Drug Monograph

Xolair (Omalizumab)

omalizumab — recombinant humanised anti-IgE monoclonal antibody (IgG1κ)

Anti-IgE Monoclonal Antibody · Subcutaneous Injection · Biologic
Pharmacokinetic Profile
Half-Life
~26 days (asthma); ~24 days (CSU)
Metabolism
Hepatic RES / endothelial cell IgG degradation
Protein Binding
N/A (is itself an IgG1 antibody)
Bioavailability
~62% (SC)
Volume of Distribution
78 ± 32 mL/kg
Clinical Information
Drug Class
Anti-IgE Monoclonal Antibody
Available Doses
75 mg/0.5 mL, 150 mg/mL, 300 mg/2 mL PFS/autoinjector; 150 mg vial
Route
Subcutaneous only
Renal Adjustment
None required
Hepatic Adjustment
Not studied; no formal recommendation
Pregnancy
Insufficient data; IgG crosses placenta
Lactation
Low levels in breast milk (0.15% of maternal serum)
Schedule / Legal Status
Prescription only (biologic; not controlled)
Generic Available
No (biosimilar Omlyclo approved 2025)
Black Box Warning
Anaphylaxis
Rx

Indications

IndicationApproved PopulationTherapy TypeStatus
Moderate-to-severe persistent allergic asthmaAdults and children ≥6 yr with positive aeroallergen test and inadequate ICS controlAdd-on controllerFDA Approved
Chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps (CRSwNP)Adults ≥18 yr with inadequate response to nasal corticosteroidsAdd-on maintenanceFDA Approved
IgE-mediated food allergy — reduction of allergic reactions including anaphylaxis with accidental exposureAdults and children ≥1 yrAdjunct to food allergen avoidanceFDA Approved (Feb 2024)
Chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU)Adults and adolescents ≥12 yr who remain symptomatic despite H1 antihistaminesAdd-on to H1 antihistamineFDA Approved

Omalizumab was the first anti-IgE biologic and remains the only one approved across four distinct allergic/immune conditions. In allergic asthma, it reduces exacerbation rates and allows corticosteroid dose reduction in patients with elevated IgE and documented aeroallergen sensitisation. For CSU, it provides relief in patients refractory to antihistamines regardless of IgE level. The 2024 food allergy approval represents a new therapeutic paradigm, reducing the severity of allergic reactions from accidental food exposure—though it does not replace allergen avoidance or emergency epinephrine.

Key Limitation

Omalizumab is NOT indicated for acute bronchospasm, status asthmaticus, or emergency treatment of anaphylaxis. It is not indicated for forms of urticaria other than CSU.

Dose

Dosing

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Allergic asthma — adults and adolescents ≥12 yr75–375 mg SC q2–4wkSame as starting; no titration375 mg q2wk (750 mg per 4-wk period)Dose and frequency determined by pre-treatment serum total IgE (30–700 IU/mL) and body weight (30–150 kg) using PI Table 1
Administer ≥0.016 mg/kg per IU IgE/mL per 4-wk period
Allergic asthma — children 6 to <12 yr75–375 mg SC q2–4wkSame as starting375 mg q2wkDose from PI Table 2; IgE range 30–1300 IU/mL, weight 20–150 kg
Adjust dose for significant weight changes during treatment
CRSwNP — adults ≥18 yr75–600 mg SC q2–4wkSame as starting600 mg q2wkDose from PI Table 3; based on IgE and weight; add-on to nasal corticosteroids
Higher doses possible than asthma due to expanded IgE/weight matrix
IgE-mediated food allergy — adults and children ≥1 yr75–600 mg SC q2–4wkSame as starting600 mg q2wkDose from PI Table 4; IgE 30–1850 IU/mL, weight ≥10 kg; broadest dosing matrix
Does NOT replace allergen avoidance or emergency epinephrine
CSU — adults and adolescents ≥12 yr150 or 300 mg SC q4wk150 or 300 mg SC q4wk300 mg q4wkNOT based on IgE or body weight
300 mg may be given as one 300 mg/2 mL injection or two 150 mg/mL injections
Clinical Pearl: IgE Retesting

Total IgE levels rise during omalizumab treatment (due to formation of slow-clearing omalizumab-IgE complexes) and remain elevated for up to one year after discontinuation. Therefore, IgE levels measured during therapy or within one year of stopping cannot be used to recalculate doses. If treatment is interrupted for less than one year, use the original pre-treatment IgE. If interrupted for one year or more, retest IgE before restarting.

