Title: Asthma- Targeted therapies | Jindal Chest Clinic
1ASTHMA TARGETED THERAPY
- Dr. S.K Jindal
- www.jindalchest.com
2Asthma
- Chronic Inflammatory disorder of airways
characterized by Episodic, reversible
bronchospasm resulting from an exaggerated
bronchoconstrictor response to various stimuli - Affects 10 of children 5-7 adults
- Highest in NZ, Low in Fiji 1
3Trends in Prevalence of Asthma by Age U.S.,
1985-1996
Rate/1,000 Persons
80
Age (years)
70
lt18 18-44 45-64 65 Total (All Ages)
60
50
40
30
20
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
Year
4India Prevalence Studies
Adults Viswanathan (1966) Patna 2.78 Delhi 1.8
Chowgule (1998) Mumbai M 3.8 W 3.4 (17
using symptoms /or BHR) Jindal (2000)
Chandigarh M 4 W 1.27 Children Chhabra
(1998) Delhi Current 11.6 Gupta
(2001) Chandigarh Boy 2.6, Girl
1.9 Respir sympt 31 ISAAC (1998) Overall
Age 6-7 yrs 3.5 13-14 yrs 4.5
5Pathogenesis
INFLAMMATION
6Pathogenesis of Asthma
IL6,IL12
IL 5, IL 16
IL 4, IL5 IL 10,IL13
Eotaxin Cytookines
PDE4, TGF B ICAM ,V CAM, IL13
7Immunology of Asthma
J Allergy Clin. Immunol. 2002 , 109 , S490-S502
8The evolution of asthma treatment
Targeted therapy
J Allergy Clin Immunol 20071201269-75
9The need for new therapies
- Current therapies ICS ,LABA,SABA act locally
- More than 25 of patients using ICS LABA remain
inadequately controlled and at high risk of
exacerbation - Small percentage of patients (5) who are not
responsive
Chest 2008133989-998 Am J
Respir Crit Care Med 2005
10A new paradigm A systemic diseaseneeds a
systemic approach
- Asthma is a systemic disease
- New classes that are effective in severe poorly
controlled asthma - An oral treatment that is as effective as inhaled
corticosteroids without any side effects - Drugs that modify or even cure the disease
J Allergy Clin Immunol 20071201269-75
11Asthma Novel therapies
Chest 2008133989-998
12New corticosteroidsSoft Dissociated steroids
- Ciclesonide, a pro-drug becomes activated
(desciclesonide) by action of esterases in lung - Steroid-dependent asthma, administering
ciclesonide, 640 or 1,280 g/d, significantly
reduced oral prednisone requirements by 47 and
63 - less systemic effects
- Long-term retention in lung
- No oral bioavailability
- High degree of binding to circulating proteins
- Dissociated steroids
- greater effect on non-genomic than genomic effect
- better therapeutic ratio
- suitable for oral administration
Chest 2006 12911761187
Drugs 2004.64, 511519 Br. J. Pharmacol. 2006.
148, 245254
13New bronchodilators
Levcromakalim
Nature Reviews Drug Discovery 3831,2004
14Eosinophils and Asthma
15Targeting Eosinophils in Asthma
TRENDS in Molecular Medicine.200612 11
16Targeting IgE in Asthma
Journal of Asthma, 45429436, 2008
17Omalizumab
- Omalizumab (Xolair, Genentech) recombinant
humanized IgG1 monoclonal anti-IgE antibody - Binds to IgE molecule at same epitope on the Fc
region that binds to FceRI - An 89 to 99 percent reduction in free serum IgE
occurs soon after administration of omalizumab
18Omalizumab Mechanisms of action
19Evidence of Clinical Benefit
- Omalizumab reduces both early and late asthmatic
responses with significant improvements in FEV1
after allergen challenge.
AmJ Respir Crit Care Med 1997182834.
20Evidence of Clinical Benefit
- Moderate-to-severe asthma symptomatic despite
receiving ICS therapy. - Adding omalizumab
- Significantly reduced exacerbations vs adding
placebo during the steroid stable and
steroid-tapering phases - Allowed greater reductions in ICS dose
requirements (all p lt 0.01).
