The investigators aim to recruit 32 people with COPD who have frequent exacerbations and high eosinophil counts which indicates "asthmatic type" inflammation and treat them for a year with mepolizumab. This is a licenced medication for asthma. Mepolizumab is a monoclonal antibody that acts through interleukin-5 (IL-5) antagonism to reduce blood eosinophil levels and is effective at reducing exacerbations in asthmatics. To determine whether mepolizumab may be an effective treatment in people with COPD and "asthmatic type" inflammation participants will have MRI scans before the treatment, after 12 weeks and after a year to see how the drug affects inflammation. The investigators will also compare our measurements with the number of exacerbations people get (measured by diaries), with measures of their quality of life (using a questionnaire), and with ordinary laboratory breathing tests. The investigators are especially interested to know if the reduction in inflammation early on after 12 weeks is associated with fewer exacerbations and better quality of life over the year.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
31
participants will receive 100mg of mepolizumab every 4 weeks for 52 weeks
Clinical Research Facility - NGH
Sheffield, S Yorkshire, United Kingdom
Change in Percentage Ventilated Defect Percent (VDP)
The within subject change in VDP assessed by XeMRI from baseline to 12 weeks of treatment with mepolizumab. Since the protocol was written, the convention has been to report ventilation defect, the percentage of lung that is not ventilated, rather than %VV, the percentage that is ventilated. A decrease in ventilation defect is an improvement in ventilation.
Time frame: Baseline to 12 weeks of treatment
Change in Pulmonary Inflammation
The within participant change in membrane (M)/gas (the ratio of xenon dissolved in the alveolar membrane to gaseous xenon in the airspaces, a measure of alveolar membrane absorption) assessed by XeMRI from baseline to 12 weeks of mepolizumab as an index of pulmonary inflammation. M/gas is a measure of alveolar thickness, which is an index of pulmonary inflammation. An decrease in M/gas indicates reduced inflammation.
Time frame: From Baseline to 12 weeks of treatment
Change in MRI Metrics in Low and High Exacerbation Groups - Longitudinal Relaxation Time (T1)
Comparison of change in MRI metrics (Longitudinal relaxation time (T1)) from baseline to 12 weeks in groups with a) low or b) high total 52 week exacerbation (groups defined by median split of total exacerbations over 52 weeks assessed by EXACT-Pro). Longitudinal relaxation time (T1) is intrinsic MRI relaxation time affected by changes in tissue water content, this measure is expected to increase with inflammation.
Time frame: From Baseline to 12 weeks of treatment
Change in MRI Metrics in Low and High Exacerbation Groups - M0
Comparison of change in MRI metrics (Proton spin density (M0)) from baseline to 12 weeks in groups with a) low or b) high total 52 week exacerbation (groups defined by median split of total exacerbations over 52 weeks assessed by EXACT-Pro). Proton spin density (M0) is a measure of parenchymal density affected by changes in tissue water content, this measure is expected to increase with inflammation.
Time frame: From Baseline to 12 weeks of treatment
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