Source: DGNews | Posted 9 years ago
Etanercept May Be Effective For Chronic, Severe Asthma
Tags:
By Peggy Peck
Special to DG News
SAN DIEGO, CA -- November 7, 2002 -- Etanercept, an arthritis drug, is effective in improving lung function and bronchial hyperresponsiveness in patients with chronic severe asthma, while reducing the requirement for rescue medications, according to results of a small, open label study.
Suresh K Babu, MD, of the department of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology, Southampton General Hospital, Southampton, England, said patients were able to completely withdraw from nebulized salbutamol after 12-weeks of etanercept treatment.
Dr. Babu said he theorized that etanercept would inhibit tumor necrosis factor alpha. TNF- []a[] is a pleiotropic cytokine and is ubiquitous in the development of an inflammatory response. It increases the trans-epithelial migration of neutrophils, promotes chemotaxis of eosinophils/monocytes, activates T-cell, and has growth promoting effects on fibroblasts in asthma. Etanercept is a recombinant fusion protein consisting of the soluble TNF- []a[] receptor (p75) linked to the Fc portion of human IgG 1.
Ten patients, aged 18 to 65 years, with chronic severe asthma on regular oral corticosteroids, high dose inhaled steroids, long acting beta-2 agonist and/or theophylline were enrolled. They had an FEV1 of at least 50 percent and demonstrated a reversibility of at least 9 percent with inhaled salbutamol.
The patients underwent baseline lung function measurements, methacholine challenge and completed an asthma control questionnaire before and after the study. Diary cards were issued to monitor changes in peak flows, symptom scores and use of rescue medications. The study involved administration of 25mg of etanercept twice weekly for 12 weeks.
The patients showed improvements in their lung function after 12 weeks of administration of Etanercept. The FEV1/FVC ratio did not show significant change after treatment (74.7



Comments