J Allergy Clin Immunol 2001 108184190 Eur
Respir J 2001 18254261
21Evidence of Clinical Benefit
- In pooled analyses of clinical trials,
omalizumab - Significantly reduced asthma exacerbations by
38, emergency department visits by 61, hospital
admissions by 52, and unscheduled doctor visits
by 47 vs control subjects - Benefits of adding omalizumab particularly
evident in patients receiving high-dose ICS
therapy, with frequent asthma exacerbations and
with poor lung function
Allergy 2005 60302308 Chest 2004 12513781386
22Omalizumab clinical trials
23Investigation of Omalizumab in severe Asthma
Treatment (innovate) study
- INNOVATE double-blind, multicentre, parallel-
group study - Patients treated with high-dose ICSs plus a LABA
with reduced lung function and a recent history
of clinically significant exacerbation were
evaluated - Reduced
- Severe exacerbations by 50,
- Emergency department visits by 44
- Improved lung function, asthma symptoms
- Asthma-related quality of life
INNOVATE. Allergy 2005 60309316
24INNOVATE study
INNOVATE. Allergy 2005 60309316
25Clinical Use
- Patients likely to benefit
- With evidence of sensitization to perennial
aeroallergens - Require high doses of inhaled corticosteroids
- ( gt
800ug BDP) - Frequent exacerbations of asthma
- Unstable disease ( FEV1 lt 60 )
- IgE level between 30 and 700 IU/mL
- Those with severe symptoms - poor adherence to
daily medication
CHEST 2006 129466474 N Engl J Med
20063542689-95.
26Preparation for Use
- Omalizumab supplied as a lyophilized, sterile
powder in single-use, 5-ml vials -150 or 75 mg on
reconstitution with sterile water (not normal
saline) for injection - Must be used within four hours if at room
temperature or eight hours if refrigerated - Total dose not to exceed 375 mg with no single
injection gt 150 mg
Chin Med J 2008121(7)640-648
27Dosage
- Recommended dose - 0.016 mg per kg body wt per IU
of IgE every four weeks, administered
subcutaneously at either two-week or four-week
intervals - Monitoring of total serum IgE levels during
course of therapy not indicated, because levels
elevated as a result of presence of circulating
IgEanti-IgE complexes
N Engl J Med 20063542689-95.
28Dosing Table
29Response to Treatment Adverse Effects
- Patients should be treated for at least 12 weeks
before efficacy assessed - Most common adverse events - viral infections,
URTI, sinusitis, and headaches - Rash, diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, epistaxis,
menorrhagia, hematoma, and injection site
reactions - Anaphylaxis
- Epithelial or solid-organ cancers
- Omalizumab should not be used in patients with
cancer or a strong family history of cancer
30Areas of Uncertainty
- In clinical practice, there is considerable
variability of response to omalizumab therapy - Relative benefit of Omalizumab in comparison with
other available therapies, such as leukotriene
modifiers or theophylline not known - The efficacy and safety of omalizumab not been
established for durations of treatment exceeding
one year - No firm guidelines exist ( NAEPP level B )
Journal of Asthma, 2008 45429436,
31Regulatory T-cells in Asthma
CHEST 2008 133989998
32Role of Th2 cells in asthma
Nature Genetics 5 376-387, 2004
33Targeting T-cells in Asthma
- Neutralizing Th2 Cytokines
- IL-4 primary factor driving B-cell isotype
switching from IgM to IgE - IL-5 is of crucial importance for eosinophilic
- inflammation
- IL-13 contribute to allergic inflammation by
modulating Th1/Th2 balance and stimulating IL-5
production
IL 13
J. Clin. Invest. 11413891397 (2004).
34SOLUBLE IL-4R
- Recombinant human soluble IL-4 receptor (sIL-4R),
inactivates IL-4, evaluated in steroid dependent
asthma patients following withdrawal of ICS
therapy - Reduction in exhaled nitric oxide after single
sIL-4R dose stabilization of asthma symptoms,
despite ICS therapy withdrawal - Administered once weekly for 12 weeks, sIL-4R
prevented FEV1 decline - Asthma exacerbation similar between sIL-4R and
placebo groups
Chin Med J 2008121(7)640-648 J Allergy Clin
Immunol 2001 10796397
35ANTI-IL-5 HMOABSMepolizumab
- Anti-IL-5 hMoAb (Mepolizumab) significantly
reduced number of blood eosinophils, sputum
eosinophils airway eosinophils by 55 for at
least 4 weeks - Higher dose of mepolizumab significantly reduce
risk of development of severe asthma exacerbation
by about 50 - Severe asthma not responding to conventional
treatments- reduced number of circulating
eosinophils and small, but significant
improvement in FEV1, but no other clinical
improvement
Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2003 167 199-204.
