| Literature DB >> 32028635 |
Caterina Vacchi1, Marco Sebastiani2, Giulia Cassone1, Stefania Cerri3, Giovanni Della Casa4, Carlo Salvarani2, Andreina Manfredi2.
Abstract
Interstitial lung disease (ILD) is one of the most serious pulmonary complications of connective tissue diseases (CTDs) and it is characterized by a deep impact on morbidity and mortality. Due to the poor knowledge of CTD-ILD's natural history and due to the difficulties related to design of randomized control trials, there is a lack of prospective data about the prevalence, follow-up, and therapeutic efficacy. For these reasons, the choice of therapy for CTD-ILD is currently very challenging and still largely based on experts' opinion. Treatment is often based on steroids and conventional immunosuppressive drugs, but the recent publication of the encouraging results of the INBUILD trial has highlighted a possible effective and safe use of antifibrotic drugs as a new therapeutic option for these subjects. Aim of this review is to summarize the available data and recent advances about therapeutic strategies for ILD in the context of various CTD, such as systemic sclerosis, idiopathic inflammatory myopathy and Sjogren syndrome, systemic lupus erythematosus, mixed connective tissue disease and undifferentiated connective tissue disease, and interstitial pneumonia with autoimmune features, focusing also on ongoing clinical trials.Entities:
Keywords: antifibrotic drugs; clinical trials; connective tissue disease; immunoppressants; interstitial lung disease; treatment
Year: 2020 PMID: 32028635 PMCID: PMC7073957 DOI: 10.3390/jcm9020407
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Treatment of interstitial lung disease in connective tissue disease.
| Systemic Sclerosis | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trial | Year | Population | Phase | Follow-Up | Drug Investigated | Outcome | Results | |
| SLS I [ | 2006 | 145 SSc-ILD | Phase III | 12 Mo * | CYC | Oral CYC [72 pt] vs. PBO [73 pt] | I: FVC (%); II: TLC (%), PR-D, DLCO (%) | Oral CYC was associated with significant but modest improvement in FVC (%) compared with PBO and was associated with improvements in TLC (%), PR-D but not in DLCO (%). |
| SLS I, FU extension [ | 2007 | 145 SSc-ILD | Phase III | 24 Mo * | CYC | Oral CYC [72 pt] vs. PBO [73 pt] | I: FVC (%); II: TLC (%), PR-D, DLCO (%) | At a 24 month follow up, except for a sustained impact on dyspnea, the effects on FVC and TLC were no longer apparent. |
| SLS I § [ | 2009 | 98 SSc-ILD | Phase III | 12 Mo | CYC | Oral CYC [49 pt] vs. PBO [49 pt] | I: FVC (%), HRCT aspects (GGOs, FIB, Hcs scored on a scale of 0 to 4); II: TLC (%), DLCO (%) | At the end of FU, FIB was significantly worse in the PBO group than in the CYC group ( |
| FAST trial [ | 2006 | 45 SSc-ILD | N.A. | 12 Mo | CYC-AZA | PDN + iv CYC + oral AZA as maintenance therapy [22 pt] or PBO [23pt]. | I: FVC (%), DLCO (%); II: HRCT (extent and pattern), PR-D | The improvement in terms of FVC (%) at the end of FU was modest but did not reach the statistical significance. Secondary outcome was not reached. |
| SLS II [ | 2016 | 126 SSc-ILD | Phase II | 24 Mo | MMF vs. CYC | MMF for 24 months [63 pt] vs. oral CYC for 12 months followed by PBO for 12 months [63 pt] | I: FVC (%); II: DLCO (%), PR-D, quantitative HRCT fibrosis scores. | Both MMF and CYC treatment resulted in significant improvements in FVC (%), DLCO (%), HRCT, PR-D. |
| SLS I, II § [ | 2017 | 122 SSc-ILD | N.A. | 24 Mo | MMF | SLS II-MMF ( | I: FVC (%); II: DLCO (%), PR-D | MMF in comparison with PBO was associated with an improved course of FVC (%) ( |
