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– Dupilumab, an anti-inflammatory drug already approved for use in the United States, met its efficacy endpoints for treating chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps in a pivotal trial with 276 patients.

The results make it likely that dupilumab (Dupixent) will receive a new indication from the Food and Drug Administration, pending similar results in a second pivotal trial for nasal polyps that researchers will report soon. Dupilumab, which works by blocking a receptor for both interleukin 4 and interleukin 13 and thereby shutting down type 2 inflammation, is already approved in the United States for treating atopic dermatitis and asthma.

Type 2 inflammation drives polyp formation in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis that can produce severe nasal congestion, breathing difficulty, and substantially reduced quality of life.

In the new trial, the drug showed efficacy by significantly improving both the nasal congestion score reported by patients and the nasal polyp score measured by sinus endoscopy after 24 weeks on treatment, when compared with control patients on placebo, Joseph K. Han, MD, said at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology.

Patients enrolled in the study had chronic, severe sinusitis and nasal polyps that remained uncontrolled despite prior surgery, for 75% of enrolled patients, or treatment with systemic corticosteroids, used on about 90% of the patients within the prior 2 years.

During the 24 weeks of treatment, 23% of patients in the control arm had to restart systemic corticosteroid treatment or have surgery, compared with 7% of patients on dupilumab treatment, a statistically significant difference.

 

 

The new drug is a “game changer,” for these patients, Dr. Han said in a video interview.

In some patients, treatment produced complete polyp resolution. He and his colleagues in the otolaryngology field are now trying to decide exactly which patients with polyps secondary to sinusitis will be good candidates for dupilumab after it receives an expected indication for shrinking nasal polyps.

Roughly 4% of the adult population has chronic rhinosinusitis that generates polyps. How many of these patients are affected severely enough to warrant dupilumab treatment is not clear, but will likely include several hundreds of thousands of U.S. adults, said Dr. Han, professor of otolaryngology and chief of the division of allergy at Eastern Virginia Medical School in Norfolk.



The SINUS-24 (A Controlled Clinical Study of Dupilumab in Patients With Nasal Polyps) trial enrolled patients at 76 sites in the United States and in several European countries. The study randomized 143 patients who received standard treatment plus a 300-mg dupilumab subcutaneous injection every 2 weeks, and 133 patients who received standard treatment plus placebo injections. Standard treatment included a nasal corticosteroid spray.

After 24 weeks of treatment, the endoscopically-measured nasal polyp score, which averaged about 6 at baseline on a scale of 0-8, fell by an average of 2.06 points, compared with controls, which was a statistically significant and clinically meaningful change, said Dr. Han.

The second primary endpoint, patient self-assessment of nasal congestion on a scale of 0-3, showed an average 0.89 improvement, compared with controls, which was also a statistically significant and meaningful change from the average baseline score of about 2.4.

Other efficacy measures also showed benefits from treatment, including a substantial improvement compared with controls in a quality-of-life measure. The safety profile was benign compared with placebo, and consistent with existing safety data for the drug.SINUS-24 was funded by Regeneron and Sanofi, the companies that market dupilumab. Dr. Han has been an adviser to Regeneron and Sanofi.

SOURCE: Han JK et al. AAAAI 2019, Abstract L4.

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– Dupilumab, an anti-inflammatory drug already approved for use in the United States, met its efficacy endpoints for treating chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps in a pivotal trial with 276 patients.

The results make it likely that dupilumab (Dupixent) will receive a new indication from the Food and Drug Administration, pending similar results in a second pivotal trial for nasal polyps that researchers will report soon. Dupilumab, which works by blocking a receptor for both interleukin 4 and interleukin 13 and thereby shutting down type 2 inflammation, is already approved in the United States for treating atopic dermatitis and asthma.

Type 2 inflammation drives polyp formation in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis that can produce severe nasal congestion, breathing difficulty, and substantially reduced quality of life.

In the new trial, the drug showed efficacy by significantly improving both the nasal congestion score reported by patients and the nasal polyp score measured by sinus endoscopy after 24 weeks on treatment, when compared with control patients on placebo, Joseph K. Han, MD, said at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology.

Patients enrolled in the study had chronic, severe sinusitis and nasal polyps that remained uncontrolled despite prior surgery, for 75% of enrolled patients, or treatment with systemic corticosteroids, used on about 90% of the patients within the prior 2 years.

During the 24 weeks of treatment, 23% of patients in the control arm had to restart systemic corticosteroid treatment or have surgery, compared with 7% of patients on dupilumab treatment, a statistically significant difference.

 

 

The new drug is a “game changer,” for these patients, Dr. Han said in a video interview.

In some patients, treatment produced complete polyp resolution. He and his colleagues in the otolaryngology field are now trying to decide exactly which patients with polyps secondary to sinusitis will be good candidates for dupilumab after it receives an expected indication for shrinking nasal polyps.

