# Small Airways Disease as a Novel Target for Mepolizumab in Asthma—The SASAM Prospective Real-Life Study

**Authors:** Matteo Bonini, Cristina Boccabella, Francesca Cefaloni, Eugenio De Corso, Federico Donfrancesco, Enrico Schiavi, Luca Richeldi

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm14092928 · Journal of Clinical Medicine · 2025-04-24

## TL;DR

This study shows that mepolizumab improves small airway function and asthma symptoms in severe eosinophilic asthma patients over a year.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates mepolizumab's novel efficacy in targeting small airways disease in asthma through longitudinal real-life data.

## Key findings

- Mepolizumab significantly improved R5–R20, FEF25-75%, and TLC% in asthma patients after 12 months.
- Improvements in R5–R20 correlated with better asthma control and reduced exacerbations.
- Steroid-dependent patients discontinued OCS after 3 months of treatment.

## Abstract

Mepolizumab represents an effective strategy for severe eosinophilic asthma. Small airways disease (SAD) defines a peculiar asthma phenotype related to worse disease control. Limited and indirect findings are currently available on the effect of mepolizumab on SAD. Objectives: We investigated the impact of mepolizumab on SAD assessed through impulse oscillometry (IOS) and spirometry. As secondary outcomes, we tested the correlation between SAD and clinical, functional and inflammatory parameters. Methods: This is a prospective cohort study including severe eosinophilic asthmatics eligible for mepolizumab performed between 2021 and 2023. IOS (R5–R20) and spirometry (FEF25-75%, TLC%, RV/TLC%) parameters were assessed at baseline and over 1 year of mepolizumab. Other functional (FEV1%), clinical (ACT, number of asthma exacerbations/previous year, use of OCS) and inflammatory data (BEC and FeNO) were concomitantly collected for correlations. Results: A total of 18 patients (mean age 61.1 ± 12.0 y; 10 (55.5%) female) were included. Longitudinal data from 16 patients showed that R5–R20 significantly improved after 12-months treatment (p: 0.03), as well as FEF25-75% (p: 0.04) and TLC% (0.04). FEV1% and ACT showed a concomitant improvement (p: 0.03 and <0.01, respectively). All the steroid-dependent subjects discontinued OCS after 3 months and the percentage of subjects experiencing exacerbations significantly decreased (p: <0.01). As per drug effect, BEC consistently decreased (p: <0.01). The decrease in R5–R20 correlated with an improvement in FEF25-75% (r: −0.40 p: 0.048) and ACT at T12 (r: −0.59 p: 0.02). Conclusions: Twelve months treatment with mepolizumab improved R5–R20, suggesting its additional role as a targeted treatment for distal lung regions. This improvement also correlated with a clinically relevant amelioration of asthma symptoms.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** asthma (MONDO:0004979)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** eosinophilic (MESH:D017681), Asthma (MESH:D001249), inflammatory (MESH:D007249), SAD (MESH:D056151)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

44 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12073056/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12073056