作者
Joseph K. Han,Claus Bachert,Wytske J. Fokkens,Martin Desrosiers,Martin Wagenmann,Stella E. Lee,Steven G. Smith,Neil A. Martin,Bhabita Mayer,Steven W. Yancey,Ana R. Sousa,Robert Chan,Claire Hopkins,Cecilia Ahlström Emanuelsson,Ledit Ardusso,Michael B. Armstrong,Philip G. Bardin,Sara Barnes,Miguel Bergna,Christian Betz,Achim Beule,James Blotter,Valeriu Bronescu,Matthew Brown,Sean Carrie,Adam Chaker,Hyung‐Ju Cho,Marie-Noëlle Corriveau,Timothy Courville,Mandy Cuevas,Cecelia Damask,Adam S. DeConde,Jaime Del Carpio,María De Salvo,Hun‐Jong Dhong,Stephen R. Durham,Anton Edin,Dale Ehmer,Pedro Elías,Adil Fatakia,Christine B. Franzese,Simon Gane,Gabriel García,Andrew Gillman,Moritz Groeger,Richard J. Harvey,Johan Hellgren,Thomas S. Higgins,Jonathan Hobson,Mattias Jangard,Arif Janjua,Naveed Kara,Sergey Karpischenko,Edward Kerwin,Fatimat Khanova,Shaun Kilty,Changhoon Kim,Seon-Tae Kim,Ludger Klimek,Craig LaForce,Samuel Leong,Bradley Marple,Anders Mårtensson,Jorge Máspero,N. Massey,Jonathan Matz,Chad M. McDuffie,Corina Mella,Steven Miller,Ekaterina Mirzabekyan,Jonathan Moss,N. Mumneh,Robert Nathan,Adriana Neagoş,Heidi Olze,A. Yu. Ovchinnikov,Randall A. Ow,Dmitriy Polyakov,Doinel Radeanu,Chae‐Seo Rhee,Ramón Luévanos Rojas,Jeffrey Rosenbloom,Sergey Ryazantsev,Chady Sader,Pablo Sáez Scherbovsky,Guy W. Scadding,Rodney J. Schlosser,Heena Shah-Patel,Ronald Shealy,Ayesha Siddiqi,Stacey L. Silvers,Narinder Singh,Doron D. Sommer,Weily Soong,Leigh J. Sowerby,Peter Spafford,Catalin Stefan,Richard K. Sterling,В. М. Свистушкин,Neetu Talreja,Galina Tarasova,Martha Tarpay,Alberto Tolcachier,Karin Toll,Carolina van Schaik,Luke Webb,H. James Wedner,Luis Wehbe,Soo Whan Kim,Barbara Wollenberg,Simon K. Wright,V. V. Yakusevich,Anahí Yáñez,Yury M. Yarin,David M. Yen,Hyo Yeol Kim
摘要
Background Chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps affects approximately 2-4% of the general population, and longterm use of systemic corticosteroids is associated with adverse effects.The aim of this study was to assess the efficacy and safety of mepolizumab in adults with recurrent, refractory severe bilateral chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps. MethodsSYNAPSE was a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, phase 3 trial done at 93 centres, mainly hospitals, in 11 countries.Eligible patients were aged 18 years or older with recurrent, refractory, severe, bilateral nasal polyp symptoms (nasal obstruction symptom visual analogue scale [VAS] score of >5), were eligible for repeat nasal surgery (overall symptoms VAS score >7 and endoscopic nasal polyps score of ≥5, with a minimum score of 2 in each nasal cavity) despite standard of care treatment, and had to have at least one nasal surgery in the past 10 years.Patients were randomly assigned (1:1), using permuted block design, to receive either 100 mg mepolizumab subcutaneously or placebo once every 4 weeks, in addition to standard of care (mometasone furoate intranasal spray for at least 8 weeks before screening and during the study, saline nasal irrigations, systemic corticosteroids or antibiotics, or both), as required, for 52 weeks.Site staff, the central study team, and patients were masked to study treatment and absolute blood eosinophil counts.The coprimary endpoints were change from baseline in total endoscopic nasal polyp score at week 52 and in mean nasal obstruction VAS score during weeks 49-52, assessed in the intention-to-treat population (ITT).This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov,NCT03085797.Findings From May 25, 2017, to Dec 12, 2018, 854 patients were screened for eligibility.414 patients were randomly assigned with 407 included in the ITT population; 206 received mepolizumab and 201 received placebo.Total endoscopic nasal polyp score significantly improved at week 52 from baseline with mepolizumab versus placebo (adjusted difference in medians -0•73, 95% CI -1•11 to -0•34; p<0•0001) and nasal obstruction VAS score during weeks 49-52 also significantly improved (-3•14, -4•09 to -2•18; p<0•0001).Adverse events considered related to study treatment were reported in 30 (15%) of 206 patients receiving mepolizumab and 19 (9%) of 201 receiving placebo.On-treatment serious adverse events occurred in 12 (6%) patients receiving mepolizumab and 13 (6%) receiving placebo; none were considered related to treatment in those receiving mepolizumab.One death was reported in the placebo group (myocardial infarction; death occurred 99 days after the last dose) and was considered unrelated to the treatment.Interpretation Mepolizumab treatment improved nasal polyp size and nasal obstruction compared with placebo, with no new safety indications, in patients with recurrent, refractory severe chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps.These findings suggest that mepolizumab provides an effective add-on treatment option to standard of care in this population.