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Not Yet RecruitingNCT06818019

Withdrawal of Dupilumab in Severe Asthma

WIthdrawal of DUpilumab in Severe Asthma: a Randomized Non-inferiority-controlled Trial

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
205 (estimated)
Sponsor
University Hospital, Toulouse · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Asthma management has been revolutionised by the development of biological therapies. Dupilumab is an anti-interleukin4 receptor marketed in 2020 for severe asthmatic patients with 2 exacerbations or more within the last 12 months. Although data showed that safety and efficacy of dupilumab are sustained when treatment is extended up to 3 years, no study has emerged regarding dupilumab discontinuation. This study aims to demonstrate the non-inferiority regarding strategy failure at 24 months of stopping dupilumab (intervention group) compared with its continuation (control group) in controlled asthma patients receiving this drug for at least 3 years.

Detailed description

Although dupilumab is a very effective drug in severe asthma, the optimal duration of this drug is unknown. However, this is a crucial question given the high cost of dupilumab and the lack of data regarding the long-term inhibition of type 2 pathway. Studies on biologic discontinuation are scarce in severe asthma. Studies with other biologics have shown that discontinuation of these drugs is feasible particularly for patients with low exacerbation rate before stopping treatment. In a study with pooled asthma biologics, 1247 (25.1%) stopped the biologic among the 4958 biologic users (including 19.8% of dupilumab users). Among all stoppers, 10.2% failed discontinuation of the asthma biologic in the 6 months after stopping, defined as an increase of 50% or more in exacerbations. Among patients who continued the biologic, 9.5% had an increase of 50% or more in exacerbations during a 6-month period, showing a similar failing rate. Such data for dupilumab discontinuation are lacking. In this study, we plan to include patients with controlled asthma treated with dupilumab for at least 3 years who will be randomised to stopping dupilumab or dupilumab continuation with a follow-up of 24 months. In total, 5 visits will occur for each patient: the inclusion/randomisation visit (baseline), 3 follow-up visits at month 6, month 12, month 24 as usually done in severe asthma, and a phone call visit at 18 months for exacerbations, treatments and adverse events collection. At each onsite visit, asthma medications, concomitant treatments, nasal polyp score (if applicable), number of exacerbations, Asthma Control Questionnaire, Severe Asthma Questionnaire, Treatment Burden Questionnaire and Sino-Nasal Outcome Test-22 scores, Forced expiratory volume in one second, Forced vital capacity, Fraction exhaled nitric oxide (if available), blood eosinophil, neutrophil and lymphocyte counts, adverse events, hospital admissions, and unscheduled medical visits will be recorded.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGStopping dupilumabStopping dupilumab with no dose-reducing or interval of time-increasing strategy

Timeline

Start date
2025-04-02
Primary completion
2027-12-31
Completion
2029-12-31
First posted
2025-02-10
Last updated
2025-02-10

Locations

29 sites across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06818019. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.