AI Article Synopsis

  • Mepolizumab, an anti-IL-5 antibody, effectively reduces disease flares in patients with hypereosinophilic syndrome (HES) regardless of their baseline blood eosinophil count (BEC).
  • A study analyzed data from patients aged 12 and older with HES and found that mepolizumab decreased the proportion of patients experiencing flares by 63% to 90%, and flare rates by 58% to 84%.
  • Results indicated that treatment was effective even in patients with undetectable baseline serum IL-5 levels, suggesting that such levels should not prevent mepolizumab therapy.

Article Abstract

Background: Mepolizumab, an anti-interleukin-5 (IL-5) antibody, reduces disease flares in patients with hypereosinophilic syndrome (HES). Factors predicting treatment response are unknown.

Objective: To assess mepolizumab efficacy by baseline blood eosinophil count (BEC) and serum IL-5 level in patients with HES.

Methods: This post hoc analysis used data from the phase III study assessing mepolizumab in patients with HES (NCT02836496). Patients 12 years old or older, with HES for 6 or more months, 2 or more flares in the previous year, and BEC ≥1,000 cells/μL at screening were randomized (1:1) to 4-weekly subcutaneous mepolizumab (300 mg) or placebo, plus baseline HES therapy, for 32 weeks. The proportion of patients experiencing 1 or more flares (wk 32), annualized flare rate, and proportion of patients with change from baseline in Brief Fatigue Inventory (BFI) item 3 (wk 32), were analyzed by baseline BEC (<1500/≥1500 to <2500/≥2500 cells/μL). Flare outcomes were assessed by baseline serum IL-5 (<7.81/≥7.81 pg/mL).

Results: Across baseline BEC subgroups, mepolizumab reduced the proportion of patients experiencing 1 or more flares by 63% to 90% and flare rate by 58% to 84% (treatment-by-eosinophil interaction P = .76 and P = .90, respectively); patients had improved BFI item 3 score with mepolizumab versus placebo (cells/μL: <1,500: 54% vs 37%; ≥1,500 to <2,500: 47% vs 31%; ≥2,500: 61% vs 0%; treatment-by-eosinophil interaction P = .42). Most patients had undetectable baseline serum IL-5 levels; among these, mepolizumab versus placebo reduced the proportion of patients with 1 or more flares (77%) and flare rate (67%).

Conclusions: Mepolizumab was efficacious in the patients with HES studied, irrespective of baseline BEC. Undetectable IL-5 levels should not preclude mepolizumab treatment.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaip.2022.04.037DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

hypereosinophilic syndrome
8
blood eosinophil
8
eosinophil count
8
proportion patients
8
patients
6
mepolizumab
5
mepolizumab reduces
4
reduces hypereosinophilic
4
flares
4
syndrome flares
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!