Respiratory Research (Jan 2019)

Effect of pirfenidone on lung function decline and survival: 5-yr experience from a real-life IPF cohort from the Czech EMPIRE registry

  • Monika Zurkova,
  • Eva Kriegova,
  • Vitezslav Kolek,
  • Vladimira Lostakova,
  • Martina Sterclova,
  • Vladimir Bartos,
  • Martina Doubkova,
  • Ilona Binkova,
  • Michal Svoboda,
  • Jana Strenkova,
  • Marketa Janotova,
  • Martina Plackova,
  • Ladislav Lacina,
  • Vladimir Rihak,
  • Frantisek Petrik,
  • Pavlina Lisa,
  • Radka Bittenglova,
  • Richard Tyl,
  • Gustav Ondrejka,
  • Hana Suldova,
  • Jaroslav Lnenicka,
  • Jana Psikalova,
  • Tomas Snizek,
  • Jiri Homolka,
  • Renata Kralova,
  • Jan Kervitzer,
  • Martina Vasakova,
  • ILD section,
  • IPF registry

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12931-019-0977-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Introduction Pirfenidone, an antifibrotic drug, slows-down the disease progression in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) over 12 months, however limited data on the decline of lung function and overall survival (OS) in real-world cohorts on longer follow-up exists. Patients/methods Of the enrolled Czech IPF patients (n = 841) from an EMPIRE registry, 383 (45.5%) received pirfenidone, 218 (25.9%) no-antifibrotic treatment and 240 (28.5%) were excluded (missing data, nintedanib treatment). The 2- and 5-yrs OS and forced vital capacity (FVC) and diffusing lung capacity for carbon monoxide (DLCO) were investigated at treatment initiation and 6, 12, 18 and 24 months’ follow-up. Results During a 2-yr follow-up, less than a quarter of the patients progressed on pirfenidone as assessed by the decline of ≥10% FVC (17.0%) and ≥ 15% DLCO (14.3%). On pirfenidone, the DLCO (≥10%) declines at 6, 12, 18 and 24 months’ and DLCO (≥15%) declines at 6, 18 and 24 months’ follow-up were associated with increased mortality. The DLCO decline showed higher predictive value for mortality than FVC decline. In patients with no-antifibrotics, FVC and DLCO declines were not predictive for mortality. Pirfenidone increased 5-yrs OS over no-antifibrotic treatment (55.9% vs 31.5% alive, P = 0.002). Conclusion Our study observed the 2-yrs sustained effect of pirfenidone on the decline of lung function and survival in the real-world patient’s IPF cohort. DLCO decline of ≥10% shows a potential as a mortality predictor in IPF patients on pirfenidone, and should be routinely evaluated during follow-up examinations.

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