This prospective, single-arm, multicenter, phase IV interventional study assessed benralizumab in 138 benralizumab-naïve adult patients (18–75 years) with a physician-confirmed diagnosis of severe asthma with an eosinophilic phenotype. The setting was routine clinical care across multiple centers in India. Patients received benralizumab 30 mg subcutaneously once every 4 weeks for the first three doses and then 30 mg once every 8 weeks thereafter. The follow-up period was 24 weeks.
Regarding efficacy, the median number of asthma exacerbation events per year decreased from 2.0 at baseline to 0.0 at Week 24, with a p-value less than 0.05 indicating a statistically significant decrease. The median time to the first asthma exacerbation event was 100.0 days, with a range of 41 to 184 days. At Week 24, asthma control status showed that 61.5% of patients (83 of 135) were well-controlled and 33.3% (45 of 135) were partly controlled.
Safety analysis included 31.2% (43 of 138) of patients experiencing treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs). The most common TEAEs were pyrexia (16.7%), dyspnea (5.1%), productive cough (4.4%), cough (2.9%), and nasopharyngitis (2.2%). Five patients (3.6%) experienced serious adverse events, including dyspnea, productive cough, pyrexia, constipation, H1N1 influenza, and back pain. No TEAEs led to study drug discontinuation or death. The tolerability profile was described as acceptable and expected.
Key limitations include the single-arm study design, which limits causal inference regarding efficacy, and the observational nature of safety data collected in routine care. Causality for adverse events was not reported. The study does not provide comparative data against other treatments or placebo.
View Original Abstract ↓
The phase IV Fasenra Safety Trial in India (FAST) assessed the safety and effectiveness of benralizumab for a period of 24 weeks in adult Indian patients with severe eosinophilic asthma.
This phase IV, single-arm, multicenter, prospective, interventional study (NCT05384938) included benralizumab-naïve adult patients (18–75 years) with a physician-confirmed diagnosis of severe asthma with an eosinophilic phenotype. Patients received 30 mg of benralizumab subcutaneously once every 4 weeks for the first three doses and then 30 mg once every 8 weeks thereafter as part of routine clinical care. The primary outcomes included adverse events (AEs), treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs), and serious TEAEs, along with the nature, incidence, and severity of AEs, including unexpected adverse drug reactions and AEs leading to treatment discontinuation or dose modifications. The secondary outcomes included time to first asthma exacerbation, annualized exacerbation rate, treatment outcome, and changes in absolute eosinophil count.
Of the 155 patients screened, 138 (89.0%) who received at least one dose of benralizumab were included in the safety and effectiveness analysis. At baseline, the median number of asthma exacerbation events per year was 2.0, and the median absolute eosinophil count was 375.0 cells/mm3 (range: 70.0–7352.8). Overall, 31.2% of the patients (43) experienced TEAEs; the most common TEAEs were pyrexia (16.7%), dyspnea (5.1%), productive cough (4.4%), cough (2.9%), and nasopharyngitis (2.2%). Serious TEAEs were reported in 5 (3.6%) patients and included dyspnea and productive cough (reported in 4 patients each), pyrexia (3), and constipation, H1N1 influenza, and back pain (1 each). No TEAEs leading to study drug discontinuation or death were reported. Nineteen (13.8%) patients experienced asthma exacerbation during the 24 weeks, with a median (range) time to first exacerbation event of 100.0 (41–184) days. A total of 61.5% of the patients (83/135) had well-controlled asthma, while 33.3% (45/135) had partly controlled asthma. A statistically significant decrease was observed in the mean asthma exacerbation events per year (from baseline to Week 24; 2.0 vs. 0; p
The findings of this prospective, single-arm, multicenter, phase IV study in Indian patients with severe eosinophilic asthma demonstrated that benralizumab showed an acceptable and expected safety profile with consistent efficacy.
https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05384938, identifier NCT05384938.