KIT Inhibition by Imatinib in Patients with Severe Refractory Asthma

Katherine N. Cahill(Harvard University), Howard R. Katz(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Jing Cui(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Juying Lai(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Shamsah Kazani(Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research), Allison Crosby‐Thompson(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Denise Garofalo(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Mario Castro(Washington University in St. Louis), Nizar N. Jarjour(University of Wisconsin–Madison), Emily DiMango(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Serpil C. Erzurum(Cleveland Clinic), Jennifer Trevor(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Kartik Shenoy(Temple University), Vernon M. Chinchilli(Pennsylvania State University), Michael E. Wechsler(University of Colorado Denver), Tanya M. Laidlaw(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Joshua A. Boyce(Harvard University), Elliot Israel(Harvard University)
New England Journal of Medicine
May 17, 2017
Cited by 209Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Mast cells are present in the airways of patients who have severe asthma despite glucocorticoid treatment; these cells are associated with disease characteristics including poor quality of life and inadequate asthma control. Stem cell factor and its receptor, KIT, are central to mast-cell homeostasis. We conducted a proof-of-principle trial to evaluate the effect of imatinib, a KIT inhibitor, on airway hyperresponsiveness, a physiological marker of severe asthma, as well as on airway mast-cell numbers and activation in patients with severe asthma. METHODS: ). Patients also underwent bronchoscopy. RESULTS: increased by a mean (±SD) of 1.73±0.60 doubling doses in the imatinib group, as compared with 1.07±0.60 doubling doses in the placebo group (P=0.048). Imatinib also reduced levels of serum tryptase, a marker of mast-cell activation, to a greater extent than did placebo (decrease of 2.02±2.32 vs. 0.56±1.39 ng per milliliter, P=0.02). Airway mast-cell counts declined in both groups. Muscle cramps and hypophosphatemia were more common in the imatinib group than in the placebo group. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with severe asthma, imatinib decreased airway hyperresponsiveness, mast-cell counts, and tryptase release. These results suggest that KIT-dependent processes and mast cells contribute to the pathobiologic basis of severe asthma. (Funded by the National Institutes of Health and others; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01097694 .).


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis