Showing posts with label Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. Show all posts

Sunday, September 20, 2015

Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis: a disease with similarities and links to cancer biology

Several clinical trials have recently targeted specific pathways implicated in the pathogenesis of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). However, IPF remains plagued by a median survival of 3 yrs and emphasises the need for further research with new insights and perspectives. The prevailing pathogenic hypotheses assume that either an inflammatory process or an independent epithelial/fibroblastic disorder may propagate the disease process. Based on knowledge developed with considerable scientific evidence, we provide our perspectives with an alternative point of view that IPF be considered as a neoproliferative disorder of the lung. Genetic alterations, response to growth and inhibitory signals, resistance to apoptosis, myofibroblast origin and behaviour, altered cellular communications, and intracellular signalling pathways are all fundamental pathogenic hallmarks of both IPF and cancer. The concept of IPF as a lethal malignant disorder of the lung might extend beyond the pathogenic link between these two diseases and disclose new pathogenic mechanisms leading to novel therapeutic options, adopted from cancer biology. Moreover, this vision might dawn the awareness of the public, political and scientific community of this devastating disease from an angle different from the current perception and provoke new ideas and studies to get a better understanding to control the otherwise relentless progressive disease.




Reference: Eur Respir J 2010; 35: 496–504
Download here: http://www.mediafire.com/view/w50h70w0hjck2ac/Idiopathic_pulmonary_fibrosis.pdf

New guideline on treatment of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis

Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis is a chronic, progressive, and ultimately fatal lung disease. After more than a decade of clinical trials yielding negative or inconsistent results, two compounds, pirfenidone and nintedanib, have finally been proven to be effective in slowing functional decline in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and both have now been approved in the USA, Europe, and Japan.

Furthermore, the previously widely used combination of prednisone, azathioprine, and N-acetylcysteine has been shown to be harmful compared with placebo for patients with the disease. Accordingly, an update of the 2011 American Thoracic Society–European Respiratory Society– Japanese Respiratory Society–Latin American Thoracic Association clinical practice guideline on idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis treatment has been published this year. In keeping with the 2011 document, for the 2015 update, all available evidence was assessed with the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) method and discussed at a multidisciplinary level. Recommendations were formulated and graded exclusively by group members with no financial or intellectual conflicts of interest. By contrast with the 2011 guidelines, the committee also included a patient representative. According to the GRADE system, recommendations are presented as either “strong” or “conditional” (the 2011 guidelines used the term “weak” rather than “conditional”). For a treatment with a conditional recommendation, it is judged that “the majority of individuals in this situation would want the suggested course of action but many would not”. The table shows a comparison of the 2011 and 2015 recommendations. The major change in the 2015 recommendations is the introduction of a conditional recommendation for the use of pirfenidone (which received a weak recommendation against its use in 2011), and of nintedanib, a multitarget tyrosine kinase inhibitor that was not included in the previous guideline. Because of the absence of a head-to-head comparison, the guideline does not provide recommendations for one treatment regimen over the other. The three-drug regimen, prednisone–azathioprine– N-acetylcysteine, received a strong recommendation against its use, whereas recommendations for N-acetylcysteine monotherapy (conditional recommendation against use) and for anti-acid treatment (conditional recommendation for use) remain unchanged. The new guideline document represents the recent substantial advances in the pharmacological treatment of idiopathic pulmonary fi brosis. A weakness of the document is the fact that decisions were made within a month of publication of key phase 3 trial data and before information provided as part of regulatory submissions had become available (data that have had important consequences in changing the US Food and Drug Administration’s opinion of forced vital capacity [FVC] as a clinically relevant effi cacy measure in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis).

Furthermore, the guideline committee factored drug cost into their decisionmaking process without doing a detailed health economic analysis This approach has resulted in the apparent incongruity of drugs, with high-quality clinical trial data being given the same conditional level of recommendation as anti-acid therapy (which has never been tested in a randomised controlled trial).4 Importantly, the guidelines emphasise several major issues that need further research: first, existing anti-fibrotic therapy slows disease decline, but neither halts nor cures idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, and thus the need for new pharmacotherapies persists; second, the effectiveness of anti-fibrotic therapy beyond the 52–72-week duration of clinical trials remains to be fully defined; third, whether or not treatment is benefi cial in more advanced disease (eg, FVC <50%) is unknown; and fourth, combination anti-fibrotic therapy might provide synergistic eff ects with larger functional benefit, although trial data showing both safety and efficacy are needed before such an approach can be considered. In summary, the updated guidelines represent the important developments that have occurred in the pharmacological treatment of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, while simultaneously drawing attention to the continued large unmet clinical need of individuals afflicted by this terrible disease.This approach has resulted in the apparent incongruity of drugs, with high-quality clinical trial data being given the same conditional level of recommendation as anti-acid therapy (which has never been tested in a randomised controlled trial). Importantly, the guidelines emphasise several major issues that need further research: first, existing anti-fibrotic therapy slows disease decline, but neither halts nor cures idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, and thus the need for new pharmacotherapies persists; second, the effectiveness of anti-fibrotic therapy beyond the 52–72-week duration of clinical trials remains to be fully defined; third, whether or not treatment is benefi cial in more advanced disease (eg, FVC <50%) is unknown; and fourth, combination anti-fibrotic therapy might provide synergistic eff ects with larger functional benefit,6 although trial data showing both safety and efficacy are needed before such an approach can be considered. In summary, the updated guidelines represent the important developments that have occurred in the pharmacological treatment of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, while simultaneously drawing attention to the continued large unmet clinical need of individuals afflicted by this terrible disease.

Reference: www.thelancet.com/respiratory Vol 3 September 2015

Download Full Article: http://www.mediafire.com/view/xxfxexs43hv479k/PIIS2213260015003227.pdf