ALK released further analysis of data from its five-year GRAZAX Asthma Prevention (GAP) clinical trial in children. The analysis in The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, shows that the benefits of GRAZAX in prevention of asthma symptoms were even more pronounced when treatment was initiated at an earlier age.
The GAP trial was initiated in 2009 to investigate the effect of ALK's sublingual grass allergy immunotherapy (SLIT) tablet, GRAZAX, on the risk of developing asthma when compared with placebo treatment. The trial involved 812 children aged 5-12 years at 101 sites in 11 European countries and comprised a three-year treatment phase with a two-year follow-up phase.
The primary trial endpoint was the time to a first diagnosis of reversible impairment of lung function. The hypothesis was that fewer children given GRAZAX would receive this diagnosis or that they would be diagnosed later than subjects in the placebo group.
This primary endpoint was not met and the trial indicated that an appropriate asthma diagnosis in this particular population should not be based on a single time point evaluation but rather rely on a combined clinical assessment obtained over a longer observation period, which is normally done in daily practice. However, the trial did reveal several advantages of early treatment of children with GRAZAX. Including:
GRAZAX significantly reduced the proportion of children experiencing asthma symptoms or using asthma medication - an effect that was observed year round and sustained for two years after end of treatment
The younger the children were at treatment initiation, the greater the percentage of children avoiding asthma symptoms and the need for symptomatic asthma medication during the follow-up period
The disease modifying effect on ARC in children was verified
The GAP trial also confirmed that the safety and tolerability of GRAZAX were favorable and in line with previous studies, with no new or unexpected findings.
Asthma affects an estimated 300 million individuals worldwide and is considered a serious global health problem affecting all age groups. It is one of the most common chronic childhood diseases and can impose a considerable burden on patients, their families, and health care systems. Allergic rhinoconjunctivitis is a recognized risk factor for asthma development.
GRAZAX is one of a new generation of allergy immunotherapy treatments that show benefits in respiratory allergy. It reduces ARC symptoms and the need for allergy pharmacotherapy. In addition, the latest GAP data indicate that the disease modifying properties of GRAZAX extends to prevent the development of asthma symptoms in children with grass pollen ARC. GRAZAX is today marketed in Europe and Australia as the only product with an ARC disease modifying effect. In North America GRAZAX is available under the brand name GRASTEK.