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TOPLINE:

Both blood eosinophil-directed treatment (BET) and standard care treatment (ST) similarly reduced treatment failure following acute exacerbations in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).

METHODOLOGY:

  • The researchers randomized 152 adults with a mean age of 70 years to BET or a placebo (if eosinophil counts were less than 2%) or to standard care treatment regardless of baseline eosinophil counts; the final population available for analysis included 47 patients in the blood eosinophil group and 46 in the primary care group, with 73 and 71 exacerbations, respectively.
  • Participants were assessed at baseline and at day 14, day 30, and day 90 after exacerbation; the primary outcome was the rate of treatment failure at 30 days post exacerbation, defined as any need for retreatment with antibiotics or steroids, hospitalization, or death; secondary outcomes included health-related quality of life, forced expiratory volume in 1 second, and visual analogue score respiratory symptoms.
  • Participants were recruited from 14 general practices between November 6, 2017, and April 30, 2020; the study was terminated on April 30, 2023, because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

TAKEAWAY:

  • BET was noninferior to ST in a noninferiority analysis.
  • At 30 days post exacerbation, 14 treatment failures had occurred in the BET group and 23 in the ST group; the relative risk was 0.60 (P = .070).
  • The frequency of adverse events was similar between the groups; the most common adverse events were glycosuria and hospital admission for COPD exacerbation (2% in the BET group and 1% in the ST group for both event types), and no deaths occurred during the study period.
  • Subgroup analysis showed the greatest benefit in both groups was to patients with higher eosinophil counts who received prednisolone.

IN PRACTICE: 

“There was improvement of lung function, quality of life, and symptoms in exacerbations with low eosinophil count independent of whether placebo or prednisolone was prescribed,” the authors wrote in their discussion.

SOURCE:

The lead author on the study was Sanjay Ramakrishnan, MBBS, University of Oxford, United Kingdom. The study was published online in Lancet Respiratory Medicine .

LIMITATIONS:

A key limitation was an error in the randomization code that prevented the trial’s completion as a superiority study; other limitations included the relatively low number of exacerbations associated with low eosinophil counts and reduction in the recommended length of treatment with prednisolone during the study period.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by the National Institute for Health and Care Research. Dr. Ramakrishnan disclosed personal salary support from the National Institute for Health and Care Research, an unrestricted research grant from AstraZeneca to his institution, and speaker fees and conference travel support from AstraZeneca, all unrelated to the current study.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

Both blood eosinophil-directed treatment (BET) and standard care treatment (ST) similarly reduced treatment failure following acute exacerbations in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).

METHODOLOGY:

  • The researchers randomized 152 adults with a mean age of 70 years to BET or a placebo (if eosinophil counts were less than 2%) or to standard care treatment regardless of baseline eosinophil counts; the final population available for analysis included 47 patients in the blood eosinophil group and 46 in the primary care group, with 73 and 71 exacerbations, respectively.
  • Participants were assessed at baseline and at day 14, day 30, and day 90 after exacerbation; the primary outcome was the rate of treatment failure at 30 days post exacerbation, defined as any need for retreatment with antibiotics or steroids, hospitalization, or death; secondary outcomes included health-related quality of life, forced expiratory volume in 1 second, and visual analogue score respiratory symptoms.
  • Participants were recruited from 14 general practices between November 6, 2017, and April 30, 2020; the study was terminated on April 30, 2023, because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

TAKEAWAY:

  • BET was noninferior to ST in a noninferiority analysis.
  • At 30 days post exacerbation, 14 treatment failures had occurred in the BET group and 23 in the ST group; the relative risk was 0.60 (P = .070).
  • The frequency of adverse events was similar between the groups; the most common adverse events were glycosuria and hospital admission for COPD exacerbation (2% in the BET group and 1% in the ST group for both event types), and no deaths occurred during the study period.
  • Subgroup analysis showed the greatest benefit in both groups was to patients with higher eosinophil counts who received prednisolone.

IN PRACTICE: 

“There was improvement of lung function, quality of life, and symptoms in exacerbations with low eosinophil count independent of whether placebo or prednisolone was prescribed,” the authors wrote in their discussion.

SOURCE:

The lead author on the study was Sanjay Ramakrishnan, MBBS, University of Oxford, United Kingdom. The study was published online in Lancet Respiratory Medicine .

LIMITATIONS:

A key limitation was an error in the randomization code that prevented the trial’s completion as a superiority study; other limitations included the relatively low number of exacerbations associated with low eosinophil counts and reduction in the recommended length of treatment with prednisolone during the study period.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by the National Institute for Health and Care Research. Dr. Ramakrishnan disclosed personal salary support from the National Institute for Health and Care Research, an unrestricted research grant from AstraZeneca to his institution, and speaker fees and conference travel support from AstraZeneca, all unrelated to the current study.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

Both blood eosinophil-directed treatment (BET) and standard care treatment (ST) similarly reduced treatment failure following acute exacerbations in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).

METHODOLOGY:

  • The researchers randomized 152 adults with a mean age of 70 years to BET or a placebo (if eosinophil counts were less than 2%) or to standard care treatment regardless of baseline eosinophil counts; the final population available for analysis included 47 patients in the blood eosinophil group and 46 in the primary care group, with 73 and 71 exacerbations, respectively.
  • Participants were assessed at baseline and at day 14, day 30, and day 90 after exacerbation; the primary outcome was the rate of treatment failure at 30 days post exacerbation, defined as any need for retreatment with antibiotics or steroids, hospitalization, or death; secondary outcomes included health-related quality of life, forced expiratory volume in 1 second, and visual analogue score respiratory symptoms.
  • Participants were recruited from 14 general practices between November 6, 2017, and April 30, 2020; the study was terminated on April 30, 2023, because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

TAKEAWAY:

  • BET was noninferior to ST in a noninferiority analysis.
  • At 30 days post exacerbation, 14 treatment failures had occurred in the BET group and 23 in the ST group; the relative risk was 0.60 (P = .070).
  • The frequency of adverse events was similar between the groups; the most common adverse events were glycosuria and hospital admission for COPD exacerbation (2% in the BET group and 1% in the ST group for both event types), and no deaths occurred during the study period.
  • Subgroup analysis showed the greatest benefit in both groups was to patients with higher eosinophil counts who received prednisolone.

IN PRACTICE: 

“There was improvement of lung function, quality of life, and symptoms in exacerbations with low eosinophil count independent of whether placebo or prednisolone was prescribed,” the authors wrote in their discussion.

SOURCE:

The lead author on the study was Sanjay Ramakrishnan, MBBS, University of Oxford, United Kingdom. The study was published online in Lancet Respiratory Medicine .

LIMITATIONS:

A key limitation was an error in the randomization code that prevented the trial’s completion as a superiority study; other limitations included the relatively low number of exacerbations associated with low eosinophil counts and reduction in the recommended length of treatment with prednisolone during the study period.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by the National Institute for Health and Care Research. Dr. Ramakrishnan disclosed personal salary support from the National Institute for Health and Care Research, an unrestricted research grant from AstraZeneca to his institution, and speaker fees and conference travel support from AstraZeneca, all unrelated to the current study.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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