Pharmacotherapeutic group: Drugs for obstructive airway diseases, adrenergics in combination with anticholinergics including triple combinations with corticosteroids, ATC code: R03AL11
Mechanism of action
Trixeo Aerosphere contains budesonide, a glucocorticosteroid, and two bronchodilators: glycopyrronium, a long-acting muscarinic antagonist (anticholinergic) and formoterol, a long-acting β2-adrenergic agonist.
Budesonide is a glucocorticosteroid which when inhaled has a rapid (within hours) and dose dependent anti-inflammatory action in the airways.
Glycopyrronium is a long-acting, muscarinic antagonist, which is often referred to as an anticholinergic. The major targets for anticholinergic drugs are muscarinic receptors located in the respiratory tract. In the airways, it exhibits pharmacological effects through inhibition of M3 receptor at the smooth muscle leading to bronchodilation. Antagonism is competitive and reversible. Prevention of methylcholine and acetylcholine-induced bronchoconstrictive effects was dose-dependent and lasted more than 12 hours.
Formoterol is a selective β2-adrenergic agonist that when inhaled results in rapid and long-acting relaxation of bronchial smooth muscle in patients with reversible airways obstruction. The bronchodilating effect is dose dependent, with an onset of effect within 1-3 minutes after inhalation. The duration of effect is at least 12 hours after a single dose.
Clinical efficacy
The efficacy and safety of Trixeo Aerosphere was evaluated in patients with moderate to very severe COPD in two randomised, parallel-group trials, ETHOS and KRONOS. Both studies were multicentre, double-blind studies. Patients were symptomatic with a COPD Assessment Test (CAT) score ≥10 while receiving two or more daily maintenance therapies for at least 6 weeks prior to screening.
ETHOS was a 52-week trial (N=8,588 randomised; 60% male, mean age of 65) that compared two inhalations twice daily of Trixeo Aerosphere, formoterol fumarate dihydrate/glycopyrronium (FOR/GLY) MDI 5/7.2 micrograms, and formoterol fumarate dihydrate/budesonide (FOR/BUD) MDI 5/160 micrograms. Patients had moderate to very severe COPD (post-bronchodilator FEV1 ≥25% to <65% predicted) and were required to have a history of one or more moderate or severe COPD exacerbations in the year prior to screening. The proportion of patients with moderate, severe and very severe COPD was 29%, 61% and 11% respectively. The mean baseline FEV1 across all groups was 1,021-1,066 mL, and during screening the mean post-bronchodilator percent predicted FEV1 was 43% and mean CAT score was 19.6. The primary endpoint of the ETHOS trial was the rate of on-treatment moderate or severe COPD exacerbations for Trixeo Aerosphere compared with FOR/GLY MDI and FOR/BUD MDI.
KRONOS was a 24-week trial (N=1,902 randomised; 71% male, mean age of 65) that compared two inhalations twice daily of Trixeo Aerosphere, FOR/GLY MDI 5/7.2 micrograms, FOR/BUD MDI 5/160 micrograms and open-label active comparator formoterol fumarate dihydrate/budesonide Turbuhaler (FOR/BUD TBH) 6/200 micrograms. Patients had moderate to very severe COPD (post-bronchodilator FEV1 ≥25% to <80% predicted). The proportion of patients with moderate, severe and very severe COPD was 49%, 43% and 8% respectively. The mean baseline FEV1 across all groups was 1,050-1,193 mL, and during screening the mean post-bronchodilator percent predicted FEV1 was 50%, over 26% of patients reported a history of one or more moderate or severe COPD exacerbation in the past year and the mean CAT score was 18.3. There was a 28-week extension, for up to 52 weeks of treatment, in a subset of subjects. The primary endpoints of the KRONOS trial were the on-treatment FEV1 area under the curve from 0-4 hours (FEV1 AUC0-4) over 24 weeks for Trixeo Aerosphere compared to FOR/BUD MDI and the on-treatment change from baseline in morning pre-dose trough FEV1 over 24 weeks for Trixeo Aerosphere compared to FOR/GLY MDI.
At study entry, the most common COPD medications reported in the ETHOS and KRONOS studies were ICS+LABA+LAMA (39%, 27% respectively), ICS+LABA (31%, 38% respectively) and LAMA+LABA (14%, 20% respectively).
Effect on exacerbations
Moderate or severe exacerbations:
In the 52-week ETHOS study, Trixeo Aerosphere significantly reduced the annual rate of on-treatment moderate/severe exacerbations by 24% (95% CI: 17, 31; p<0.0001) compared with FOR/GLY MDI (rate; 1.08 vs 1.42 events per patient year) and by 13% (95% CI: 5, 21; p=0.0027) compared with FOR/BUD MDI (rate; 1.08 vs 1.24 events per patient year).
The benefits observed on annualised rate of moderate/severe COPD exacerbations over 24 weeks in KRONOS were generally consistent with those observed in ETHOS. Improvements compared with FOR/GLY MDI were statistically significant; however improvements compared with FOR/BUD MDI and FOR/BUD TBH did not reach statistical significance.
