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PulmPEEPs
PulmPEEPs
109 episodes
1 week ago
The Pulm PEEPs podcast will be providing regular episodes delving into the world of pulmonary and critical care medicine. Our mission with this platform is to provide learners of all levels multiple formats to engage in pulmonary and critical care education that you can access anytime, anywhere. We will be bringing you case reports of classic teaching cases that we have encountered accompanied by infographics on high-yield points from each case, roundtable chats with experts and leaders in the field of PCCM, and series of Top ICU and Top Pulmonary consults.
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Education
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All content for PulmPEEPs is the property of PulmPEEPs and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
The Pulm PEEPs podcast will be providing regular episodes delving into the world of pulmonary and critical care medicine. Our mission with this platform is to provide learners of all levels multiple formats to engage in pulmonary and critical care education that you can access anytime, anywhere. We will be bringing you case reports of classic teaching cases that we have encountered accompanied by infographics on high-yield points from each case, roundtable chats with experts and leaders in the field of PCCM, and series of Top ICU and Top Pulmonary consults.
Show more...
Education
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101. RFJC – NAVIGATOR
PulmPEEPs
9 minutes 28 seconds
5 months ago
101. RFJC – NAVIGATOR
We’re back with another Rapid Fire Journal Club. Luke Hedrick and Dave Furfaro discuss the NAVIGATOR trial published in NEJM in 2021 evaluating tezepelumab for adults with asthma.
Article and Reference

We are talking today about the NAVIGATOR trial evaluating the use of tezepelumab in adults with asthma.
Menzies-Gow A, Corren J, Bourdin A, Chupp G, Israel E, Wechsler ME, Brightling CE, Griffiths JM, Hellqvist Å, Bowen K, Kaur P, Almqvist G, Ponnarambil S, Colice G. Tezepelumab in Adults and Adolescents with Severe, Uncontrolled Asthma. N Engl J Med. 2021 May 13;384(19):1800-1809. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa2034975. PMID: 33979488.
https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2034975
Key Learning Points
Background & Rationale

* Asthma biologics already exist, targeting IgE and type 2 cytokines (IL-4, IL-5, IL-13), but there’s an unmet need for patients with non-allergic or non-eosinophilic phenotypes.
* Tezepelumab is a monoclonal antibody targeting TSLP (thymic stromal lymphopoietin), an upstream mediator of both T2 and non-T2 inflammation, offering a potentially broader therapeutic effect.

 
📌 Study Design (Navigator Trial)

* Phase 3, double-blind, placebo-controlled RCT
* Conducted in 18 countries from 2017-2020
* N = 1,061 patients, aged 12-80 with moderate to severe asthma
* All were on medium/high-dose ICS + controller med
* Required ≥2 exacerbations in prior year

 
📌 Outcomes

* Primary Outcome: Annualized rate of asthma exacerbations (events per patient-year)
* Secondary Outcomes:

* Change in pre-bronchodilator FEV₁
* Symptoms & quality of life (with predefined MCIDs)
* Subgroup analyses by eosinophil count, FeNO, and perennial allergen sensitivity



 
📌 Key Inclusion/Exclusion

* Inclusion: 12-80 years, guideline-based therapy, ≥2 exacerbations
* Exclusion: recent biologic use, mild/asymptomatic asthma, no reversibility on spirometry

 
📌 Patient Population (Table 1 Summary)

* Middle-aged, predominantly white, female
* Poorly controlled severe asthma despite high-intensity therapy
* ~75% on high-dose ICS, ~10% on oral steroids
* ~40% had normal FeNO
* ~60% had eosinophils <300
* Median IgE ~195

 
 Results
Efficacy:

* Annualized exacerbation rate:

* 0.93 (tezepelumab) vs. 2.1 (placebo)
* Rate ratio: 0.44, p<0.001 (very positive)


* In eosinophils <300 group: rate ratio 0.59, still effective
* FEV₁ improved by ~+0.25 L (vs. +0.09 L placebo), significant & sustained from week 2 onward
* Quality of life: statistically improved but did not meet MCID, so unclear clinical impact
* Severity of exacerbations reduced: fewer hospitalizations & ED visits in the treatment arm
* ~40% of treated patients still had some exacerbations → not a cure, but improves severity

Safety:

* Very well tolerated
* 77% reported adverse events (more common in placebo)
* No anaphylaxis, no GBS, no cancer signal
* Most common AEs: URTI, headache, nasopharyngitis
* Injection site reactions: 3.6%
* Serious AEs were lower in drug arm than placebo

 
Overall Takeaway

* Tezepelumab significantly reduces asthma exacerbations (including in patients with low eosinophils), improves lung function, and is safe and well tolerated.
* Provides a broad-acting biologic option even for patients who may not be eligible for existing T2-high biologics.
* Now widely used as part of the asthma biologic armamentarium for poorly controlled asthma despite maximal inhaled therapy.

Infographic:
 


PulmPEEPs
The Pulm PEEPs podcast will be providing regular episodes delving into the world of pulmonary and critical care medicine. Our mission with this platform is to provide learners of all levels multiple formats to engage in pulmonary and critical care education that you can access anytime, anywhere. We will be bringing you case reports of classic teaching cases that we have encountered accompanied by infographics on high-yield points from each case, roundtable chats with experts and leaders in the field of PCCM, and series of Top ICU and Top Pulmonary consults.