Anti-interleukin 5 therapies failure criteria in severe asthma: a Delphi-consensus study
Author(s) -
Laura Mattéi,
Carey Suehs,
Khuder Alagha,
Arnaud Bourdin,
Christophe Brousse,
Jérémy Charriot,
Gilles Devouassoux,
Stéphanie Fry,
Laurent Guilleminault,
M. Gouitaa,
Camille Taillé,
Pascal Chanez,
Laurie Pahus
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
therapeutic advances in respiratory disease
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.022
H-Index - 37
eISSN - 1753-4666
pISSN - 1753-4658
DOI - 10.1177/17534666211049735
Subject(s) - medicine , discontinuation , asthma , exacerbation , delphi method , intensive care medicine , medical prescription , likert scale , nominal group technique , physical therapy , family medicine , nursing , statistics , mathematics , knowledge management , computer science
Background: Current practices for assessing response to anti-interleukin 5/R treatment in severe asthma patients are heterogeneous. The objective of this study was to achieve an expert consensus defining failure criteria for anti-interleukin 5/R treatment in severe asthma patients.Methods: Experts were invited to a 5-round Delphi exercise if they were pulmonologists managing ⩾30 patients at a nationally recognized severe asthma expert centre. Following two rounds of statement-generating brainstorming, the expert panel ranked each statement according to a 5-point Likert-type scale during three additional rounds. Positive consensus was considered achieved when ⩾80% of experts agreed with a statement with >50% strong agreement and <15% disagreement.Results: Twenty experts participated in the study. All experts agreed that predefined treatment goals defining effectiveness should be personalized during shared decision making via a patient contract. Treatment failure was defined as (1) absence of a reduction in exacerbation rates by ⩾25% or (2) absence of a reduction in oral corticosteroid therapy by ⩾25% of the initial dosage or (3) occurrence of emergency room visits or hospitalizations after 6 months of treatment. Treatment failure should result in discontinuation. For partial responders, treatment discontinuation was not recommended unless an alternative from another therapeutic class exists and should be discussed in a multidisciplinary consultation.Conclusion: The present study provides objective criteria for anti IL5 or IL5R failure in severe asthma and suggests consensus based guidelines for prescription, evaluation and discontinuation decision-making.
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