Severe exacerbations (resulting in hospitalisation or death):
In ETHOS, Trixeo Aerosphere numerically reduced the annual rate of on-treatment severe exacerbations by 16% (95% CI: ‑3, 31; p=0.0944) compared with FOR/GLY MDI (rate; 0.13 vs 0.15 events per patient year) and significantly reduced the annual rate of on-treatment severe exacerbations by 20% (95% CI: 3, 34; p=0.0221) compared with FOR/BUD MDI (rate; 0.13 vs 0.16 events per patient year).
In both studies, benefits on exacerbations were observed in patients with moderate, severe and very severe COPD.
Effects on lung function
In ETHOS and KRONOS, Trixeo Aerosphere improved on-treatment lung function (FEV1) compared with FOR/GLY MDI and FOR/BUD MDI (see Table 2 for ETHOS and Table 3 for KRONOS). There was a sustained effect over the 24-week treatment period in both studies, and over 52 weeks in ETHOS.
Table 2: Lung function analyses – ETHOS (spirometric sub-study)
| | Trixeo Aerosphere (N=747) | FOR/GLY MDI (N=779) | FOR/BUD MDI (N=755) | Treatment difference 95% CI |
| Trixeo Aerosphere vs. FOR/GLY MDI | Trixeo Aerosphere vs. FOR/BUD MDI |
| Trough FEV1 (mL) over 24 weeks, LS mean change from baseline (SE) | 129 (6.5) | 86 (6.6) | 53 (6.5) | 43 mL (25, 60) p<0.0001 | 76 mL (58, 94) p<0.0001# |
| FEV1 AUC0-4 over 24 weeks; LS mean change from baseline (SE) | 294 (6.3) | 245 (6.3) | 194 (6.3) | 49 mL (31, 66) p<0.0001# | 99 mL (82, 117) p<0.0001 |
# p-value not adjusted for multiplicity in hierarchical testing plan
LS = least squares, SE = standard error, CI = confidence intervals, N = number in Intent-to-Treat population
Table 3: Lung function analyses – KRONOS
| | Trixeo Aero-sphere (N=639) | FOR/ GLY MDI (N=625) | FOR/ BUD MDI (N=314) | FOR/ BUD TBH (N=318) | Treatment difference 95% CI |
| Trixeo Aerosphere vs. FOR/GLY MDI | Trixeo Aerosphere vs. FOR/BUD MDI | Trixeo Aerosphere vs. FOR/BUD TBH |
| Trough FEV1 (mL) over 24 weeks, LS mean change from baseline (SE) | 147 (6.5) | 125 (6.6) | 73 (9.2) | 88 (9.1) | 22 mL (4, 39) p=0.0139 | 74 mL (52, 95) p<0.0001 | 59 mL (38, 80) p<0.0001# |
| FEV1 AUC0-4 over 24 weeks; LS mean change from baseline (SE) | 305 (8.4) | 288 (8.5) | 201 (11.7) | 214 (11.5) | 16 mL (‑6, 38) p=0.1448# | 104 mL (77, 131) p<0.0001 | 91 mL (64, 117) p<0.0001 |
# p-value not adjusted for multiplicity in hierarchical testing plan
LS = least squares, SE = standard error, CI = confidence intervals, N = number in Intent-to-Treat population
Symptom relief
In ETHOS, the baseline average dyspnoea scores ranged from 5.8 – 5.9 across the treatment groups. Trixeo Aerosphere significantly improved breathlessness (measured using the Transition Dyspnoea Index (TDI) focal score over 24 weeks) compared with FOR/GLY MDI (0.40 units; 95% CI: 0.24, 0.55; p<0.0001) and compared with FOR/BUD MDI (0.31 units; 95% CI: 0.15, 0.46; p<0.0001). Improvements were sustained over 52 weeks. In KRONOS, the baseline average dyspnoea scores ranged from 6.3 – 6.5 across the treatment groups. Trixeo Aerosphere significantly improved breathlessness over 24 weeks compared with FOR/BUD TBH (0.46 units; 95% CI: 0.16, 0.77; p=0.0031). Improvements compared with FOR/GLY MDI, and FOR/BUD MDI did not reach statistical significance.
Health-related quality of life
In ETHOS, Trixeo Aerosphere significantly improved disease-specific health status (as assessed by the St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire [SGRQ] total score) over 24 weeks compared with FOR/GLY MDI (improvement ‑1.62; 95% CI: ‑2.27, ‑0.97; p<0.0001) and compared with FOR/BUD MDI (improvement ‑1.38, 95% CI: ‑2.02, ‑0.73; p<0.0001). Improvements were sustained over 52 weeks. In KRONOS, improvements compared with FOR/GLY MDI, FOR/BUD MDI and FOR/BUD TBH did not reach statistical significance.
Use of rescue medication
In ETHOS, Trixeo Aerosphere significantly reduced the on-treatment use of rescue medication over 24 weeks compared with FOR/GLY MDI (treatment difference ‑0.51 puffs/day; 95% CI: ‑0.68, ‑0.34; p<0.0001) and FOR/BUD MDI (treatment difference ‑0.37 puffs/day; 95% CI: ‑0.54, ‑0.20; p<0.0001). Reductions were sustained over 52 weeks. In KRONOS, differences compared with FOR/GLY MDI, FOR/BUD MDI and FOR/BUD TBH were not statistically significant.
Paediatric population
The European Medicines Agency has waived the obligation to submit the results of studies with Trixeo Aerosphere in all subsets of the paediatric population, in COPD (see section 4.2 for information on paediatric use).