36Interleukin 13 and Asthma
Nature Reviews Drug Discovery 3831,2004
37AntiIL-13 mAb
- IL-13 induces airway hyperresponsiveness,
- mucus production, secretion of eotaxin, and
changes in airway remodeling - At least 3 different humanized mAbs under
development, specific for human IL-13 are either
in phase I or phase II human clinical trials
J Allergy Clin Immunol 20071191251-7
38Suplatast tosilate - 0ral agent
- Th2 cytokine inhibitor - suppresses IL-4 and IL-5
synthesis - Severe asthma( 0n ICS) - significant improvements
in FEV1, morning PEF rate and daytime asthma
symptoms at 4 weeks vs adding placebo - Significantly reduced AHR and improved PEF
symptoms in steroid-naive patients with mild
asthma
J Allergy Clin Immunol 2003 111958966
39TNF ALPHA
40Clinical Evidence for use
- Etanercept (recombinant fusion protein)
- Marked and significant improvement in asthma
control when added to high-dose ICS in
treatment-resistant refractory asthma - Infliximab(anti-TNF- monoclonal antibody)
- Reduced diurnal PEF variability in a trial of
patients with moderate asthma despite receiving
ICS therapy - Fewer exacerbations during the 8-week study
N Engl J Med 2006354697708
Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2006 174753762
41TNF inhibitors The other side
- TNF-a inhibitors predispose to increased risk of
serious and life-threatening infection,
recrudescence of tuberculosis, reactivation of
hepatitis B and malignancy - Merits further study in larger trials in patients
with severe asthma - TNF-a-inhibitor therapy likely be used in
combination with, not as a replacement for,
standard treatment of refractory asthma
Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2007 175 926-934
42Phosphodiesterase-4 inhibitors
Nature Reviews Drug Discovery 3831,2004
43PDE-4 Inhibitors
- Roflumilast, orally active PDE-4 inhibitor,
dose-related inhibition of late-phase
bronchospasm following allergen challenge in mild
asthma - Improvements in lung function ( FEV1) , asthma
symptoms, and reductions in rescue medication
use, vs ICS - Ciclamilast - mediates AHR through inhibition of
PDE-4D mRNA expression and down-modulation of
PDE-4 activity, reduced inflammation and mucus
hypersecretion
Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol 2006 96679686
Eur J Pharmacol 2006 547125135
44Adenosine receptors New targets
Nature Reviews Drug Discovery 3831,2004
45Adenosine A2B Antagonists
- Activation of A2B receptors on mast cells
stimulates release of proinflammatory mediators
and cytokines, leads to increased IgE production
by B cells - Activation of A2B receptors on lung fibroblasts
promotes their differentiation into - myofibroblasts,suggesting a role in airway
remodeling - Selective A2B receptor antagonist (CVT-6883)
reduced allergen-induced bronchospasm and
inflammatory cell infiltration
J Pharmacol ExpTher200732012461251
46Chemokine/Chemokine Receptor Antagonists
- Chemokines are small peptides that attract
inflammatory cells, including mast
cells,eosinophils and Th2 cells into airways - Signal via G-protein-coupled receptors for which
small-molecule inhibitors can be developed - Most studied target has been chemokine (C-C
motif) receptor 3 (CCR3), predominantly expressed
on eosinophils and mediates chemotactic response
to CC-chemokine eotaxin, in asthma - Antagonism has been associated with decreases
- in eosinophil infiltration and AHR in
experimental - asthma models
Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol 2007 366167
47Signal Transduction targets
TRENDS in Molecular Medicine.200612 11
48Transcription-factor blockade
- Transcription factors are potential targets for
development of immunomodulatory agents to limit
expression of inflammatory genes in asthma - Kinase Inhibitors p38 mitogen-activated protein
kinase and inhibitor of B kinase 2 - Identified and evaluated in models of arthritis
and other Th1-mediated inflammatory diseases - Role in asthma remains to be determined
Eur J Pharmacol 2006533118 132
49Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma
agonists
- Thiazolidinediones are PPAR-g agonists currently
approved for NIDDM - PPAR-g agonists have anti-inflammatory effects in
addition to inhibition of GATA-3 levels that
could be targeted for treatment of asthma - Several small clinical trials ongoing
- Anecdotally, diabetic patients with asthma
started taking thiazolidinediones for diabetes
had improvement in asthma manifested by decreased
symptoms and improved pulmonary function values
Clin Exp Allergy 2006361494-504. Diabetes Care
200225401.
50Toll-like receptor (TLR) agonists
- TLRs play a key role in activating
antigen-presenting cells for both innate and
adaptive immune responses - Agonists or TLR4 and TLR9 have been developed and
used in clinical trials - TLR4 agonist
- Evaluated as a potential therapy for seasonal
allergic rhinitis - TLR9 agonists (immunostimulatory
oligonucleotides) - Tolamba currently being investigated for
allergic rhinitis
N Engl J Med 20063551445-55.
J Allergy Clin Immunol 2004113235-41
51Targeted
52Pharmacogenetics The Future of Asthma
Therapeutics?
Gene Species Full name
C5 mouse Complement factor 5
TIM1 mouse T-cell immunoglobulin and mucin-domain 1
ADAM33 human A disintegrin and metalloproteinase 33
DPP10 human dipeptidyl peptidase 10
PHF11 human plant homeodomain finger protein 11
53Summary
- Airway inflammation, a prominent feature in
asthma, needs to be targeted with effective
medication to achieve asthma control - A major unmet need is to treat patients with
- severe asthma who are relatively
corticosteroid-resistant more effectively - A number of approaches currently in clinical
development, show promise in targeting specific - cytokines, inflammatory cells, or inflammatory
- mechanisms, may become available for clinical
use in the future - Long-term, multicenter clinical trials accurately
assessing risks and benefits are needed
54THANK YOU