4.5 Article

Mepolizumab decreases tissue eosinophils while increasing type-2 cytokines in eosinophilic chronic rhinosinusitis

Journal

CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL ALLERGY
Volume 52, Issue 12, Pages 1403-1413

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cea.14152

Keywords

biologics; biomarkers; chronic rhinosinusitis; eosinophils; mepolizumab; mucosa; type-2 inflammation

Funding

  1. GlaxoSmithKline

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study demonstrates that Mepolizumab can effectively reduce eosinophil counts in sinonasal tissue of patients with eosinophilic chronic rhinosinusitis. However, it does not appear to have a significant effect on eosinophil degranulation. Additionally, the use of Mepolizumab leads to increased levels of type-2 cytokines in sinonasal tissue, suggesting a local inflammatory feedback loop.
Background Eosinophilic chronic rhinosinusitis is an often treatment-resistant inflammatory disease mediated by type-2 cytokines, including interleukin (IL)-5. Mepolizumab, a monoclonal antibody drug targeting IL-5, has demonstrated efficacy and safety in inflammatory airway disease, but there is negligible evidence on direct tissue response. The study's aim was to determine the local effect of mepolizumab on inflammatory biomarkers in sinonasal tissue of eosinophilic chronic rhinosinusitis patients. Methods Adult patients with eosinophilic chronic rhinosinusitis received 100mg mepolizumab subcutaneously at four-weekly intervals for 24 weeks in this prospective phase 2 clinical trial. Tissue eosinophil counts, eosinophil degranulation (assessed as submucosal eosinophil peroxidase deposition by immunohistochemistry) and cytokine levels (measured in homogenates by immunoassay) were evaluated in ethmoid sinus tissue biopsies collected at baseline and at weeks 4, 8, 16 and 24. Results Twenty patients (47.7 +/- 11.7 years, 50% female) were included. Sinonasal tissue eosinophil counts decreased after 24 weeks of treatment with mepolizumab (101.64 +/- 93.80 vs 41.74 +/- 53.76 cells per 0.1 mm(2); p = .035), eosinophil degranulation remained unchanged (5.79 +/- 2.08 vs 6.07 +/- 1.20, p = .662), and type-2 cytokine levels increased in sinonasal tissue for IL-5 (10.84 +/- 18.65 vs 63.98 +/- 50.66, p = .001), IL-4 (4.48 +/- 3.77 vs 9.38 +/- 7.56, p = .004), IL-13 (4.02 +/- 2.57 vs 6.46 +/- 3.99, p = .024) and GM-CSF (1.51 +/- 1.74 vs 4.50 +/- 2.97, p = .001). Conclusion Mepolizumab reduced eosinophils in sinonasal tissue, demonstrating that antagonism of IL-5 suppresses eosinophil trafficking. With reduced tissue eosinophils, a local type-2 inflammatory feedback loop may occur. The study exposes mechanistic factors which may explain incomplete treatment response.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available