| Literature DB >> 26556432 |
Pritish Mondal1, Amber Loyson1, Jorge Lascano2, Satyanarayan Hegde3.
Abstract
Ivacaftor is the first novel cystic fibrosis pharmaceutical that acts at the molecular level to potentiate cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) function and was first approved for clinical use in 2012. We are sharing our single center experience of five patients: four from pediatric age group and one adult patient. All patients had both subjective and objective improvements in their health. Despite established lung disease, our patients had significant improvement in both their FEV1 (forced expiratory volume in 1 second) and FEF25-75 and BMI (body mass index). Larger studies demonstrated only 6.7% improvement in mean FEV1 after starting Ivacaftor therapy but their patient population had normal lung function to begin with. In contrast our case series demonstrates that, in patients with established lung disease and diminished lung function, Ivacaftor can be expected to result in much higher recovery in lung function. Mean FEV1 improved by 35% in our case series. Ivacaftor is extremely expensive, costing $300,000 per patient per year requiring lifelong therapy, hence requiring prior authorizations from most third-party payers in the USA. The knowledge shared from our experience will be useful for other clinicians to petition healthcare policymakers on behalf of their patients.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 26556432 PMCID: PMC4590953 DOI: 10.1155/2014/947923
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Med ISSN: 2314-758X
Demography, radiology, and lower airway flora.
| Patient/ | Mutation | CT scan before therapy | CT scan after therapy | Lower airway flora before Ivacaftor | Lower airway flora after Ivacaftor | Chronic antibiotic/ |
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| Number 1 | del F508/G551D | 6 months before: the multiple regions of scattered ground glass and tree in bud opacities in both lower lobes | 18 months after: the multiple regions of scattered ground glass and tree in bud opacities in both lower lobes and | MRSA∗ | MRSA | None |
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| Number 2 | del F508/G551D | 3 months before: diffuse bronchiectasis and peribronchial thickening in the left lower lobe | Not done | MRSA, | MSSA# | None |
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| Number 3 | del F508/G551D | 6 months before: peribronchial thickening and diffuse mild | Not done | MRSA | Normal flora | None |
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| Number 4 | del F508/G551D | 2 years before: diffuse bronchiectasis and mucoid impactions | 6 months after: decreased mucoid impaction, improved bronchial wall thickening in comparison to CT scan 2 years ago | MRSA | MRSA | Inhaled tobramycin and colistin which was discontinued 1 year after Ivacaftor was started |
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| Number 5 | 2789 + 5G > A/G551D | Not done | Not done | NMPA | NMPA | Inhaled tobramycin Lispro-insulin |
*MRSA: methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.
#MSSA: methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus.
$NMPA: nonmucoid Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
++MPA: mucoid Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
Figure 1BMI trend. There was a significant overall improvement in BMI (P < 0.01). The adult patient (patient number 5) was obese to start with who lost some weight to a healthier BMI.
Figure 2FEV1 trend. There was significant overall improvement (P < 0.01) in FEV1, however more so in the younger patients. Patient number 5 (46-year-old female) who already had established bilateral bronchiectasis had a modest improvement. Patient number 4, a 14-year-old male who also had bilateral diffuse bronchiectasis and multiple pulmonary exacerbations prior to starting Ivacaftor, demonstrated significant improvement in his FEV1 presumably due to decreased mucus impaction in the airways (see chest CT scans in Figure 4).
Figure 3FEF25–75 trend. Similar to trend in FEV1 (see Figure 2), there was significant improvement in FEF 25–75% (P < 0.01). The adult patient (number 5) had only modest improvement suggesting that the patient already had irreversible lung damage.
Figure 4CT of the chest before and after Ivacaftor. Two representative chest CT slices of patient number 4 ((a) and (b), 16-year-old male) at the same anatomic region before and after Ivacaftor therapy. They demonstrate decreased mucus impaction in the latter scan despite the continued presence of bronchiectasis. Decreased mucus impaction probably explains improved lung function (Figures 2 and 3) despite irreversible nature of bronchiectasis. In the bottom panels ((c) and (d)) are the chest CT of another patient (14-year-old female) who already had established bronchiectasis in the peripheral airways before Ivacaftor (c) which has been resolved 18 months after Ivacaftor therapy (d).