| Nadashkevich et al. [ | 2006 | 60 SSc° | N.A. | 18 Mo | CYC vs. AZA | Oral CYC [30 py] vs. oral AZA [30 pt]. PRD for the first 6 months. | I: FVC (%); DLCO (%), Chest X ray | FVC and DLCO did not change after treatment in the CYC-group, but statistically significantly worsened in the AZA-group. |
| Daoussis et al. [ | 2010 | 14 SSc-ILD | N.A. | 12 Mo | RTX | RTX [8 pt] vs. PBO [6 pt] | I: FVC (%), FEV1 (%), DLCO (%); II: HRCT score | There was a significant increase of FVC and DLCO in the RTX group compared with baseline ( |
| RECOVER trial [ | 2013 | 22 SSc | Phase II/III | 12 Mo | RTX | RTX vs. PBO | II: Pulmonary functional tests | N.A. |
| ASTIS trial [ | 2014 | 156 SSc (n° SSc-ILD n.a.) | Phase II | 24 Mo | HSCT vs. CYC | HSCT [79 pt] vs. CYC [77 pt] | I: event-free survival. II: FVC (%), TLC (%); RV (%); DLCO (%) | HSCT therapy resulted in significant improvement in the FVC and total lung capacity (TLC) at a two-year follow-up |
| ASSIST trial [ | 2011 | 19 SSc-ILD | Phase II | 12 Mo | HSCT vs. CYC | HSCT [10 pt] vs. CYC [9 pt]. | FVC (%); DLCO (%); HRCT score | HSCT in comparison to CYC was more effective in improving FVC and decreasing diseased-lung volume. No effects on DLCO (%) was observed. |
| SCOT trial [ | 2018 | 73 Ssc-ILD | Phase II/III | 54 Mo | HSCT vs. CYC | HSCT [36 pt] vs. CYC [37 pt] | I: Global rank composite score including FVC (%) | HSCT achieved long-term benefits in patients with scleroderma, including improved event-free and overall survival Data regarding pulmonary function were not available. |
| SENSCIS trial [ | 2019 | 576 Ssc-ILD | Phase III | 12 Mo | Nintedanib | Nintedanib [288 pt] vs. PBO [288 pt] | I:FVC (mL) ^; II: FVC (%) ^, FVC (mL) $, DLCO (%)$ PR-D | Nintedanib significantly reduced the annual rate of decline in FVC at the end pf FU ( |
| Khanna et al. [ | 2011 | 20 SSc-ILD | Phase I/IIa | 12 Mo | Imatinib | Imatinib [20 pt] | I: FVC (%), DLCO (%), HRCT, PR-D | Imatinib led to trends toward improvement of 1.74% in the estimated FVC %, TLC % and in the DLCO % predicted over a 1-year period ( |
| Fraticelli et al. [ | 2014 | 30 SSc-ILD | Phase II | 6 Mo * | Imatinib | Imatinib [30 pt] for 6 months | I: FVC (%), DLCO (%), HRCT, PR-D | Three patients died and one pt was lost to follow-up. Four pt had a good response, seven worsened and 15 had a stabilized lung disease. Overall, 19 pt had an improved or stabilized lung disease. After a 6-month follow-up, 12 (54.5%) of the 22 pt showed an improved or stabilized lung disease. |
| Martyanov et al. [ | 2017 | 31 SSc-ILD | Phase IIa | 18 Mo * | Dasatinib | Dasatinib for 6 months | II: PFT, PR-D, HRCT, Serum KL-6, SP-D, APRIL and adiponectin. | No significant changes in clinical assessments or serum biomarkers were seen at the end of FU. By quantitative HRCT, 65% of patients showed no progression of FIB, 39% showed no progression of total ILD. Improvers showed stability in FVC and DLCO, while both measures showed a decline in non-improvers ( |
| LOTUSS trial [ | 2016 | 63 SSc-ILD | Phase II | 5 We * | PRF | 2-week titration [32 pt] vs. 4-week titration [31pt] from 801 mg/d to 2403 mg/d, for 16 weeks. | EE: FVC (%), DLCO (%) | FVC (%) and DLCO (%) remained largely unchanged at the end of FU. |
| SLS III [ | 2017 | Phase II | 18 Mo | MMF, PRF | MMF +PBO vs. MMF + PRF | I: FVC (%); II: DLCO (%), PR-D, HRCT | N.A. | |
| FaSScinate trial [ | 2016 | 87 SSc | Phase II | 48 We | TCZ | TCZ [43 pt] vs. PBO [44 pt] | EE: FVC (mL and %) $, DLCO (%) $ | FVC showed a not significant decrease in TCZ group than PBO group at the end of FU and fewer pt in the TCZ group than in the PBO group had worsening of percent predicted FVC ( |
| FocuSSced trial [ | 2018 | 212 SSc | Phase III | 48 We | TCZ | TCZ vs. PBO | II: FVC (%) $ | The cumulative distribution of change from baseline to week 48 in FVC (%) favored TCZ over PBO ( |