Administration Requirements

Initiate omalizumab in a healthcare setting equipped to manage anaphylaxis. Observe patients for an appropriate period after each injection. Self-administration with prefilled syringe or autoinjector may be considered after at least 3 doses without hypersensitivity, in patients with no history of anaphylaxis to omalizumab or other agents (except food for food allergy indication), who can recognise and treat anaphylaxis. The autoinjector is only for patients ≥12 years.

PK

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action

Omalizumab is a recombinant humanised IgG1κ monoclonal antibody that selectively binds to the Cε3 domain of human immunoglobulin E (IgE) at the same site used by the high-affinity IgE receptor (FcεRI). By capturing free circulating IgE, omalizumab prevents IgE from engaging FcεRI on mast cells and basophils, thereby blocking the initial step of the allergic cascade. This results in a marked reduction in surface FcεRI receptor density on effector cells—an effect that develops progressively over weeks of treatment. The net outcome is reduced mast cell and basophil degranulation upon allergen exposure, leading to decreased histamine, leukotriene, and cytokine release. In allergic asthma, this translates to reduced airway inflammation and exacerbation frequency. In CSU, the exact mechanism is less well characterised, but is thought to involve downregulation of FcεRI on skin mast cells and basophils. In IgE-mediated food allergy, omalizumab raises the threshold of allergen exposure needed to trigger a reaction.

ADME Profile

ParameterValueClinical Implication
AbsorptionSlow SC absorption; Tmax 7–8 days; bioavailability ~62%Extended Tmax means clinical effect builds over several weeks; steady state reached by ~6 months of dosing
DistributionVd 78 ± 32 mL/kg; no specific organ uptake; does not cross BBB significantly; crosses placenta (IgG); excreted in breast milk at 0.15% of maternal serumDistribution similar to endogenous IgG; weight-based dosing accounts for body-size variation
MetabolismDegraded in hepatic reticuloendothelial system (RES) and endothelial cells; standard IgG clearance pathways plus target-mediated clearance via omalizumab-IgE complex formationNo CYP enzyme involvement; minimal drug-drug interaction potential; clearance approximately doubles with doubling of body weight
EliminationAsthma: t½ ~26 days; apparent CL 2.4 ± 1.1 mL/kg/day. CSU: t½ ~24 days; apparent CL ~240 mL/day (3.0 mL/kg/day)Long half-life supports q2–4 week dosing; total IgE rises during treatment (slower clearance of omalizumab-IgE complexes vs free IgE)
SE

Side Effects

≥10%Very Common (Asthma Trials, Adults ≥12 yr)
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Injection site reactions (any severity)45% (vs 43% placebo)Bruising, redness, warmth, pain, itching; majority within 1 h; severity decreases with subsequent doses; severe ISRs in 12% vs 9% placebo
Note on Headache

Headache was reported in 15% of asthma trial patients but at similar rates to placebo and is therefore not considered drug-attributable in this indication. However, in CSU trials headache was more frequent with omalizumab (150 mg: 12.0%; 300 mg: 6.1%) than placebo (2.9%).

1–10%Common (Asthma Trials, Adults ≥12 yr — Rates Higher Than Placebo)
Adverse EffectIncidence (Omalizumab vs Placebo)Clinical Note
Arthralgia8% vs 6%Most common musculoskeletal complaint; not dose-related
Pain (generalised)7% vs 5%Non-specific; not clearly attributable to drug
Leg pain4% vs 2%More common than arm pain
Fatigue3% vs 2%Mild; does not typically limit activity
Dizziness3% vs 2%Consider monitoring during initial doses
Fracture2% vs 1%Causal relationship not established
Arm pain2% vs 1%May relate to injection site proximity
Pruritus2% vs 1%Evaluate for systemic hypersensitivity if widespread
Dermatitis2% vs 1%Non-specific; usually localised
Earache2% vs 1%Not clearly drug-related
SeriousSerious Adverse Effects (Regardless of Frequency)
Adverse EffectEstimated FrequencyTypical OnsetRequired Action
Anaphylaxis (BOXED WARNING)0.1% in trials (3/3507); ≥0.2% post-marketing60–70% within first 3 doses; onset usually within 2 h; can occur >1 yr into treatmentStop omalizumab permanently; treat with epinephrine per anaphylaxis protocol; report to manufacturer and FDA
Malignancy0.5% omalizumab vs 0.2% control in trialsVariable; most patients followed <1 yr5-year observational study showed similar rates (12.3 vs 13.0 per 1000 patient-years); causal link not established but cannot be ruled out
Serum sickness-like reaction (fever, arthritis, rash, lymphadenopathy)Rare (post-marketing)1–5 days after injection; may recurDiscontinue omalizumab; treat symptomatically; do not rechallenge
Eosinophilic conditions / Churg-Strauss syndrome (EGPA)RareOften with corticosteroid reductionCheck eosinophil count; evaluate for vasculitis; causal association not established
Cardiovascular / cerebrovascular eventsSignal in observational studyVariableFDA-labelled warning; confounding factors present; monitor in high-risk patients
DiscontinuationDiscontinuation Rates
Asthma (Adults)
Low similar to placebo
Key context: In pivotal asthma trials, the most common reasons for clinical intervention were injection site reactions (45%), viral infections (23%), URTI (20%), sinusitis (16%), and headache (15%)—all at similar rates to placebo. Discontinuation for adverse events was uncommon.
Food Allergy (Paediatric)
0% no discontinuations due to AEs in FA trial
Key context: In the pivotal food allergy trial (110 omalizumab, 55 placebo), there were no discontinuations due to adverse reactions in either group.
Anaphylaxis Risk Mitigation

