Abstract
A preliminary report from the recent phase 3 trial of benralizumab, a monoclonal antibody that binds to interleukin-5 receptor alpha (IL5Rα), in patients with EoE revealed that medication use led to tissue eosinophil eradication but did not meet the clinical endpoint of symptom resolution. Here, we characterized the clinical, endoscopic, histologic, and transcriptional changes in patients with active EoE following benralizumab treatment. We retrospectively examined patients with EoE treated with benralizumab at the University of Utah (n = 11) and reviewed reported clinical symptoms, circulating and tissue eosinophilia, and endoscopic and histologic scores. Gene expression profiles from available esophageal tissue from benralizumab-treated patients were compared to those from patients with remission EoE (n = 5), active EoE (n = 10), and controls (n = 22). Benralizumab treatment resulted in partial symptom improvement and significant reduction in tissue eosinophilia, and endoscopic and histologic disease scoring (P<0.01). Histologic score reductions were driven by eosinophil feature scores, while scores for epithelial features (basal cell hyperplasia and dilated intercellular spaces) were similar to those in active EoE. The gene signatures in benralizumab-treated patients mimicked those of active EoE (e.g. upregulation of POSTN, CDH26, CCL26, and downregulation of DSG1). RNA profiles and pathways support histologic findings of impaired epithelial function that persists despite benralizumab treatment. In conclusion, despite eosinophil eradication, patients treated with benralizumab had persistent epithelial injury at the histologic and transcriptional level. In this cohort, benralizumab therapy failed to eradicate inflammation and epithelial dysfunction showing that interleukin-5 receptor alpha blockade monotherapy is insufficient to control EoE.
Original language | English (US) |
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Journal | Diseases of the Esophagus |
Volume | 38 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Feb 1 2025 |
Funding
Financial support: JWC is supported by funding in part by NIH award K23DK129784. AMU is a Consortium of Eosinophilic Gastrointestinal Diseases Researcher Trainee Scholar. DDB is supported by funding in part by NIH award K08DK128603, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation\u2019s Harold Amos Medical Faculty Development Program, and Columbia University Digestive and Liver Disease Research Center (CU-DLDRC) grant 1P30DK132710. We thank Ryan Freeman, lab technician, for his work in collecting patient characteristic data from health records. Research reported in this publication utilized the High-Throughput Genomics and Cancer Bioinformatics Shared Resource at Huntsman Cancer Institute in the University of Utah and was supported by the National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number P30CA042014. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the NIH.
Keywords
- Allergy
- Histology Scoring System
- IL-5 alpha receptor alpha
- RNA sequencing
- transcriptome
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- General Medicine