| Dermatomyositis and Polymyositis | ||||||||
| Allenbach et al. [ | 2015 | 12 ASSD | Phase II | 12 Mo | RTX | RTX | II: Improvement of ILD (increase of 10% in FVC or 15% of DLCO %). | Improvement of FVC was observed in four patients, stabilization in 5 five and worsening in one. Only 1 pt with increased FVC (%) also showed an improvement of DLCO (%). In addition, one patient had an improvement of DLCO without significant change for FVC (data not shown). Finally, five patients had improving ILD measured by PFT. |
| ATtackMy-ILD [ | 2017 | Recruiting (estimated 20 ASSD-ILD) | Phase II | 6 Mo | ABA | ABA vs. PBO | I: FVC (%) $; II: time to progression free survival, PR-D, time to improvement in FVC% (≥10 points) | N.A. |
| Connective tissue diseases | ||||||||
| RECITAL [ | 2013 | Recruiting (estimated 116 CTD-ILD) | Phase II/III | 48 We | RTX, CYC | RTX | I: FVC (mL); II: DLCO $ | N.A. |
| INBUILD trial [ | 2019 | 663 pt with progressive fibrosing ILD other than IPF (including CTDs) | Phase III | 52 We | Nintedanib | Nintedanib vs. PBO | I: FVC ^; II: absolute change from baseline in the total score on the King’s Brief Interstitial Lung Disease (K-BILD) questionnaire; time until the first acute exacerbation of ILD or death; | In patients with progressive fibrosing interstitial lung diseases, the annual rate of decline in the FVC was significantly lower among patients who received nintedanib than among those who received placebo. Diarrhea was a common adverse event. |
SLS: Scleroderma Lung Study; CYC: Cyclophosphamide; pt: patients; Mo: Month; FVC: Fored Vital Capacity; TLC: Total Lung Capacity; PR-D: patient-reported dyspnea; DLCO: diffusing capacity of the lung for carbon monoxide; N.A.: not available; I primary outcome; II secondary outcome; § Data extrapolated from a previous trial; * after the end of treatment; ° at the baseline 1% in each treatment group presented X-ray evidence of bibasilar pulmonary fibrosis. FVC and DLCO were evaluated in the overall patient group; AEs: adverse events; FU: follow-up; GGOs: ground-lass opacities; FIB: fibrosis; HCs: honeycomb cysts; PDN prednisone; Iv: intravenous; $ change from baseline; ^ annual rate decline; KL 6: Krebs von den Lungen-6; SP-D: surfactant protein D; APRIL: B cell proliferation-inducing ligand; We: weeks; EE: Exploratory endpoints; TCZ: tocilizumab; PRF: pirfenidone; PBO: placebo; ASSD: Anti-synthetase syndrome; ABA: Abatacept; CTD: connective tissue disease.
Treatment of patients with CTD related ILD. Summary of the literature according to the study design.
| Systemic Sclerosis | Idiopathic Inflammatory Myopathy | Primary Sjogren Syndrome | Systemic Lupus Erythematosus | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Glucocorticoids | Prospective [ | Prospective [ | ||
| Cyclophosphamide | Randomized clinical trial [ | Prospective [ | ||
| Mycophenolate Mofetil | Randomized clinical trial [ | Retrospective [ | ||
| Azathioprine | Randomized clinical trial [ | Prospective [ | ||
| Rituximab | Randomized clinical trial [ | Randomized clinical trial [ | Prospective [ | |
| Hematopoietic stem cells transplantation | Randomized clinical trial [ | |||
| Tyrosine kinase inhibitors | Randomized clinical trial [ | |||
| Pirfenidone | Randomized clinical trial [ | Case report [ | ||
| Calcineurin inhibitors | Prospective [ | |||
| Lung transplantation | Retrospective [ | Retrospective [ | ||
| Plasma exchange | Case report [ | |||
| Intravenous Immunoglobulins | Retrospective [ | |||
| IL-6 inhibitors | Randomized clinical trial [ | Case report [ | ||
| Methotrexate | Prospective [ |
IL: interleukin.