Association Between T2-related Comorbidities and Effectiveness of Biologics in Severe Asthma.

Michael E Wechsler, Ghislaine Scelo,Désirée E S Larenas-Linnemann,Carlos A Torres-Duque,Jorge Maspero,Trung N Tran,Ruth B Murray,Neil Martin,Andrew N Menzies-Gow,Mark Hew,Matthew J Peters,Peter G Gibson,George C Christoff,Todor A Popov,Andréanne Côté,Celine Bergeron,Delbert Dorscheid,J Mark FitzGerald,Kenneth R Chapman,Louis Philippe Boulet,Mohit Bhutani,Mohsen Sadatsafavi, Libardo Jiménez-Maldonado, Mauricio Duran-Silva, Bellanid Rodriguez,Carlos Andres Celis-Preciado, Diana Jimena Cano-Rosales,Ivan Solarte, Maria Jose Fernandez-Sanchez, Patricia Parada-Tovar,Anna von Bülow,Anne Sofie Bjerrum,Charlotte S Ulrik,Karin Dahl Assing,Linda Makowska Rasmussen,Susanne Hansen,Alan Altraja,Arnaud Bourdin,Camille Taille,Jeremy Charriot,Nicolas Roche,Andriana I Papaioannou,Konstantinos Kostikas,Nikolaos G Papadopoulos,Sundeep Salvi,Deirdre Long,Patrick D Mitchell,Richard Costello,Concetta Sirena, Cristina Cardini,Enrico Heffler,Francesca Puggioni,Giorgio Walter Canonica,Giuseppe Guida,Takashi Iwanaga,Mona Al-Ahmad, Ulises García,Piotr Kuna,João A Fonseca,Riyad Al-Lehebi,Mariko S Koh,Chin Kook Rhee,Borja G Cosio,Luis Perez de Llano,Diahn-Warng Steve Perng,Erick Wan-Chun Huang,Hao-Chien Wang,Ming-Ju Tsai,Bassam Mahboub,Laila Ibraheem Jaber Salameh,David J Jackson,John Busby,Liam G Heaney,Paul E Pfeffer, Amanda Grippen Goddard,Eileen Wang,Flavia C L Hoyte, Nicholas M Chapman,Rohit Katial,Victoria Carter,Lakmini Bulathsinhala,Neva Eleangovan,Con Ariti,Juntao Lyu,Celeste Porsbjerg,David B Price

American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine(2024)

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摘要
Rationale: Previous studies investigating the impact of comorbidities on the effectiveness of biologic agents have been relatively small and of short duration and have not compared classes of biologic agents. Objectives: To determine the association between type 2-related comorbidities and biologic agent effectiveness in adults with severe asthma (SA). Methods: This cohort study used International Severe Asthma Registry data from 21 countries (2017-2022) to quantify changes in four outcomes before and after biologic therapy-annual asthma exacerbation rate, FEV1% predicted, asthma control, and long-term oral corticosteroid daily dose-in patients with or without allergic rhinitis, chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) with or without nasal polyps (NPs), NPs, or eczema/atopic dermatitis. Measurements and Main Results: Of 1,765 patients, 1,257, 421, and 87 initiated anti-IL-5/5 receptor, anti-IgE, and anti-IL-4/13 therapies, respectively. In general, pre- versus post-biologic therapy improvements were noted in all four asthma outcomes assessed, irrespective of comorbidity status. However, patients with comorbid CRS with or without NPs experienced 23% fewer exacerbations per year (95% CI, 10-35%; P < 0.001) and had 59% higher odds of better post-biologic therapy asthma control (95% CI, 26-102%; P < 0.001) than those without CRS with or without NPs. Similar estimates were noted for those with comorbid NPs: 22% fewer exacerbations and 56% higher odds of better post-biologic therapy control. Patients with SA and CRS with or without NPs had an additional FEV1% predicted improvement of 3.2% (95% CI, 1.0-5.3; P = 0.004), a trend that was also noted in those with comorbid NPs. The presence of allergic rhinitis or atopic dermatitis was not associated with post-biologic therapy effect for any outcome assessed. Conclusions: These findings highlight the importance of systematic comorbidity evaluation. The presence of CRS with or without NPs or NPs alone may be considered a predictor of the effectiveness of biologic agents in patients with SA.
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