Novel Therapeutic Approaches to Eosinophilic Esophagitis
Novel Therapeutic Approaches to Eosinophilic Esophagitis
Eosinophilic esophagitis is a chronic inflammatory condition that requires treatment to improve symptoms and prevent complications of esophageal remodeling, such as strictures and narrow-caliber esophagus. First-line treatments include proton pump inhibitors, topical corticosteroids, elimination or elemental diets, and esophageal dilation. Topical corticosteroids have typically required repurposing inhaled asthma medications by swallowing an aerosolized medication or mixing a nebulizer solution into a slurry. New topical corticosteroid formulations undergoing investigation include a premade budesonide oral suspension and disintegrating budesonide and fluticasone propionate tablets. The approach to an elimination diet is also changing, with an emphasis on patient preference when considering a traditional 6-food elimination diet compared with a step-up approach. This approach involves eliminating only 2 or 4 foods initially and expanding if necessary. While this method can be initially less effective for some patients, it generally involves fewer endoscopies and minimizes diet restriction. Beyond conventional therapies, a number of novel biologic agents are also under investigation. These include weekly subcutaneous injections or monthly intravenous infusions of RPC4046, dupilumab, antolimab, and benralizumab. The increasing number of approaches under development as well as anticipated submissions to the US Food and Drug Administration offer the potential of multiple specific therapies becoming available in the near future.
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