grant

Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Receptor Agonist Treatment in Adult, Obesity-Related, Symptomatic Asthma

Organization VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTERLocation NASHVILLE, UNITED STATESPosted 1 May 2021Deadline 30 Apr 2027
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY202521+ years oldAbdomenAddressAdipose tissueAdolescentAdolescent YouthAdultAdult HumanAdult asthmaAdult-Onset Diabetes MellitusAdverse ExperienceAdverse eventAgonistAllergensAnti-InflammatoriesAnti-Inflammatory AgentsAnti-inflammatoryAsthmaAutoregulationB Cell Differentiation Factor IB cell growth factor 2B-Cell Growth Factor-IIBCGF-IIBCGF2BMIBMI percentileBMI z-scoreBiological MarkersBiopsyBlood EosinophilBlood NeutrophilBlood Polymorphonuclear NeutrophilBlood SerumBlood granulocytic cellBody SystemBody TissuesBody Weight decreasedBody mass indexBronchial AsthmaClinicalClinical DataCollectionDataDevelopmentDiseaseDisorderDouble-Blind MethodDouble-Blind StudyDouble-BlindedDouble-Masked MethodDouble-Masked StudyEffectivenessEndocrine Gland SecretionEndogenous Nitrate VasodilatorEndothelium-Derived Nitric OxideEo-CSFEosinophil Differentiation FactorEosinophilic GranulocyteEosinophilic LeukocyteExhalationExhalingFDA approvedFatty TissueFormulationGLP-1GLP-1 receptorGLP-I receptorGlp-1GlucocorticoidsGoalsGranular LeukocytesGranulocytic cellHealth Care UtilizationHomeostasisHormonesIL-13IL-5IL13IgA enhancing factorInflammasomeInflammationInhalationInhalingInsulin ResistanceInterleukin 5 PrecursorInterleukin-13Interleukin-5InterleukinsKetosis-Resistant Diabetes MellitusLeannessLinkLungLung Respiratory SystemLymphoid CellMarrow EosinophilMarrow NeutrophilMaturity-Onset Diabetes MellitusMeasuresMediatingMediatorMetabolic PathwayMiceMice MammalsModelingMononitrogen MonoxideMucous body substanceMucusMurineMusNIDDMNasal EpitheliumNetwork AnalysisNeutrophilic GranulocyteNeutrophilic LeukocyteNitric OxideNitrogen MonoxideNitrogen ProtoxideNon obeseNon-Insulin Dependent DiabetesNon-Insulin-Dependent Diabetes MellitusNoninsulin Dependent DiabetesNoninsulin Dependent Diabetes MellitusNonobeseObese MiceObesityOralOrgan SystemOutcomePathway AnalysisPathway interactionsPeptidesPhase 3 Clinical TrialsPhase III Clinical TrialsPhenotypePhysiological HomeostasisPolymorphonuclear CellPolymorphonuclear LeukocytesPolymorphonuclear NeutrophilsPolypharmacyPopulationPreclinical dataPrediabetesPrediabetes syndromePrediabetic StatePulmonary Body SystemPulmonary Organ SystemQOLQuality of lifeQuestionnairesQuetelet indexRNA SeqRNA sequencingRNAseqRandomized Controlled Clinical TrialsRespiratory EpitheliumRespiratory ExpirationRespiratory SystemRespiratory TractsRespiratory tract structureRoleSafetySamplingSerumSeveritiesSlow-Onset Diabetes MellitusSpecific qualifier valueSpecifiedSputumStable Diabetes MellitusStructure of respiratory epitheliumSubgroupSymptom BurdenSymptomsSystemT cell replacing factorT-Cell Replacing FactorT2 DMT2DT2DMTSLPTSLP geneTestingTherapeuticTherapeutic HormoneTherapeutic InterventionThinnessThymic Stromal LymphopoietinTissuesTranslatingType 2 Diabetes MellitusType 2 diabetesType II Diabetes MellitusType II diabetesViralWeight LossWeight Reductionadiposeadiposityadult adiposityadult obesityadult onset diabetesadulthoodadults with obesityairway epitheliumairway epithelium inflammationairway inflammationairway remodelingasthma attackasthma exacerbationasthma patientasthmaticasthmatic patientbariatric surgerybio-markersbiologic markerbiomarkerbiomarker performancebiomarker utilitybody weight losscardiac functionco-morbidco-morbiditycohortcomorbidityconventional therapyconventional treatmentcorpulencedesigndesigningdetermine efficacydevelopmentaldifferential expressiondifferentially expressedefficacy analysisefficacy assessmentefficacy determinationefficacy evaluationefficacy examinationendothelial cell derived relaxing factoreosinophilevaluate efficacyexacerbation in asthmaexacerbation prone asthmaexacerbation prone asthmaticexamine efficacyfunction of the heartgastric bandinggastric bypass surgeryglucagon-like peptide 1glucagon-like peptide-1 receptorgranulocytehealth care service usehealth care service utilizationheart functionimplantable gastric stimulation bandingimprovedinsightinsulin resistantinsulin sensitivityinsulin toleranceintervention therapyjuvenilejuvenile humanketosis resistant diabeteslung functionmaturity onset diabetesmethacholinemucousmultimorbiditymultiple chronic conditionsneuroprotectionneuroprotectiveneutrophilnew drug treatmentsnew drugsnew pharmacological therapeuticnew therapeuticsnew therapynext generation therapeuticsnovelnovel drug treatmentsnovel drugsnovel pharmaco-therapeuticnovel pharmacological therapeuticnovel therapeuticsnovel therapyob/ob mouseobese asthmaobese individualsobese peopleobese personobese populationobese subjectsobesity surgeryobesity-associated asthmaobesity-related asthmapathwayperiostinphase III protocolpre-clinicalpre-diabetespre-diabeticpreclinicalpreclinical findingspreclinical informationprediabeticpredict responsivenesspredicting responseprimary outcomeprogramspulmonary functionrandomized control clinical trialrandomized placebo control trialrandomized placebo controlled trialrespiratory inflammationrespiratory tract epitheliumrespiratory tract inflammationsecondary outcomesmall moleculesocial rolestomach staplingsubcutaneoussubdermaltooltranscriptional differencestranscriptome sequencingtranscriptomic sequencingtype 2 DMtype II DMtype two diabetesweight loss surgerywhite adipose tissuewt-lossyellow adipose tissue
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Full Description

