Patients at Guy’s and St Thomas’ have become the first in the country to receive a revolutionary new treatment for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
The new injection, developed by King’s College London, is called dupilumab. It can be self-administered like an insulin pen and provides additional therapy to prevent acute flare ups of COPD – a progressive, long-term lung disease that makes it hard to breathe.
Every day in the UK 85 people with COPD will tragically die. The condition has a major impact on quality of life and mortality. COPD costs the NHS around £2 billion a year and is the 2nd leading cause of hospital admissions.
Current treatments, including medicines that open up the airways, known as brochodilators, improve breathing but do not target the inflammation driving COPD symptoms. Other therapies, like steroid inhalers, broadly reduce inflammation but do not offer a targeted approach, so work inconsistently across patients.
The new treatment has been developed for those with a subtype of COPD which is affected by white blood cells known as eosinophils. This impacts about 80 million people globally.
In clinical trials dupilumab reduced COPD flare ups, known as exacerbations, by 30-34% each year. Exacerbations result in increased shortness of breath, coughing and mucus production, and even lead to deaths – often resulting in the need for extra treatment including steroid medication and hospital admissions.
The medicine, approved by NICE earlier this year, works by reducing inflammation in the body. Dupilumab targets proteins in the body that cause inflammation, like IL-4 and IL-13. This reduces swelling in the airways and mucus build up, helping patients breathe easier and reducing exacerbations.
In a milestone in the treatment for COPD, patients received their first injection of dupilumab today at St Thomas’ Hospital. Following the first injection, they will receive their medication every two weeks and will be taught to self-inject from the second dose, similar to how people with diabetes administer insulin.
Patients will be monitored for the following year to review their symptoms. If there has been an improvement the medication will be continued in the longer term.




