Gregory S Sawicki1, Edward F McKone2, David J Pasta3, Stefanie J Millar3, Jeffrey S Wagener4,5, Charles A Johnson4, Michael W Konstan6. 1. 1 Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts. 2. 2 St. Vincent's University Hospital, Dublin, Ireland. 3. 3 ICON Clinical Research, San Francisco, California. 4. 4 Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated, Boston, Massachusetts. 5. 5 University of Colorado Medical School, Aurora, Colorado; and. 6. 6 Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio.
Abstract
RATIONALE: In clinical trials, patients with cystic fibrosis and a G551D mutation who received ivacaftor experienced improvements in pulmonary and nutritional outcomes. However, whether these improvements reflect a change in disease trajectory cannot be determined without longer-term analyses with an appropriate comparator population. OBJECTIVES: To examine, over a 3-year period, whether ivacaftor therapy affects pulmonary function and nutritional measures in patients with CF with a G551D mutation compared with patients with CF who are homozygous for the F508del mutation. METHODS: A propensity score was used to match patients with CF greater than or equal to 6 years of age who have a G551D mutation and received ivacaftor in clinical trials for up to 144 weeks with data from patients in the U.S. Cystic Fibrosis Foundation Patient Registry who are homozygous for the F508del mutation. Matching was based on variables including age, sex, weight for age, height for age, body mass index for age, % predicted FEV1, and chronic therapies (dornase alfa, inhaled antibiotics, inhaled and oral corticosteroids). MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: By calculating the annual estimated rate of decline in lung function for G551D patients receiving ivacaftor and comparing it with the rate of decline in lung function for matched F508del control patients, we show that the rate of lung function decline in G551D ivacaftor-treated patients was slower by nearly half. Moreover, treatment with ivacaftor is shown to improve body mass index and weight-for-age z scores for G551D patients over the 3-year analysis period. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that ivacaftor is a disease-modifying therapy for the treatment of cystic fibrosis.
RATIONALE: In clinical trials, patients with cystic fibrosis and a G551D mutation who received ivacaftor experienced improvements in pulmonary and nutritional outcomes. However, whether these improvements reflect a change in disease trajectory cannot be determined without longer-term analyses with an appropriate comparator population. OBJECTIVES: To examine, over a 3-year period, whether ivacaftor therapy affects pulmonary function and nutritional measures in patients with CF with a G551D mutation compared with patients with CF who are homozygous for the F508del mutation. METHODS: A propensity score was used to match patients with CF greater than or equal to 6 years of age who have a G551D mutation and received ivacaftor in clinical trials for up to 144 weeks with data from patients in the U.S. Cystic Fibrosis Foundation Patient Registry who are homozygous for the F508del mutation. Matching was based on variables including age, sex, weight for age, height for age, body mass index for age, % predicted FEV1, and chronic therapies (dornase alfa, inhaled antibiotics, inhaled and oral corticosteroids). MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: By calculating the annual estimated rate of decline in lung function for G551Dpatients receiving ivacaftor and comparing it with the rate of decline in lung function for matched F508del control patients, we show that the rate of lung function decline in G551Divacaftor-treated patients was slower by nearly half. Moreover, treatment with ivacaftor is shown to improve body mass index and weight-for-age z scores for G551Dpatients over the 3-year analysis period. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that ivacaftor is a disease-modifying therapy for the treatment of cystic fibrosis.
Entities:
Keywords:
CFTR; cystic fibrosis; disease modification; ivacaftor; lung function decline
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