Patients with a history of anaphylaxis to foods, medications, or other causes are at increased risk of anaphylaxis to omalizumab (OR 8.1, 95% CI 2.7–24.3). Approximately 60–70% of anaphylaxis cases occur within the first three doses. All patients should carry epinephrine autoinjectors during omalizumab therapy.

Int

Drug Interactions

No formal drug interaction studies have been conducted with omalizumab. As a monoclonal antibody metabolised by proteolytic degradation (not CYP enzymes), omalizumab has minimal pharmacokinetic interaction potential. The following clinical considerations are relevant:

MinorAllergen Immunotherapy
MechanismBoth modulate immune response to allergens
EffectConcomitant use has not been adequately evaluated in asthma
ManagementNot contraindicated; the PI states concurrent use has not been evaluated but does not prohibit it
FDA PI
ModerateSystemic Corticosteroids
MechanismCorticosteroid withdrawal may unmask eosinophilic conditions
EffectRisk of Churg-Strauss syndrome or systemic eosinophilia during corticosteroid taper
ManagementDo not discontinue corticosteroids abruptly upon starting omalizumab; taper gradually under supervision; monitor eosinophil count
FDA PI
MinorLive Vaccines
MechanismTheoretical immunosuppressive effect as biologic agent
EffectNo specific data on vaccine interaction; general biologic precaution
ManagementFollow standard immunisation guidelines; ensure vaccinations are up to date before initiating biologic therapy where possible
Clinical Practice
ModerateAnti-helminthic Treatment
MechanismIgE plays a role in immune defence against helminths; omalizumab reduces free IgE
EffectIn a trial in high-risk patients, geohelminth infection was numerically higher with omalizumab (53% vs 42%); response to anti-helminthic treatment was preserved
ManagementMonitor patients at high risk of helminth infection; treat infections promptly with standard anti-helminthic agents
FDA PI
Mon

Monitoring

  • Serum Total IgEBefore treatment only
    Routine
    Required for dose determination in asthma, CRSwNP, and food allergy (not CSU). Do NOT retest during treatment or within 1 year of stopping—levels are falsely elevated by omalizumab-IgE complexes. If treatment is interrupted ≥1 year, retest before restarting.
  • Post-Injection ObservationEvery administration (especially first 3 doses)
    Routine
    Observe in a healthcare setting for an appropriate period after injection. Anaphylaxis is most common within first 3 doses and usually occurs within 2 hours. Even after established therapy, vigilance is needed as late-onset anaphylaxis (>1 year) has been reported.
  • Asthma Control / Disease ResponseEvery 3–6 months
    Routine
    Periodically reassess the need for continued therapy. Evaluate exacerbation frequency, rescue inhaler use, ICS dose, and quality of life. Most patients show response by 12–16 weeks.
  • Eosinophil CountIf vasculitis symptoms develop
    Trigger-based
    Be alert to new-onset eosinophilia, vasculitic rash, worsening pulmonary symptoms, cardiac complications, or neuropathy—especially during corticosteroid taper. These may indicate unmasking of Churg-Strauss syndrome.
  • Helminth Infection ScreeningBaseline and periodically in high-risk patients
    Trigger-based
    Stool examination for ova and parasites in patients from endemic areas or with occupational exposure. Treat any active infection before starting omalizumab if feasible.
  • Body WeightEach visit
    Routine
    Significant weight changes require dose recalculation for asthma, CRSwNP, and food allergy indications (clearance approximately doubles with doubling weight).
CI

