An injection given during some asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) attacks is more effective than the current treatment of steroid tablets, reducing the need for further treatment by 30 percent.
The findings, published in The Lancet Respiratory Medicine, could be “game-changing” for millions of people with asthma and COPD around the world, the researchers, from the University of Oxford and Kings College London, say. The study was supported by the NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre (BRC).
Asthma attacks and COPD flare-ups, also called exacerbations, can be deadly; every day in the UK four people with asthma and 85 people with COPD will die. Asthma and COPD costs the NHS £5.9 billion a year.
The injection treats a type of flare-up called ‘eosinophilic exacerbations’, which involve symptoms such as wheezing, coughing and chest tightness due to inflammation resulting from high amounts of eosinophils, a type of white blood cell.
Eosinophilic exacerbations make up to 30 percent of COPD flare-ups and almost 50 percent of asthma attacks. They can become more frequent as the disease progresses, leading to irreversible lung damage in some cases. There are two million of these exacerbations in the UK every year.
Treatment at the point of an exacerbation for this type of asthma has barely changed for over 50 years, with steroid drugs being the mainstay of medication. Steroids such as prednisolone can reduce inflammation in the lungs but have severe side-effects, such as diabetes and osteoporosis. Furthermore, many patients ‘fail’ treatment and need repeated courses of steroids, re-hospitalisation or die within 90 days.
Results from the phase two ABRA clinical trial – conducted at Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust – show that a drug that is already available can be repurposed in emergency settings to reduce the need for further treatment and hospitalisations.
Benralizumab is a monoclonal antibody which targets eosinophils to reduce lung inflammation. It is currently used for the treatment of severe asthma. The ABRA trial found that a single dose can be more effective when injected at the point of exacerbation compared to steroid tablets.
The study investigators randomised people at high risk of an asthma or COPD attack into three groups, one receiving a benralizumab injection and dummy tablets, one receiving standard of care (30mg of prednisolone daily for five days) and dummy injection, and a third group receiving both benralizumab injection and standard of care. As a double-blind, double-dummy, active-comparator placebo-controlled trial, neither the people in the study, or the study investigators knew which study arm or treatment they were given.
After 28 days, respiratory symptoms of cough, wheeze, breathlessness and sputum were found to be better with benralizumab. After 90 days, there were four times fewer people in the benralizumab group that failed treatment compared to standard of care with prednisolone.
Treatment with the benralizumab injection took longer to fail, meaning fewer episodes to see a doctor or go to hospital. There was also an improvement in the quality of life for people with asthma and COPD.
Lead investigator of the trial Professor Mona Bafadhel, now at the King’s Centre for Lung Health and formerly an Oxford BRC-supported researcher at the University of Oxford’s Nuffield Department of Medicine, said: This could be a game-changer for people with asthma and COPD. Treatment for asthma and COPD exacerbations have not changed in 50 years, despite causing 3.8 million deaths worldwide a year combined.
“Benralizumab is a safe and effective drug already used to manage severe asthma. We’ve used the drug in a different way – at the point of an exacerbation – to show that it’s more effective than steroid tablets which is the only treatment currently available. The big advance in the ABRA study is the finding that targeted therapy works in asthma and COPD attacks. Instead of giving everyone the same treatment, we found targeting the highest risk patients with very targeted treatment, with the right level of inflammation was much better than guessing what treatment they needed.”
The benralizumab injection was administered by healthcare professionals in the study but can be potentially administered in the GP practice or in the Emergency Department. Benralizumab was safe in the study and similar in safety to many past studies.
Professor Bafadhel said: “We hope these pivotal studies will change how asthma and COPD exacerbations are treated for the future, ultimately improving the health for over a billion people living with asthma and COPD across the world.”
Dr Sanjay Ramakrishnan, Clinical Senior Lecturer at the University of Western Australia, who is the first author of the ABRA trial and started the work while at the University of Oxford, said: “Our study shows massive promise for asthma and COPD treatment. COPD is the third leading cause of death worldwide but treatment for the condition is stuck in the 20th century. We need to provide these patients with life-saving options before their time runs out.
“The ABRA trial was only possible with collaboration between the NHS and universities and shows how this close relationship can innovate healthcare and improve people’s lives.”
Geoffrey Pointing, aged 77 from Banbury, who took part in the study, said: “Honestly, when you’re having a flare up, it’s very difficult to tell anybody how you feel – you can hardly breathe. Anything that takes that away and gives you back a normal life is what you want. But on the injections, it’s fantastic. I didn’t get any side effects like I used to with the steroid tablets. I used to never sleep well the first night of taking steroids, but the first day on the study, I could sleep that first night, and I was able to carry on with my life without problems. I want to add that I’m just grateful I took part and that the everyone involved in the ABRA study are trying to give me a better life.”
This research was conducted with support from AstraZeneca UK Limited.