Dupilumab: New kid on the block
The newest biologic for asthma is dupilumab, approved Oct. 19, 2018, by the Food and Drug Administration as the only asthma biologic that patients can administer at home. Dupilumab is an anti–IL-4 and anti–IL-13 biologic whose most recent study results showed a severe exacerbations rate 50% lower than placebo (N Engl J Med. 2018 Jun 28;378[26]:2486-96.). Patients with higher baseline levels of eosinophils had the best response, although some patients showed hypereosinophilia following dupilumab therapy.
The study had a low number of adolescents enrolled, however, and more data on predictive biomarkers are needed. Dupilumab also requires a twice-monthly administration.
“It could be potentially better than those currently available due to additional effect on FEV1,” Dr. Szefler said, but cost and safety may determine how dupilumab is recommended and used, including possible use for early intervention.
As development in biologics for pediatric asthma continues to grow, questions about best practices for management remain, such as what age is best for starting biologics, what strategies are most safe and effective, and what risks and benefits exist for each strategy. Questions also remain regarding the risk factors for asthma and what early intervention strategies might change the disease’s natural history.
“Look at asthma in children as a chronic disease that can result in potentially preventable adverse respiratory outcomes in adulthood,” Dr. Szefler said. He recommended monitoring children’s lung function over time and using “measures of clinical outcomes, lung function, and biomarkers to assess potential benefits of biologic therapy.”
Dr. Szefler has served on the advisory board for Regeneron and Sanofi, and he has consulted for AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Daiichi Sankyo, GlaxoSmithKline, Novartis, and Propeller Health.