Contraindications & Cautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • Severe hypersensitivity reaction to omalizumab or any ingredient of Xolair

Relative Contraindications (Specialist Input Recommended)

  • History of anaphylaxis to foods, medications, or other causes — 8-fold increased risk of anaphylaxis to omalizumab; if prescribed, enhanced monitoring is essential
  • Latex allergy — the needle cap of the 75 mg/0.5 mL and 150 mg/mL prefilled syringes contains a derivative of natural rubber latex (the autoinjector does not contain latex)

Use with Caution

  • Patients at high risk of geohelminth infection — IgE is part of anti-parasitic immunity; monitor and treat infections promptly
  • Concurrent oral corticosteroid taper — risk of unmasking eosinophilic conditions; taper gradually
  • Pregnancy — insufficient human data; IgG crosses placenta; use only if clearly needed
  • Children <6 yr (asthma) or <12 yr (CSU) — not approved for these age groups in these indications
  • Elderly — limited data (134 patients ≥65 yr in trials); no apparent age-related differences observed
FDA Boxed Warning Anaphylaxis

Anaphylaxis presenting as bronchospasm, hypotension, syncope, urticaria, and/or angioedema of the throat or tongue has been reported after omalizumab administration. Anaphylaxis has occurred as early as the first dose and beyond one year of treatment. In premarketing clinical trials, anaphylaxis was reported in 3 of 3,507 (0.1%) asthma patients. Post-marketing estimates suggest a rate of at least 0.2%. Approximately 60–70% of cases occurred within the first three doses. Initiate therapy only in a healthcare setting prepared to manage anaphylaxis. Patients selected for self-administration must meet specific criteria to mitigate anaphylaxis risk.

Pt

Patient Counselling

Purpose of Therapy

Omalizumab is a biologic injection that works by blocking IgE, a key chemical that triggers allergic reactions. Depending on your condition, it helps prevent asthma attacks, reduce hives, shrink nasal polyps, or reduce the severity of allergic reactions to accidentally eaten food allergens. It is not an emergency rescue medication and does not replace your rescue inhaler, antihistamines, or epinephrine autoinjector.

How to Take

Omalizumab is given as an injection under the skin, every 2 or 4 weeks depending on your condition and the results of a blood test for IgE. Your first few injections must be given in a clinic or doctor’s office where staff can watch you for any severe reaction. After that, your doctor may approve home self-injection if it is safe for you.

Allergic Reactions and Anaphylaxis
Tell patientA severe allergic reaction called anaphylaxis can occur after any injection—even after you have been taking omalizumab for a long time without problems. Symptoms include difficulty breathing, throat tightness, tongue or lip swelling, dizziness, fainting, rapid heartbeat, and skin rash or hives.
Call prescriberSeek emergency medical care immediately if any of these symptoms occur after an injection. Always carry your prescribed epinephrine autoinjector.
Not a Rescue Medication
Tell patientOmalizumab works slowly over weeks to months. It does not treat sudden asthma attacks, acute hive flares, or emergency food allergy reactions. Keep your rescue inhaler, antihistamines, and epinephrine autoinjector available at all times.
Call prescriberIf your asthma worsens, hives increase, or you notice no improvement after 12–16 weeks of treatment.
Food Allergy Patients
Tell patientOmalizumab reduces the severity of reactions if you accidentally eat a food allergen, but it does NOT allow you to eat your allergens intentionally. You must continue strict allergen avoidance. It is NOT a replacement for epinephrine in an emergency.
Call prescriberIf you have any allergic reaction to a food, even if it seems mild, and report it at your next appointment.
Injection Site Care
Tell patientMild redness, swelling, and pain at the injection site are common and usually improve within a few days. Rotate injection sites (abdomen, thigh, or outer upper arm if given by someone else) and inject at least 1 inch from any previous site.
Call prescriberIf injection site reactions are severe, widespread, or do not resolve within a week.
Corticosteroid Use
Tell patientDo not stop or reduce your oral or inhaled corticosteroids on your own after starting omalizumab. Dose changes to corticosteroids must be done gradually and only under your doctor’s supervision.
Call prescriberIf you develop new symptoms during a corticosteroid taper: rash, numbness/tingling, worsening breathing, or flu-like symptoms.
Ref

