| Literature DB >> 21265830 |
Arnab Datta1, Chris J Scotton, Rachel C Chambers.
Abstract
Pulmonary fibrosis represents the end stage of a number of heterogeneous conditions and is, to a greater or lesser degree, the hallmark of the interstitial lung diseases. It is characterized by the excessive deposition of extracellular matrix proteins within the pulmonary interstitium leading to the obliteration of functional alveolar units and in many cases, respiratory failure. While a small number of interstitial lung diseases have known aetiologies, most are idiopathic in nature, and of these, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis is the most common and carries with it an appalling prognosis - median survival from the time of diagnosis is less than 3 years. This reflects the lack of any effective therapy to modify the course of the disease, which in turn is indicative of our incomplete understanding of the pathogenesis of this condition. Current prevailing hypotheses focus on dysregulated epithelial-mesenchymal interactions promoting a cycle of continued epithelial cell injury and fibroblast activation leading to progressive fibrosis. However, it is likely that multiple abnormalities in a myriad of biological pathways affecting inflammation and wound repair - including matrix regulation, epithelial reconstitution, the coagulation cascade, neovascularization and antioxidant pathways - modulate this defective crosstalk and promote fibrogenesis. This review aims to offer a pathogenetic rationale behind current therapies, briefly outlining previous and ongoing clinical trials, but will focus on recent and exciting advancements in our understanding of the pathogenesis of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, which may ultimately lead to the development of novel and effective therapeutic interventions for this devastating condition.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21265830 PMCID: PMC3085875 DOI: 10.1111/j.1476-5381.2011.01247.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Pharmacol ISSN: 0007-1188 Impact factor: 8.739
Figure 1Fibrotic foci – a histological hallmark of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. (A) Histological analysis of human IPF tissue reveals the presence of dense collagen deposition within the interstitium (Martius Scarlet Blue staining; original magnification ×10). Fibroblastic foci are revealed as accumulations of fibroblasts and alpha-SMA+ myofibroblasts, which are highly synthetic for collagen and have a contractile phenotype (B: Martius Scarlet Blue staining; C: immunohistochemistry for alpha-SMA. Original magnification ×20). The overlying epithelium is often hyperplastic, with frequent apoptosis and areas of denudation. The presence and distribution of fibrotic foci, together with the spatial and temporal heterogeneity of the pathology is crucial to defining a UIP pattern.
An overview of completed and ongoing clinical trials in IPF [modified from (Scotton and Chambers, 2007)]
| Anti-inflammatory/Immunosuppressive | |||||
| Corticosteroids | Immunosuppressant and anti-inflammatory | Significant lack of studies evaluating prednisolone against placebo | Open label study; | CRP score at 3 months | 27% responders/46% stable/27% non-respondersAdverse effects noted in all patientsCochrane Review of 2003 found no evidence for an effect of corticosteroids in IPF; no high quality prospective studies were identified as suitable for meta-analysis ( |
| Cyclophosphamide | Alkylating agent with anti-inflammatory properties | Retrospective case series; cyclophosphamide + prednisolone vs. no treatment; | Survival at 6–12 months | No evidence for a therapeutic benefit. Significant potential adverse effects | |
| Azathioprine | Inhibits adenine deaminase and impairs cell proliferation (particularly leukocytes) Anti-inflammatory | Prospective, double-blinded, randomized placebo-controlled trial; prednisolone + azathioprine ( | Primary end points: ΔFVC/DLco/A-a gradient at 1 year; survival at 9 years | Marginally significant survival benefit in azathioprine/prednisolone group only after age-adjustmentNo significant improvement in remaining parameters | |
| Etanercept | See text | Prospective, double-blinded, randomized placebo-controlled trial; etanercept ( | Primary end points: Δ% pred FVC/% pred DLco/ΔA-a gradient over 48 weeks | No significant difference observed between treatment groups. Etanercept therapy resulted in a non-significant reduction in disease progression in several physiological, functional and QoL end points | |
| Azathioprine/prednisolone | As above | Thorax National Institute, Chile | Prospective, double-blinded, randomized placebo-controlled trial; currently recruiting patients, total planned | Primary end point: progression free survivalat 2 years | Results awaited |
| Azathioprine/prednisolone/N-acetylcysteine (NAC) | In addition to above, please refer to text for NAC | NHLBI, USA | Prospective, double-blinded, randomized placebo-controlled trial; currently recruiting patients, total planned | Primary end point: ΔFVC at 60 weeks | Results awaited |