Project Summary
Obesity is clearly detrimental in asthma, yet we lack tools to treat the unique obese asthma phenotype.

Comorbid obesity impacts >40% of adult asthmatics1 and increases asthma severity, symptoms and

exacerbations while simultaneously reducing the efficacy of conventional therapies.2-5 Our long-term goal is to

develop novel treatments for airway inflammation in the obese asthma phenotype. Our overall objective, which

is the next step in translating our preclinical and preliminary clinical findings, is to determine the impact of

glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RA) on asthma control and airway and adipose inflammation

in adults with obese asthma. Our central hypothesis is that GLP-1RA improve asthma control and reduce

airway inflammation due to direct effects on the respiratory tract in obese asthma. To generate the proof-of-

concept data to support definitive phase 3 clinical trials of GLP-1RA in the obese asthma phenotype and test

our central hypothesis, we propose the following specific aims: 1) Determine the efficacy of GLP-1RA on

asthma control and assess tolerability in obese asthma and 2) Determine the tissue-specific impact of GLP-

1RA on inflammation in the airway and adipose in obese asthma. In a 12-week double-blind, randomized,

placebo-controlled trial of oral semaglutide 7 mg once daily in adult subjects with obesity-related, symptomatic

asthma without DMII, we will test the hypotheses that semaglutide improves asthma control (aim 1a), is

tolerated (aim 1b) and reduces type-2 and non-type 2 airway inflammation independent of weight loss (aim 2).

The primary clinical outcome will be change from baseline in ACQ-7. The primary mechanistic outcome will be

change from baseline in serum periostin. Because insulin resistance is variable in obesity and baseline blood

eosinophil counts are often predictive of response to asthma therapeutics, these markers will be used for

prespecified subgroup analyses. Subcutaneous abdominal adipose and respiratory tract samples at baseline

and 5 and 12 weeks of therapy will be compared using RNA sequencing to test the hypothesis that GLP-1RA

reduce inflammation to restore homeostasis in the respiratory tract opposite to changes in adipose tissue in

obese asthma. This proposal facilitates the collection of the necessary clinical, mechanistic, and tolerability

data to inform the design of a definitive phase III clinical trial of a GLP-1RA in asthma. It thereby supports the

rapid development of a novel therapeutic class for asthma and represents a paradigm shift in the approach to

therapeutic intervention in asthma through the targeting of a metabolic pathway which regulates upstream

inflammation across multiple organ systems, may be disease modifying, and ultimately glucocorticoid sparing.

Grant Number: 5U01AI155299-05
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Katherine Cahill

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