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Effect of continued antifibrotic therapy after forced vital capacity decline in patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis; a real world multicenter cohort study

Authors :
Colin J. Adams
Shane Shapera
Christopher J. Ryerson
Deborah Assayag
Kerri A. Johannson
Charlene D. Fell
Julie Morisset
Hélène Manganas
Martin Kolb
Nathan Hambly
Gerard Cox
Nasreen Khalil
Veronica Marcoux
Pearce G. Wilcox
Teresa To
Mohsen Sadatsafavi
Andrew J. Halayko
Andrea Gershon
Kristopher Garlick
Jolene H. Fisher
Source :
Respiratory medicine. 191
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Longitudinal data on the impact of continued, switched or discontinued antifibrotic therapy in patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) who have disease progression is needed.We hypothesized that ongoing antifibrotic use (versus discontinuation) in the setting of forced vital capacity (FVC) decline would be associated with less future decline and lower likelihood of a composite outcome of FVC decline, lung transplant, or death.We performed a multicenter cohort study using data from the Canadian Registry for Pulmonary Fibrosis in patients with IPF with FVC decline ≥10% over 6 months on antifibrotic therapy. The association of continued, switched or discontinued therapy with (1) further change in FVC and (2) a composite of FVC decline ≥10%, transplant, or death, in the subsequent 6 months, was assessed using adjusted linear and logistic regression modelling, respectively. Generalized estimating equations accounted for repeated observations per patient.165 patients had a decline in FVC ≥10% over 6 months while receiving antifibrotic therapy. Compared to continued use, antifibrotic discontinuation after FVC decline was associated with greater additional FVC decline (-207 mL 95%CI -353 to -62, p = 0.005) and higher odds of FVC decline ≥10%, transplant, or death (odds ratio 12.2 95%CI 1.2 to 130.5, p = 0.04). There was no difference between continued versus switched antifibrotic therapy.Ongoing antifibrotic therapy in the setting of FVC decline is associated with less future FVC decline and lower odds of FVC decline ≥10%, transplant, or death in a real-world cohort of IPF.

Details

ISSN :
15323064
Volume :
191
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Respiratory medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....33bf71c60c8db16fcccb8c60bbf76217