Roughly 4% of the adult population has chronic rhinosinusitis that generates polyps. How many of these patients are affected severely enough to warrant dupilumab treatment is not clear, but will likely include several hundreds of thousands of U.S. adults, said Dr. Han, professor of otolaryngology and chief of the division of allergy at Eastern Virginia Medical School in Norfolk.



The SINUS-24 (A Controlled Clinical Study of Dupilumab in Patients With Nasal Polyps) trial enrolled patients at 76 sites in the United States and in several European countries. The study randomized 143 patients who received standard treatment plus a 300-mg dupilumab subcutaneous injection every 2 weeks, and 133 patients who received standard treatment plus placebo injections. Standard treatment included a nasal corticosteroid spray.

After 24 weeks of treatment, the endoscopically-measured nasal polyp score, which averaged about 6 at baseline on a scale of 0-8, fell by an average of 2.06 points, compared with controls, which was a statistically significant and clinically meaningful change, said Dr. Han.

The second primary endpoint, patient self-assessment of nasal congestion on a scale of 0-3, showed an average 0.89 improvement, compared with controls, which was also a statistically significant and meaningful change from the average baseline score of about 2.4.

Other efficacy measures also showed benefits from treatment, including a substantial improvement compared with controls in a quality-of-life measure. The safety profile was benign compared with placebo, and consistent with existing safety data for the drug.SINUS-24 was funded by Regeneron and Sanofi, the companies that market dupilumab. Dr. Han has been an adviser to Regeneron and Sanofi.

SOURCE: Han JK et al. AAAAI 2019, Abstract L4.

– Dupilumab, an anti-inflammatory drug already approved for use in the United States, met its efficacy endpoints for treating chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps in a pivotal trial with 276 patients.

The results make it likely that dupilumab (Dupixent) will receive a new indication from the Food and Drug Administration, pending similar results in a second pivotal trial for nasal polyps that researchers will report soon. Dupilumab, which works by blocking a receptor for both interleukin 4 and interleukin 13 and thereby shutting down type 2 inflammation, is already approved in the United States for treating atopic dermatitis and asthma.

Type 2 inflammation drives polyp formation in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis that can produce severe nasal congestion, breathing difficulty, and substantially reduced quality of life.

In the new trial, the drug showed efficacy by significantly improving both the nasal congestion score reported by patients and the nasal polyp score measured by sinus endoscopy after 24 weeks on treatment, when compared with control patients on placebo, Joseph K. Han, MD, said at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology.

Patients enrolled in the study had chronic, severe sinusitis and nasal polyps that remained uncontrolled despite prior surgery, for 75% of enrolled patients, or treatment with systemic corticosteroids, used on about 90% of the patients within the prior 2 years.

During the 24 weeks of treatment, 23% of patients in the control arm had to restart systemic corticosteroid treatment or have surgery, compared with 7% of patients on dupilumab treatment, a statistically significant difference.

 

 

The new drug is a “game changer,” for these patients, Dr. Han said in a video interview.

In some patients, treatment produced complete polyp resolution. He and his colleagues in the otolaryngology field are now trying to decide exactly which patients with polyps secondary to sinusitis will be good candidates for dupilumab after it receives an expected indication for shrinking nasal polyps.

Roughly 4% of the adult population has chronic rhinosinusitis that generates polyps. How many of these patients are affected severely enough to warrant dupilumab treatment is not clear, but will likely include several hundreds of thousands of U.S. adults, said Dr. Han, professor of otolaryngology and chief of the division of allergy at Eastern Virginia Medical School in Norfolk.



The SINUS-24 (A Controlled Clinical Study of Dupilumab in Patients With Nasal Polyps) trial enrolled patients at 76 sites in the United States and in several European countries. The study randomized 143 patients who received standard treatment plus a 300-mg dupilumab subcutaneous injection every 2 weeks, and 133 patients who received standard treatment plus placebo injections. Standard treatment included a nasal corticosteroid spray.

After 24 weeks of treatment, the endoscopically-measured nasal polyp score, which averaged about 6 at baseline on a scale of 0-8, fell by an average of 2.06 points, compared with controls, which was a statistically significant and clinically meaningful change, said Dr. Han.

The second primary endpoint, patient self-assessment of nasal congestion on a scale of 0-3, showed an average 0.89 improvement, compared with controls, which was also a statistically significant and meaningful change from the average baseline score of about 2.4.

Other efficacy measures also showed benefits from treatment, including a substantial improvement compared with controls in a quality-of-life measure. The safety profile was benign compared with placebo, and consistent with existing safety data for the drug.SINUS-24 was funded by Regeneron and Sanofi, the companies that market dupilumab. Dr. Han has been an adviser to Regeneron and Sanofi.

SOURCE: Han JK et al. AAAAI 2019, Abstract L4.

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