4.5 Article

Nintedanib in idiopathic and secondary pleuroparenchymal fibroelastosis

Journal

ORPHANET JOURNAL OF RARE DISEASES
Volume 16, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13023-021-02043-5

Keywords

Pulmonary fibrosis; Pleuroparenchymal fibroelastosis; Pulmonary function tests; CT volumetry; Nintedanib; Progression; Prognosis

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The study suggests that nintedanib treatment may be associated with a slower decline in lung function in patients with PPFE, paving the way for prospective, controlled studies.
Background Pleuroparenchymal fibroelastosis (PPFE) has a variable disease course with dismal prognosis in the majority of patients with no validated drug therapy. This study is to evaluate the effect of nintedanib in patients with idiopathic and secondary PPFE. Patients admitted to a tertiary care center (2010-2019) were included into this retrospective analysis if they had a multidisciplinary diagnosis of PPFE, had been followed-up for 3 months or more, and had lung function tests and chest CTs available for review. Changes in pulmonary function tests were assessed using non-parametric tests and linear mixed effect model. Lung volumes were measured with lobar segmentation using chest CT. Results Out of 21 patients with PPFE, nine had received nintedanib, six had received another treatment and another six patients were monitored without drug therapy. Annual FVC (% of predicted) relative decline was - 13.6 +/- 13.4%/year before nintedanib and - 1.6 +/- 6.02%/year during nintedanib treatment (p = 0.014), whereas no significant change in FVC% relative decline was found in patients receiving another treatment (- 13.25 +/- 34 before vs - 16.61 +/- 36.2%/year during treatment; p = 0.343). Using linear mixed effect model, the slope in FVC was - 0.97%/month (95% CI: - 1.42; - 0.52) before treatment and - 0.50%/month (95% CI: - 0.88; 0.13) on nintedanib, with a difference between groups of + 0.47%/month (95% CI: 0.16; 0.78), p = 0.004. The decline in the upper lung volumes measured by CT was - 233 mL/year +/- 387 mL/year before nintedanib and - 149 mL/year +/- 173 mL/year on nintedanib (p = 0.327). Nintedanib tolerability was unremarkable. Conclusion In patients with PPFE, nintedanib treatment might be associated with slower decline in lung function, paving the way for prospective, controlled studies.

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