Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/112267
Título: REal worlD Effectiveness and Safety of Mepolizumab in a Multicentric Spanish Cohort of Asthma Patients Stratified by Eosinophils: The REDES Study
Autores/as: Domingo Ribas, Christian
Carrillo Díaz, Teresa 
Blanco Aparicio, Marina
Martínez Moragón, Eva
Banas Conejero, David
Sánchez Herrero, M. Guadalupe
Esquerre, Mariana Muñoz
Carreño, Héctor Cabrerizo
Valero, Antonio
Arismendi, Ebymar
Bobolea, Irina
Saiz, Gemma López
Sierra, Celia Pinedo
Barcala, Francisco Javier González
Corona, Purificación Pérez López
González, Jacinto Ramos
Puentes, Javier Martín
Campos, Gregorio Soto
Grimaldi, Francisco Pérez
Lluch, Inmaculada
Rivero, Juan Luis García
Villegas, Celia Gutierrez
Garrido, Idoia Salinas
Aracil, Cleofé Fernández
Maestu, Luis Puente
Girón, Walther Iván
Sacristán, Ángela Gómez
Palacios, Miguel Díaz
Ibáñez, Ethel
De Lorenzo, Irene
Sogo, Ana
Ross-Monserrate, Daniel
Prina, Elena
Vives, Eusebi Chiner
Baños, Sandra Vañes
Campos, Rocío Díaz
Moguel, Ismael García
Martínez, Carmen Montero
Marrube, María Fernandez
Valverde, Tamara Hermida
Enríquez, Anaís
Malanda, Nuria Marina
Larrauri, Ana Gómez
Dumpiérrez, Antonio García
Sainz, Rodolfo Castillo
Rodríguez, Nancy Ortega
Quintana, Lourdes Almeida
López, Luis Cabanes
Gancedo, Santiago Quirce
Ortega, Javier Dominguez
Ribate, David Romero
Hernández, Irene
Escudero, Daniel Laorden
Cisneros, Carolina
Viña, Antolín López
Alonso, Andrea Trisán
Careaga, Teresa Caruana
Fernández, Ana Gómez Bastero
Barrera, Lucía Marín
Clasificación UNESCO: 32 Ciencias médicas
320710 Inmunopatología
Fecha de publicación: 2021
Publicación seriada: Drugs (Basel) 
Resumen: Background: The efficacy of mepolizumab is well documented in severe eosinophilic asthma (SEA), although the stringent selection criteria adopted by SEA clinical trials limits the generalizability of results. Objective: Our study evaluated the effectiveness and safety of mepolizumab in patients with SEA in Spain. The primary efficacy endpoint was the change in the rate of clinically significant asthma exacerbations 12 months after starting mepolizumab compared to the baseline rate in the 12 months prior to treatment. Patients were stratified by baseline blood eosinophil counts. Methods: We conducted a multicentric observational cohort study of SEA patients treated with mepolizumab across 24 specialized hospital asthma units in Spain. Severe exacerbation rate, lung function, oral corticosteroid use (OCS) and asthma control test (ACT) were retrospectively collected and compared during the 12-month pre- and post-mepolizumab treatment. Adverse events were also investigated. Results: A total of 318 patients with SEA were included (mean age: 56.6 years, 69.2% female). Exacerbation rates decreased by 77.5%, and 50.6% of patients did not suffer any exacerbations during the 12 months of treatment. The difference in forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) pre- and post-bronchodilator after starting mepolizumab was 0.21 (0.46) L (95% CI 0.14–0.27) (p < 0.001). Exacerbations and lung function significantly improved across all eosinophil subgroups. Among the 98 patients on OCS, 47.8% were able to discontinue this treatment and the mean daily dose was decreased by 59.9%. The baseline ACT score was 14.1, increasing by a mean (SD) of 6.7 points (1.9) at 12 months. Adverse events related to mepolizumab were uncommon. Conclusions: This real-world study of SEA patients confirms that mepolizumab is effective in reducing clinically meaningful exacerbations, improving lung function, and decreasing OCS dependence and mean OCS dose at 12 months, irrespective of baseline eosinophil counts.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/112267
ISSN: 0012-6667
DOI: 10.1007/s40265-021-01597-9
Fuente: Drugs (Basel) [ISSN 0012-6667], n. 81, p. 1763–1774
Colección:Artículos
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