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Craving to Biologics Used in Severe Asthma (CROCUS)

M

Medical Centre Leeuwarden

Status

Completed

Conditions

Asthma

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Some patients treated with biologics for severe asthma experience a craving to the next biological administration. This phenomenon has never been described before. In this study, the researchers aim to further elucidate the feeling of needing the next administration of a biologic for severe asthma.

Full description

Recent research by Kroes and colleagues on omalizumab levels has shown that approximately half of patients on long-term omalizumab therapy (>4 months) experience a subjective craving for the next dose. These patients had a need (Borg scale 3-10) for the next dose of biologic before the usual periodic dose, while other patients indicated that they had no or a low need (Borg scale 0-2) for the next dose at the usual dosing moment. This so-called 'craving' has not been described in the literature before. Patients in the high-requirement group had significantly lower median omalizumab trough levels than patients in the low-requirement group. There may be a relationship between blood levels of biologics and the need for the next dose. However, data is currently only available on the variability in serum trough levels of omalizumab, but not yet on the other biologics for asthma, some of which are administered as a fixed dose and some are dosed by body weight. No assays are currently available for blood level determinations from the other biologics.

Before investigating the relationship between blood levels and the need for biologics, it is important to fully map the 'craving'. Some patients who are responders to biologic therapy based on improvements in clinical outcomes still do not have good enough control of their asthma and indicate that the dosing interval is not optimal. In addition to patients that indicate a need for the next dose, there are also patients that would like a longer dosing interval. To date, dosing interval adjustments have been made based on the patient's subjective experience and the physician's clinical judgment. This study investigates how big the problem of need for the next dose is, how patients experience this need, what this need exactly entails, whether this occurs more often in patients treated for a longer period and what possible problems patients experience in the treatment with biologics against serious problems.

Enrollment

150 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Treated with a biologic for severe asthma in the Medical Centre Leeuwarden for more than 4 months

Exclusion criteria

  • Not speaking Dutch

Trial design

150 participants in 2 patient groups

Interview group
Description:
A selection of patients will be interviewed, mapping the craving for the next biologic administration. These interviews will be used to develop a questionnaire to quantify the craving for the next administration in the total population.
Questionnaire group
Description:
The remaining patients will be asked to fill in a questionnaire, based on the interviews from Group 1.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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