Data from a phase III study of a drug for the treatment of autoimmune
diseases has been released, which show that it is effective in the treatment of
bronchial asthma. If the drug is approved for asthma, it could be on a fast
track to becoming a sought-after and purchased drug.
An estimated fifty billion dollars is spent annually directly on the care of
patients with asthma, and much of this money goes to pay for expensive
inpatient care for patients. Despite the widespread use of inhalers and
supportive care, asthma control remains difficult for many patients. As a
result , there are about 400,000 asthma-related hospitalizations in the United
States each year. Clearly, there is a need for new therapies that can help
patients with this disease, and fortunately, drug developers are creating new
drugs that can better control this condition.
Brand-name drugs that have gained approval over the past few years belong to a
new class that targets interleukin-5 to reduce inflammation, and in trials they
have reduced attacks in patients with severely controlled moderate to severe
asthma. Their sales so far represent only a small fraction of overall asthma
spending, but demand is growing. Like them, the new drug is a biologic that
reduces inflammation, although unlike previous novelties it targets
interleukin-4 and interleukin-13, two other cytokines involved in immune system
responses. In the third phase of the study, adding a dose of three hundred
milligrams to standard asthma therapy reduced severe asthma attacks by 46%
after fifty-two weeks. Patients with an IL-4 and IL-13 activity score of 150 or
300 eosinophilic cells/microliter or greater experienced a 60% and 67%
reduction in seizures, respectively. The drug also increased lung function
compared to placebo, as measured by measuring expiratory volume for one second.
The overall incidence of side effects and discontinuation of the drug was
similar to placebo. There is no guarantee that the drug will receive Food and
Drug Administration approval for asthma treatment, but if it does, it will be
evaluated by about a million US adults and adolescents.