International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Aug 2023)

Personalized CFTR Modulator Therapy for <i>G85E</i> and <i>N1303K</i> Homozygous Patients with Cystic Fibrosis

  • Simon Y. Graeber,
  • Anita Balázs,
  • Niklas Ziegahn,
  • Tihomir Rubil,
  • Constanze Vitzthum,
  • Linus Piehler,
  • Marika Drescher,
  • Kathrin Seidel,
  • Alexander Rohrbach,
  • Jobst Röhmel,
  • Stephanie Thee,
  • Julia Duerr,
  • Marcus A. Mall,
  • Mirjam Stahl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms241512365
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 15
p. 12365

Abstract

Read online

CFTR modulator therapy with elexacaftor/tezacaftor/ivacaftor (ETI) has been approved for people with CF and at least one F508del allele in Europe. In the US, the ETI label has been expanded to 177 rare CFTR mutations responsive in Fischer rat thyroid cells, including G85E, but not N1303K. However, knowledge on the effect of ETI on G85E or N1303K CFTR function remains limited. In vitro effects of ETI were measured in primary human nasal epithelial cultures (pHNECs) of a G85E homozygous patient and an N1303K homozygous patient. Effects of ETI therapy in vivo in these patients were assessed using clinical outcomes, including multiple breath washout and lung MRI, and the CFTR biomarkers sweat chloride concentration (SCC), nasal potential difference (NPD) and intestinal current measurement (ICM), before and after initiation of ETI. ETI increased CFTR-mediated chloride transport in G85E/G85E and N1303K/N1303K pHNECs. In the G85E/G85E and the N1303K/N1303K patient, we observed an improvement in lung function, SCC, and CFTR function in the respiratory and rectal epithelium after initiation of ETI. The approach of combining preclinical in vitro testing with subsequent in vivo verification can facilitate access to CFTR modulator therapy and enhance precision medicine for patients carrying rare CFTR mutations.

Keywords