Open Up a World
WITH FEWER EXACERBATIONS

DUPIXENT demonstrated severe exacerbation reduction up to ~3 years.

Severe exacerbations through Week 24

up to
81%
reduction in severe exacerbationsa through Week 24

with DUPIXENT 300 mg Q2W + SOC (n=64) vs placebo + SOC (n=68) (0.20 vs 1.04; rate ratio: 0.19 [95% CI: 0.07, 0.56]) (baseline blood EOS ≥300 cells/µL, DRI12544, secondary endpoint)1

QUEST primary endpoint results (ITT population)

  • 48% reduction in severe exacerbations at Week 52 in patients with no biomarker requirement with DUPIXENT 200 mg Q2W + SOC (n=631) vs placebo + SOC (n=317) (rate ratio: 0.52 [95% CI: 0.41, 0.66])1
  • 46% reduction in severe exacerbations at Week 52 in patients with no biomarker requirement with DUPIXENT 300 mg Q2W + SOC (n=633) vs placebo + SOC (n=321) (rate ratio: 0.54 [95% CI: 0.43, 0.68])1

aSevere exacerbations were defined as deterioration of asthma requiring the use of systemic corticosteroids for at least 3 days or hospitalization or ED visit due to asthma that required systemic corticosteroids.1

Severe exacerbations through Weeks 48 to 96

97%
of patients did not have an exacerbation requiring hospitalization or ED visit
  • Patients rolled over from DRI12544 and QUEST treated with DUPIXENT 300 mg Q2W + SOC (n=2062) during the second and third years in the OLE period (TRAVERSE OLE study, secondary endpoint)2,b,c

ZERO
exacerbations in 89% of patients from QUEST in Year 3

(Weeks 48-96) when treated with DUPIXENT 200 mg/300 mg Q2W + SOC (n=816) for 52 weeks in QUEST and continued with DUPIXENT 300 mg Q2W + SOC in the OLE period (TRAVERSE OLE study, other endpoint)2

  • 79.5% of patients rolled over from DRI12544 (n=396) experienced 0 exacerbations during Weeks 48-962
  • 74% of patients rolled over from DRI12544 and QUEST (n=2062) experienced 0 exacerbations over ~3 years of treatment with DUPIXENT2

Results are descriptive. Definitive conclusions cannot be made.

Data were not multiplicity controlled and there are limitations associated with open-label study design, including lack of comparator arm, decreasing sample size, and potential continued involvement of responders and attrition of non‑responders.

bAnalysis includes DRI12544 and QUEST patients enrolled in TRAVERSE.2

cOf the 542 patients who experienced at least 1 severe asthma exacerbation, 66 (3.2% of the overall study population) had an exacerbation that required hospitalization or ED visit during the TRAVERSE study period (unadjusted annualized event rate of 0.027).2

DUPIXENT reduced severe exacerbations in patients with elevated EOS (≥150 cells/μL) and elevated EOS + allergic asthma2

PATIENTS WITH ELEVATED EOS (QUEST, prespecified subgroup analyses)

Reductions in severe exacerbations when added to SOC. No statistically significant differences were observed during the 52-week treatment period in patients with baseline blood EOS <150 cells/μL taking DUPIXENT 200 mg Q2W or 300 mg Q2W + SOC and in the ≥150 to <300 cells/μL eosinophil subgroup treated with DUPIXENT 200 mg Q2W + SOC vs matching placebo + SOC.1,2
DUPIXENT trials enrolled patients with eosinophil levels up to 1500 cells/μL.1

dSecondary endpoint.2

PATIENTS WITH ELEVATED EOS + ALLERGIC ASTHMA (QUEST, post hoc analyses)

Results are descriptive. Definitive conclusions cannot be made as this was a post-hoc analysis. There are limitations on sample size and data
were not multiplicity controlled.

Allergic asthma was defined as total serum IgE ≥30 IU/mL + ≥1 positive perennial-aeroallergen–specific IgE ≥0.35 kU/L at baseline.3

BASELINE BLOOD EOS ≥300 CELLS/µL & MEDIUM ICS DOSE > QUEST (POST HOC ANALYSIS)

Severe exacerbations through Week 52

71%
reduction in severe exacerbationse through Week 52

with DUPIXENT 300 mg Q2W + SOC (n=129) vs placebo + SOC (n=61) (rate ratio: 0.29 [95% CI:
0.17, 0.51]) (baseline blood EOS ≥300 cells/μL, QUEST, post hoc analysis)2,4,5

  • 73% reduction in severe exacerbations through Week 52 with DUPIXENT 200 mg Q2W + SOC (n=134) vs placebo + SOC (n=68) (rate
    ratio: 0.27 [95% CI: 0.15, 0.48]) (baseline blood EOS ≥300 cells/μL, QUEST, post hoc analysis)2,4,5

Results are descriptive. Definitive conclusions cannot be made as this was a post-hoc analysis. There are limitations on sample size and data
were not multiplicity controlled.

eSevere exacerbations were defined as deterioration of asthma requiring the use of systemic corticosteroids for at least 3 days or hospitalization
or ED visit due to asthma that required systemic corticosteroids.1

BASELINE BLOOD EOS ≥300 CELLS/µL
& MEDIUM ICS DOSE > TRAVERSE OLE
STUDY (POST HOC ANALYSIS)

Severe exacerbations through Week 96

ZERO
exacerbations in 70% of patients from QUEST in Year 3

(Week 96) when treated with DUPIXENT 300 mg Q2W + SOC (n=215) for 52 weeks in QUEST and
continued with DUPIXENT 300 mg Q2W + SOC in the OLE period (baseline blood EOS ≥300 cells/μL,
TRAVERSE OLE study, post hoc analysis)2,4

Results are descriptive. Definitive conclusions cannot be made as this was a post hoc analysis of open-label extension data.

Data were not multiplicity controlled and there are limitations associated with open-label study design, including lack of comparator arm, decreasing sample size, and potential continued involvement of responders and attrition of nonresponders.

Patients with higher short-acting beta agonist use (3+ canisters/
year)
were more likely to experience 1+ severe exacerbation requiring an
HCP visit or hospitalization6,f

fBased on observational analyses of SABA use IN Asthma (SABINA)
datasets involving patients from Europe and North America.

Consider DUPIXENT sooner for your appropriate asthma patients on medium ICS dose + one or more controller

ED, emergency department; EOS, eosinophils; ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; ITT, intention-to-treat; OLE, open‑label extension; Q2W, once every 2 weeks; SOC, standard of care.

Consider DUPIXENT sooner for your appropriate asthma patients on medium ICS dose + one or more controller

ED, emergency department; EOS, eosinophils; ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; ITT, intention-to-treat; OLE, open‑label extension; Q2W, once every 2 weeks; SOC, standard of care.