| Anti-fibrotic/Anti-angiogenic | |||||
| anti-TGFβ (1/2/3) antibody (GC1008) | See text | Genzyme and Cambridge Antibody Technology, UK | Non-randomized, open label, single group assignment Phase I study; | Primary end points: safety and tolerabilitySecondary end points: potential clinical outcomes up to 3 years | Results awaited |
| Anti-αvβ6 integrin (STX-100) | See text | Stromedix, USA | Phase I studies completed (Stromedix) – awarded orphan drug status (USA) and Phase II studies planned | Results awaited | |
| LPA, antagonist (AM152) | See text | Amira, USA | Phase I clinical study initiated in healthy individuals | Safety and pharmacokinetic profiles to be analysed | Results awaited |
| Pirfenidone | See text | Prospective, double-blinded, randomized placebo-controlled trial; high dose pirfenidone ( | Primary end point: ΔFVC at 52 weeks | Significant reduction in FVC decline in high dose treatment arm. However, change in end point during trial, handling of missing data and absence of patient reported outcome means it is difficult to draw firm conclusions at this time | |
| CAPACITY 1 (awaiting publication) (Intermune, USA) | Prospective, double-blinded, randomized placebo-controlled trial; high dose pirfenidone ( | ΔFVC at 72 weeks | No significant difference in FVC decline between treatment groups | ||
| CAPACITY 2 (awaiting publication) (Intermune, USA) | Prospective, double-blinded, randomized placebo-controlled trial; high dose pirfenidone ( | ΔFVC at 72 weeks | Significant reduction in FVC decline in pirfenidone groups | ||
| Imatinib mesylate (Gleevec) | See text | Prospective, double-blinded, randomized placebo-controlled trial; imatinib ( | Primary end point: time to disease progression (>10% decline in % pred FVC) or death over 92 weeks | No change in primary end point between treatment and placebo | |
| FG-3019 | See text | Fibrogen, USA | Phase I open label study; | 1–12 months | FG-3019 is safe and well-tolerated. Future trials will assess therapeutic potential |
| Zileuton | See text | Investigator led (University of Michigan) | Randomized, open label, active control, parallel assignment Phase II study; | Primary end point: Δ[LTB4] in BALF at 6 monthsSecondary end points include progression free survival and change in physiology | Results awaited |
| Iloprost | See text | Prospective, double-blinded, randomized placebo-controlled Phase II study; iloprost ( | Primary end point: safetySecondary end points included dyspnoea (Borg Scale) and 6MWD at 12 weeks | Patients diagnosed with IPF and PAH.Iloprost was well tolerated though no significant differences observed in secondary end points' | |
| Anti-IL-13 antibody (QAX576) | See text | Novartis, Switzerland | Open label Phase II study; | Primary end point: IL13 serum levelsSecondary end point: change in designated serum biomarkers over time with treatment for 4 weeks | Results awaited |
| IFNγ1b | See text | Prospective, double-blinded, randomized placebo-controlled trial; interferon ( | Primary end point: survival from time of randomizationPrimary end points: safety and tolerability | Trial ended prematurely as overall survival had crossed predefined boundary at planned interim stage analysis (64 weeks); however, no difference between treatment and placebo arms | |
| National Centre for Research Resources, USA | Non-randomized open label single interventional study with nebulized interferon-γRecruiting patients, planned | Secondary end points: lung function trends and BALF [IFN-γ] at 1 year | Results awaited | ||
| Endothelin antagonists | |||||
| Bosentan (dual ET-1 receptor antagonist) | See text | Prospective, double-blinded, randomized placebo-controlled trial; bosentan ( | Primary end point: 6MWD at 12 months | No effect on primary outcome between treatments arms; | |
| BUILD-3 (Actelion, Switzerland) | Prospective, double-blinded, randomized placebo-controlled trial; total | Primary end points: time to disease progression or death over 8–32 months | BUILD-3 trial designed to evaluate efficacy of bosentan in the subgroup of patients with IPF diagnosed at lung biopsy | ||
| Ambrisentan (selective ET-1A receptor antagonist) | See text | ARTEMIS-IPF (Gilead, USA) | Prospective, double-blinded randomized placebo-controlled trial; ambrisentan vs. placebo, currently recruiting, total planned | Primary end points: time to disease progression or death, event driven over 4 years | Terminated at interim analysis stage due to lack of efficacy |
| Macicentan | See text | MUSIC (Actelion, Switzerland) | Prospective, double-blinded randomized placebo-controlled trial; total | ΔFVC over 12 months | Results awaited |
| AII antagonists (Losartan) | See text and refer to sildenafil below | Losartan in Treating Patients with IPF (National Cancer Institute, USA) | Open label interventional study; recruiting patients; planned | Primary end point: FVC response at 1 year | Results awaited |
