Long-term outcomes of combination biologic therapy in uncontrolled severe asthma: a case study.
Severe asthma
allergic asthma
biologic therapy
eosinophilic asthma
uncontrolled asthma
Journal
The Journal of asthma : official journal of the Association for the Care of Asthma
ISSN: 1532-4303
Titre abrégé: J Asthma
Pays: England
ID NLM: 8106454
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
05 2023
05 2023
Historique:
medline:
28
3
2023
pubmed:
2
8
2022
entrez:
1
8
2022
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
Treatment with biologics has significantly reduced the social and economic burden of severe asthma. However, some patients may still feature a suboptimal control of their symptoms while on therapy. In this subset of asthmatic patients, a benefit from a dual biologic therapy has sporadically been reported in literature. Our aim is to add our experience to the limited body of evidence supporting combination biologic therapies. Here we present the case of a 68-year-old nonsmoker female, with an allergic and eosinophilic corticosteroid-dependent severe asthma. She displayed well controlled comorbidities and good adherence to the inhaled therapy. Omalizumab was started in 2008 with an initial remarkable clinical improvement. After nine years of biologic therapy, she reported a gradual worsening of her symptoms and exacerbations. Mepolizumab was then added in 2019. The addition of Mepolizumab resulted in a meaningful amelioration of her quality of life, asthma control, number of exacerbations and 6-minute-walking-distance at 3-year follow-up. The average Prednisone dosage was tapered from 25 mg to 20 mg daily. No adverse events were observed since the introduction of the second biologic. Our experience indicates that Mepolizumab may be beneficial and safe as an add-on biologic in a patient whose allergic and eosinophilic asthma remains uncontrolled despite treatment with an anti-IgE strategy. Further studies on a larger number of patients are required to demonstrate whether the positive outcomes published so far are replicable on a larger scale.
Identifiants
pubmed: 35913268
doi: 10.1080/02770903.2022.2109162
doi:
Substances chimiques
Anti-Asthmatic Agents
0
Omalizumab
2P471X1Z11
Types de publication
Case Reports
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM