GSK present data at ERS for depemokimab an asthma medication that last 6 months.
On 9 September, GSK presented the full results from the SWIFT-1 and SWIFT-2 phase III clinical trials which assessed the efficacy and safety of depemokimab versus placebo in adults and adolescents with severe asthma with type 2 inflammation characterised by raised blood eosinophil count.1
The data were presented at the European Respiratory Society International Conference (7-11 September) in Vienna, Austria and simultaneously published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
SWIFT-1 and SWIFT-2 are duplicate studies with the same primary and secondary endpoints. Both trials met their primary endpoints with statistically significant reductions in the annualised rate of clinically significant exacerbations (asthma attacks) over 52 weeks versus placebo, with the pre-specified pooled analysis showing a significant 54% reduction in exacerbations [Rate Ratio 0.46, 95% CI, 0.36 – 0.59, p<0.001] (AER depemokimab = 0.51 exacerbations per year versus placebo = 1.11).
In the pooled analysis of SWIFT-1 and SWIFT-2, there was a 72% reduction [RR 0.28, 95% CI 0.13 – 0.61, p=0.002] (AER: depemokimab = 0.02 versus placebo = 0.09) in the secondary endpoint of clinically significant exacerbations requiring hospitalisation or emergency department visit compared to placebo. As the pooled analysis of SWIFT-1 and SWIFT-2 did not control for multiple comparisons, results with a significant p-value (<0.05) are termed nominally significant. In the individual trials, the secondary endpoints assessing quality-of-life or the symptoms-based measure, showed improvements but did not reach statistical significance versus placebo.
These data are part of GSK’s aspirations to advance treatment goals for those with severe asthma. Preventing exacerbations, a known risk for hospitalisation, and cause of cumulative lung damage and disease progression, has been a longstanding goal of asthma treatment and care. Sustained suppression of type 2 inflammation, an underlying driver of exacerbations, could help change the course of disease. Extended dosing intervals could also help tackle other barriers to optimal outcomes such as adherence or frequent healthcare appointments.
Kaivan Khavandi, SVP, Global Head of Respiratory/Immunology R&D, said:
“With a dosing schedule of just two injections per year, depemokimab has the potential to be the first approved ultra-long-acting biologic with sixmonth dosing. This could offer physicians and millions of patients with severe asthma an option that provides reassurance of sustained suppression of a key marker of type 2 inflammation and a reduction in the rate of exacerbations and hospitalisation – the fundamental treatment goal in asthma.”
David Jackson, FRCP, MSc, PhD, lead author of SWIFT-1 and SWIFT-2, Professor of Respiratory Medicine at King’s College London and Clinical Lead for Severe Asthma at Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospitals, London, said:
“As a physician, it is encouraging to see results of research that could evolve the management of severe asthma. For me, preventing exacerbations and particularly those that lead to hospitalisations is a treatment priority for the people I see with severe asthma. Not only are exacerbations traumatic for patients, and contribute to pressures on healthcare systems/hospitals, but each exacerbation can cause irreversible changes to the tissue of the lungs that over time can lead to permanent loss of lung function and make a patient’s breathing progressively more difficult.”
Depemokimab is the first ultra-long-acting biologic to be evaluated in phase III trials; it has high binding affinity and potency for interleukin-5 (IL-5), which will enable six-month dosing intervals for patients with severe asthma. IL-5 is a key cytokine (protein) in type 2 inflammation, typically detected by raised blood eosinophil count. More than 80% of people with severe asthma exhibit type 2 inflammation as the underlying pathobiology of their asthma. Identification of these people could guide physicians in initiating the right treatment for the individual’s type of asthma, thereby helping to reduce their risk of exacerbations.
The proportion of patients experiencing any adverse event (AE) was similar between the depemokimab and placebo group in SWIFT-1 (depemokimab = 73%, placebo = 73%) and SWIFT-2 (depemokimab = 72%, placebo = 78%). No deaths or serious AEs were determined to be related to the study treatment by the investigator.
The trial was conducted during a time of high COVID prevalence, and these events were recorded as the most common AE across groups. There was no difference in reports of COVID between those receiving depemokimab or placebo in SWIFT-1 (depemokimab = 20%, placebo = 22%) and SWIFT-2 (15% for both depemokimab and placebo). Nasopharyngitis, another name for the common cold, was the second most common AE in the pooled analysis. The proportion of patients experiencing a nasopharyngitis AE was lower in the depemokimab group than the placebo group in SWIFT-1 (depemokimab = 12%, placebo = 19%) and in SWIFT-2 (depemokimab = 13%, placebo = 21%). Safety analysis of the data continues as part of the open-label extension studies.
These data will inform regulatory filings around the world. Depemokimab is currently not approved anywhere in the world.
For more information, read the original press release.
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