randomization, possibly contributing to the lack of benefit of AZD9412 on other asthma endpoints. Numerically, AZD9412 did not reduce severe exacerbation rate, ACQ‐6, asthma symptom scores or reliever medication use. AZD9412 improved lung function (morning peak expiratory flow; mPEF) by 19.7 L/min. Exploratory post hoc analyses indicated a greater mPEF improvement by AZD9412 in patients with high blood eosinophils (>0.3 × 109/L) at screening and low serum interleukin‐18 relative change at pre‐treatment baseline. Pharmacodynamic effect of AZD9412 was confirmed using IFN‐response markers. Conclusions & Clinical Relevance Colds did not have the impact on asthma patients that was expected and, due to the low exacerbation rate, the trial was stopped early. On‐demand AZD9412 treatment did not numerically reduce the number of exacerbations, but did attenuate URTI‐induced worsening of mPEF. Severe asthma patients with high blood eosinophils or low serum interleukin‐18 response are potential subgroups for further investigation of inhaled IFN‐β1a.

Details

ISSN :
13652222 and 09547894
Volume :
51
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical & Experimental Allergy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....42f37d6ed3103e9c535d88e437392f8b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/cea.13765