Sources

Regulatory (PI / SmPC)
  1. Genentech, Inc. Xolair (omalizumab) prescribing information. Revised 02/2024. Genentech PIPrimary source for all indications, dosing tables (Tables 1–4), pharmacokinetics, adverse event incidence rates (Tables 7–10), boxed warning, and contraindications cited in this monograph.
  2. FDA. Omalizumab (marketed as Xolair) Information. FDA.govFDA safety communications including cardiovascular risk signal and label changes.
  3. FDA. Omlyclo (omalizumab-noli) biosimilar prescribing information. 2025. FDA LabelFirst FDA-approved biosimilar to omalizumab; confirms biosimilar adverse event and dosing profile.
Key Clinical Trials
  1. Humbert M, Beasley R, Ayres J, et al. Benefits of omalizumab as add-on therapy in patients with severe persistent asthma who are inadequately controlled despite best available therapy (GINA 2002 step 4 treatment): INNOVATE. Allergy. 2005;60(3):309–316. doi:10.1111/j.1398-9995.2004.00772.xPivotal INNOVATE trial demonstrating reduced exacerbations and emergency visits in severe allergic asthma with omalizumab add-on therapy.
  2. Maurer M, Rosén K, Hsieh HJ, et al. Omalizumab for the treatment of chronic idiopathic or spontaneous urticaria. N Engl J Med. 2013;368(10):924–935. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1215372ASTERIA I trial establishing efficacy of omalizumab 300 mg q4wk for CSU refractory to antihistamines.
  3. Wood RA, Togias A, Sicherer SH, et al. Omalizumab for the treatment of multiple food allergies. N Engl J Med. 2024;390(10):889–899. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2312382OUtMATCH trial supporting the Feb 2024 food allergy approval; demonstrated increased tolerance threshold in peanut and multi-food allergic patients.
  4. Gevaert P, Omachi TA, Corren J, et al. Efficacy and safety of omalizumab in nasal polyposis: 2 randomized phase 3 trials. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2020;146(3):595–605. doi:10.1016/j.jaci.2020.05.032POLYP 1 and POLYP 2 trials forming the basis for the CRSwNP indication approval.
Guidelines
  1. Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA). Global Strategy for Asthma Management and Prevention. 2024 Update. ginasthma.orgPositions omalizumab as a Step 5 add-on biologic for severe allergic asthma with elevated IgE.
  2. Zuberbier T, Abdul Latiff AH, Abuzakouk M, et al. The international EAACI/GA2LEN/EuroGuiDerm/APAAACI guideline for the definition, classification, diagnosis, and management of urticaria. Allergy. 2022;77(3):734–766. doi:10.1111/all.15090International guideline recommending omalizumab as second-line therapy for CSU unresponsive to updosed H1 antihistamines.
Mechanistic / Basic Science
  1. Holgate ST, Djukanović R, Casale T, Bousquet J. Anti-immunoglobulin E treatment with omalizumab in allergic diseases: an update on anti-inflammatory activity and clinical efficacy. Clin Exp Allergy. 2005;35(4):408–416. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2222.2005.02191.xComprehensive review of omalizumab’s mechanism including IgE binding, FcεRI downregulation, and anti-inflammatory effects.
Pharmacokinetics / Special Populations
  1. Lowe PJ, Tannenbaum S, Gautier A, Jimenez P. Relationship between omalizumab pharmacokinetics, IgE pharmacodynamics and symptoms in patients with severe persistent allergic (IgE-mediated) asthma. Br J Clin Pharmacol. 2009;68(1):61–76. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2125.2009.03401.xPopulation PK/PD model confirming the IgE/weight-based dosing strategy and relationship between free IgE suppression and clinical outcomes.
  2. StatPearls: Omalizumab. Singh AP, Neely JA. In: StatPearls [Internet]. Updated Aug 17, 2023. NCBI BookshelfClinical review covering pharmacokinetics (bioavailability 62%, t½ 24–26 days), special populations, and current indications.
  3. Kim HL, Leigh R, Becker A. Omalizumab: practical considerations regarding the risk of anaphylaxis. Allergy Asthma Clin Immunol. 2010;6(1):32. doi:10.1186/1710-1492-6-32Practical guidance on anaphylaxis risk assessment, monitoring protocols, and patient selection for self-administration.