| Literature DB >> 25837041 |
Carolyn E Come1, Mordechai R Kramer2, Mark T Dransfield2, Muhanned Abu-Hijleh2, David Berkowitz2, Michela Bezzi2, Surya P Bhatt2, Michael B Boyd2, Enrique Cases2, Alexander C Chen2, Christopher B Cooper2, Javier Flandes2, Thomas Gildea2, Mark Gotfried2, D Kyle Hogarth2, Kumaran Kolandaivelu2, William Leeds2, Timothy Liesching2, Nathaniel Marchetti2, Charles Marquette2, Richard A Mularski2, Victor M Pinto-Plata2, Michael A Pritchett2, Samaan Rafeq2, Edmundo R Rubio2, Dirk-Jan Slebos2, Grigoris Stratakos2, Alexander Sy2, Larry W Tsai2, Momen Wahidi2, John Walsh2, J Michael Wells2, Patrick E Whitten2, Roger Yusen2, Javier J Zulueta2, Gerard J Criner2, George R Washko2.
Abstract
Uncontrolled pilot studies demonstrated promising results of endoscopic lung volume reduction using emphysematous lung sealant (ELS) in patients with advanced, upper lobe predominant emphysema. We aimed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of ELS in a randomised controlled setting.Patients were randomised to ELS plus medical treatment or medical treatment alone. Despite early termination for business reasons and inability to assess the primary 12-month end-point, 95 out of 300 patients were successfully randomised, providing sufficient data for 3- and 6-month analysis.57 patients (34 treatment and 23 control) had efficacy results at 3 months; 34 (21 treatment and 13 control) at 6 months. In the treatment group, 3-month lung function, dyspnoea, and quality of life improved significantly from baseline when compared to control. Improvements persisted at 6 months with >50% of treated patients experiencing clinically important improvements, including some whose lung function improved by >100%. 44% of treated patients experienced adverse events requiring hospitalisation (2.5-fold more than control, p=0.01), with two deaths in the treated cohort. Treatment responders tended to be those experiencing respiratory adverse events.Despite early termination, results show that minimally invasive ELS may be efficacious, yet significant risks (probably inflammatory) limit its current utility.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25837041 PMCID: PMC4826269 DOI: 10.1183/09031936.00205614
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Respir J ISSN: 0903-1936 Impact factor: 16.671