| Targeting Vascular Reactivity in Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (University of Iowa, USA) | Prospective, double-blinded, randomized placebo-controlled trial; currently recruiting; planned total | Primary end points: 6MWD and QoL score | This trial is designed to evaluate the effect of losartan ± sildenafil on exercise-induced oxygen desaturation in IPF patients | ||
| Minocycline | See text | Investigator led – University of California, USA | Prospective, double-blinded, randomized placebo-controlled trial; patient numbers not disclosed | Primary end points: safety and efficacy | Results awaited |
| Angiokinase inhibitor (BIBF 1120) | See text | Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, UK | Prospective, double-blinded, randomized placebo-controlled Phase II study; BIBF1120 vs. placebo; total | Primary end point: ΔFVC over 1 year | Results awaited |
| Tetrathiomolybdate | See text | Investigator led – University of Michigan, USA | Non-randomized, open label, uncontrolled, single group assignment Phase I/II; | Primary end point: safetySecondary end points: Δlung function tests | Results awaited |
| Antioxidant | |||||
| N-acetylcysteine (NAC) | See text | Prospective, double-blinded, randomized placebo-controlled trial; NAC + azathioprine + prednisolone ( | Primary end points: absolute ΔFVC and DLco at 12 months | Reduction in FVC and DLco decline over 1 year in NAC arm, though no change in mortality | |
| Anti-coagulation/pro-fibrinolytic | |||||
| Warfarin | See text | Randomized open label trial; prednisolone + warfarin/low molecular weight heparin( | Primary end points: time to death and hospitalization-free time over 1 year | Anti-coagulant therapy resulted in a significant increase in survival of patients with IPF and a significant improvement in survival associated with acute exacerbations of IPF | |
| See text | NHLBI – Duke University, USA | Prospective, double-blinded, randomized placebo-controlled trial; warfarin vs. placebo; currently recruiting, planned total | Primary end points: time to death or disease progression over 48 weeks | Results awaited | |
| Heparin | See text | Open label exploratory study evaluating safety of nebulized heparin in IPF; | Study designed to assess safety and tolerability | Adequate local anticoagulation achieved with no significant adverse effects. Future trials planned to evaluate efficacy. | |
| Other | |||||
| Sildenafil | Phosphodiesterase 5 inhibitor. Causes vasorelaxation by stabilizing cGMP | IPF Clinical Research Network, USA ( | Prospective, double-blinded, randomized placebo-controlled trial :sildenafil ( | Primary end points: 6MWDDouble-blinded over initial 12 weeks, followed by open label extension for 12 weeks with all patients receiving sildenafil | This trial enrolled patients with advanced IPFNo significant improvement in primary end point in treatment arm, but significant improvement in secondary end points in sildenafil arm, including DLco and quality of life score |
| Anti-CCL2 antibody (CNTO 888) | See text | Centocor, USA | Prospective, double-blinded, randomized placebo-controlled Phase II trial; CNTO 888 ± usual therapy vs. placebo ± usual therapy; currently recruiting patients, planned total | Primary end points: safety and performance at lung function tests | Results awaited |
| Somatostatin analogues | See text | Institut National de la Santé Et de la Recherche Médicale, France | Non-randomized open label single interventional study with octreotide; | Monitoring of FVC; DLco; HRCT fibrosis score; 6MWD over 48 weeks | Results awaited |
| Thalidomide | See text | Investigator led – John Hopkins University, USA | Non-randomized open label single interventional study designed for patients who have failed or are unsuitable for immunosuppressive therapy; currently recruiting, planned total | Primary end point: safetySecondary end points: Δlung function over 1 year | Results awaited |
A-a, alveolar:arterial; BALF, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid; CRP, clinical-radiographic-physiological; DLco, carbon monoxide transfer factor; pred, predicted; FVC, forced vital capacity; HRCT, high resolution computer tomography; IL-13, interleukin 13; IFN-γ, interferon-gamma; LTB4, leukotriene B4; 6MWD, 6 min walk test distance; QoL, quality of life.
Figure 2Key mediators in the pathogenesis of IPF. The pathobiological mechanisms underlying the development of IPF are highly complex. Recurring damage to the epithelium (possibly due to reactive oxygen species, endoplasmic reticulum stress or viral infection) results in an abnormal wound healing response characterized by dysregulated epithelial–mesenchymal crosstalk and the accumulation of myofibroblasts (the key effector cells in IPF fibrogenesis). The proposed cellular origin of these cells includes resident fibroblasts, epithelial/endothelial–mesenchymal transition or the recruitment of circulating fibrocytes. The fibrotic micro-environment may be skewed towards a pro-angiogenic and Th2-oriented profile, where multiple cytokines, growth factors and signalling pathways mediate the pro-fibrotic responses. Some of the potential anti-fibrotic strategies (shown in red) are highlighted and these are described further in the text.