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Lenzilumab in hospitalised patients with COVID-19 pneumonia (LIVE-AIR): a phase 3, randomised, placebo-controlled trial

Authors :
Juan Pulido
Michael Boger
John Hollingsworth
Homero Paniagua
Lucas GuimarÃes
Lisa Davidson
Victor Matheus Rolim de Souzafrom
Ana Elizabeth G. Maldonado
Colleen F. Kelley
Ricardo Diaz
Caitlin Moran
Jennifer Fulton
Ana Carolina M. Beheregaray
Valeria Telles
Khang Vo
Cameron Durrant
Omar Ahmed
Alpesh Amin
Daniel Barbaro
EstevÃo Figueiredo
David Weinrib
Noah Wald-Dickler
Daniel Wagner de Castro Lima Santos
Rebeca C. Lacerda Garcia
Brian Metzger
Paulo Ferreira
Andrew Miller
Marina Andrade Lima
Wilfred Onyia
William S Aronstein
Chrisoula Politis
Maqsood Alam
Celso Silva
Ana Maria T. Ortiz
Julia Minghini
Gualter CanÇado
Charles D. Burger
Mindy Sampson
Martin Cearras
Anne Frosch
Maysa B. Alves
Roy Poblete
Felipe Dal Pizzol
Carmen Polito
TÁcito do Nascimento JÁcome
Adilson Joaquim Westheimer Cavalcante
John Burk
Camila Anton
Eveline Pipolo Milan
Cristiane Ritter
Vincent C. Marconi
Dale Chappell
Loni Dorigo
Ricardo Albaneze
Renata Bezerra Onofre
Carlos del Rio
Miki Watanabe
Joshua Berg
Claudia R. Libertin
Janine Soares de Castro
Seife Yohannes
Juvencio José Duailibe Furtado
Linda Sher
May M. Lee
Robert Orenstein
Obinna Okoye
Linh Ngo
Jeffrey Lennox
Richard Zuckerman
Stephanie Strollo
Lakshmi Sambathkumar
Jason Sniffen
Paula Pietrobom
Kiran Gajurel
Lewis McCurdy
Matheus José Barbosa Moreira
Subarna Biswas
Valeria Cantos
Ana Caroline Iglessias
Jason Baker
Leopoldo T. Trevelin
John Gharbin
Victor Barreto Garcia
Marcelo B. Vinhas
Kleber Luz
Henrikki Antila
Fernando Carvalho Neuenschwander
Zelalem Temesgen
Cheryl McDonald
Sara Zulfigar
Michael Leonard
Fabiano Ramos
Gabrielle Chappell
William Gill
Martti Anton Antila
Anandi Sheth
Meghan Lewis
Sheetal Kandiah
Michael Bowdish
Lanny Hsieh
Paulina Rebolledo
Francini Correa
Chaitanya Mandapakala
Stuart McDonald
Natalia Bacellar
Zainab Shahid
Victoria M Catterson
Matthew Robinson
Rebeca Brugnolli
Richard Lee
Marina de A. R. Da Silva
Amay Parikh
Anup Patel
Gustavo Araujo
Andrew D. Badley
Caroline Uber Ghisi
Roberto Patron
Douglass Hutcheon
Marianna M. Lago
Christopher Polk
Nestor Quezada
Lionel Lewis
Marina Salgado Miranda
Lydia Lam
Source :
The Lancet. Respiratory Medicine
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Summary Background The pathophysiology of COVID-19 includes immune-mediated hyperinflammation, which could potentially lead to respiratory failure and death. Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) is among cytokines that contribute to the inflammatory processes. Lenzilumab, a GM-CSF neutralising monoclonal antibody, was investigated in the LIVE-AIR trial to assess its efficacy and safety in treating COVID-19 beyond available treatments. Methods In LIVE-AIR, a phase 3, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, hospitalised adult patients with COVID-19 pneumonia not requiring invasive mechanical ventilation were recruited from 29 sites in the USA and Brazil and were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive three intravenous doses of lenzilumab (600 mg per dose) or placebo delivered 8 h apart. All patients received standard supportive care, including the use of remdesivir and corticosteroids. Patients were stratified at randomisation by age and disease severity. The primary endpoint was survival without invasive mechanical ventilation to day 28 in the modified intention-to-treat population (mITT), comprising all randomised participants who received at least one dose of study drug under the documented supervision of the principal investigator or sub-investigator. Adverse events were assessed in all patients who received at least one dose of study drug. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov , NCT04351152 , and is completed. Findings Patients were enrolled from May 5, 2020, until Jan 27, 2021. 528 patients were screened, of whom 520 were randomly assigned and included in the intention-to-treat population. 479 of these patients (n=236, lenzilumab; n=243, placebo) were included in the mITT analysis for the primary outcome. Baseline demographics were similar between groups. 311 (65%) participants were males, mean age was 61 (SD 14) years at baseline, and median C-reactive protein concentration was 79 (IQR 41–137) mg/L. Steroids were administered to 449 (94%) patients and remdesivir to 347 (72%) patients; 331 (69%) patients received both treatments. Survival without invasive mechanical ventilation to day 28 was achieved in 198 (84%; 95% CI 79–89) participants in the lenzilumab group and in 190 (78%; 72–83) patients in the placebo group, and the likelihood of survival was greater with lenzilumab than placebo (hazard ratio 1·54; 95% CI 1·02–2·32; p=0·040). 68 (27%) of 255 patients in the lenzilumab group and 84 (33%) of 257 patients in the placebo group experienced at least one adverse event that was at least grade 3 in severity based on CTCAE criteria. The most common treatment-emergent adverse events of grade 3 or higher were related to respiratory disorders (26%) and cardiac disorders (6%) and none led to death. Interpretation Lenzilumab significantly improved survival without invasive mechanical ventilation in hospitalised patients with COVID-19, with a safety profile similar to that of placebo. The added value of lenzilumab beyond other immunomodulators used to treat COVID-19 alongside steroids remains unknown. Funding Humanigen.

Details

ISSN :
22132600
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet Respiratory Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5365a062e325727cdb2b2d6c7a807e17
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s2213-2600(21)00494-x