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Biomarker Predictors of Clinical Efficacy of the Anti-IgE Biologic, Omalizumab, in Severe Asthma in Adults: Results of the SoMOSA Study

journal contribution
posted on 2024-04-30, 09:43 authored by Ratko Djukanović, Paul Brinkman, Johan Kolmert, Cristina Gomez, James Schofield, Joost Brandsma, Andy Shapanis, Paul JS Skipp, Anthony Postle, Craig Wheelock, Sven-Erik Dahlen, Peter J Sterk, Thomas Brown, David J Jackson, Adel Mansur, Ian Pavord, Mitesh Patel, Christopher BrightlingChristopher Brightling, Salman Siddiqui, Peter Bradding, Ian Sabroe, Dinesh Saralaya, Livingstone Chishimba, Joanna Porter, Douglas Robinson, Stephen Fowler, Peter H Howarth, Louisa Little, Thomas Oliver, Kayleigh Hill, Louise Stanton, Alexander Allen, Deborah Ellis, Gareth Griffiths, Tim Harrison, Ayobami Akenroye, Jessica Lasky-Su, Liam Heaney, Rekha Chaudhuri, Ramesh Kurukulaaratchy

The anti-IgE monoclonal, omalizumab, is widely used for severe asthma. This study aimed to identify biomarkers that predict clinical improvement during one year of omalizumab treatment.1-year, open-label, Study of Mechanisms of action of Omalizumab in Severe Asthma (SoMOSA) involving 216 severe (GINA step 4/5) uncontrolled atopic asthmatics (≥2 severe exacerbations in previous year) on high-dose inhaled corticosteroids, long-acting β-agonists, ± mOCS. It had two phases: 0-16 weeks, to assess early clinical improvement by Global Evaluation of Therapeutic Effectiveness (GETE), and 16-52 weeks, to assess late responses by ≥50% reduction in exacerbations or dose of maintenance oral corticosteroids (mOCS). All participants provided samples (exhaled breath, blood, sputum, urine) before and after 16 weeks of omalizumab treatment.191 patients completed phase 1; 63% had early improvement. Of 173 who completed phase 2, 69% had reduced exacerbations by ≥50%, while 57% (37/65) on mOCS reduced their dose by ≥50%. The primary outcome 2, 3-dinor-11-β-PGF2α, GETE and standard clinical biomarkers (blood and sputum eosinophils, exhaled nitric oxide, serum IgE) did not predict either clinical response. Five breathomics (GC-MS) and 5 plasma lipid biomarkers strongly predicted the ≥50% reduction in exacerbations (receiver operating characteristic area under the curve (AUC): 0.780 and 0.922, respectively) and early responses (AUC:0.835 and 0.949, respectively). In independent cohorts, the GC-MS biomarkers differentiated between severe and mild asthma. Conclusions This is the first discovery of omics biomarkers that predict improvement to a biologic for asthma. Their prospective validation and development for clinical use is justified.

Background

Methods

Results

History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences/Respiratory Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine

Publisher

American Thoracic Society

issn

1073-449X

eissn

1535-4970

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2025-04-18

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Peter Bradding

Deposit date

2024-04-29

Rights Retention Statement

  • No

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