Long-term computed tomographic changes in cystic fibrosis patients treated with ivacaftor
- Guillaume Chassagnon1,2,
- Dominique Hubert2,3,
- Isabelle Fajac2,4,
- Pierre-Régis Burgel2,3 and
- Marie-Pierre Revel1,2⇑
- on behalf of the investigators
- 1Radiology Dept, Cochin Hospital, AP-HP, Paris, France
- 2Université Paris Descartes, Sorbonne Paris Cité, Paris, France
- 3Pulmonary Dept and Adult CF Centre, Cochin Hospital, AP-HP, Paris, France
- 4Physiology Dept, Cochin Hospital, AP-HP, Paris, France
- Marie-Pierre Revel, Radiology Dept, Cochin Hospital, AP-HP, 27 Rue du Faubourg Saint-Jacques, 75014 Paris, France. E-mail: marie-pierre.revel{at}aphp.fr
Abstract
In CF patients treated with ivacaftor, improvement of CT abnormalities remains stable on long-term follow-up http://ow.ly/Zxu2B
To the Editor:
Cystic fibrosis (CF) patients with gating mutations in the gene coding for the CF transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) protein have been the first to benefit from CFTR-targeted therapies since the approval of ivacaftor in 2012 by the Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency. Ivacaftor is a potentiator that increases chloride transport through the defective CFTR protein [1, 2]. In phase III clinical trials, ivacaftor significantly improved lung function and clinical status in patients with a G551D mutation aged ≥6 years [3, 4]. In the two studies conducted in adults and children, the forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) showed a 10.4% predicted and 12.5% pred point increase from baseline after 24 weeks of treatment, as compared to a 0.1 and 0.2% pred point decrease in the control group. Clinical efficacy of ivacaftor was also shown in patients with other gating mutations of the CFTR gene, with a 7.5% pred point increase in FEV1 after 8 weeks of treatment [5]. In all these phase III studies, the primary endpoint was the change in FEV1 and secondary endpoints were other clinical and functional parameters, such as change in weight, respiratory exacerbation rate, health status, and sweat-chloride concentration. Imaging was never listed as an endpoint. Data on computed tomography (CT) changes upon ivacaftor treatment are scarce [6–8] and long-term changes remain unknown. The aim of this study was to assess short- and long-term CT changes in adult CF patients treated with ivacaftor.
The study was approved by the Paris Ile de France I ethics committee. We conducted a multicentre retrospective study in eight French CF centres. Adult CF patients with at least one gating mutation and being treated with ivacaftor were included if they had a pre-therapeutic chest CT and at least one follow-up chest CT. Chest CT examinations were deemed eligible if they consisted in whole lung volumetric inspiratory CT acquisitions and if spirometric measurements were available within 1 month of CT examination. Chest CT examinations were performed on multidetector CT scanners, with acquisition parameters specific to each centre. CT images were reconstructed with thicknesses ranging from 0.6 to 4 mm and were visualised using the same pulmonary window settings (window width 1500, window level –450). A modified CF-CT scoring system was used, not including quantification of air trapping, since expiratory CT acquisitions were not available [9]. CT scoring was performed by one radiologist who had received 1-week intensive training in a reference centre (Lung Analysis, Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands), in order to reach good scoring repeatability. Readings were performed in random order and the reader was blinded to patient identification, time of CT examination, results of previous CT readings and clinical data. 25 randomly selected CT scans were scored twice, with a 4-week interval, to verify intraobserver repeatability. Spirometry was performed in accordance with American Toracic Society/European Respiratory Society consensus guidelines [10]. FEV1 values expressed in percentage of predicted values were retrieved from the patient files.
Decision to perform CT as part of routine follow-up was left to the physician in charge of the patient, thus the frequency of CT examinations was not standardised. Examinations performed 3–18 months after the start of ivacaftor and those performed after 18 months of treatment were considered as short- and long-term follow-up CT examinations, respectively. FEV1 and CT scores at baseline (T0), short (T1) and long-term (T2) follow-up were compared using Wilcoxon test. Correlations between CF-CT score and FEV1, and between changes in CF-CT score and changes in FEV1 between two successive CT scans (inter-scan changes) were assessed using Spearman's correlation coefficients. Intraobserver repeatability was assessed using intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). All analyses were performed with statistical software package “R” (version 3.2.1, R Foundation, Vienna, Austria).
22 adult patients (17 males and five females, mean±sd 36±11 years) treated with ivacaftor were included. A total of 52 CT examinations were available (22 at baseline and 30 during follow-up), and were scored with high intraobserver repeatability (ICC 0.88–0.96). Eight patients had both short- and long-term follow-up CT examinations. Results are summarised in table 1. At short-term follow-up, patients experienced a statistically significant FEV1 increase. Over the same period, CF-CT score, as well as two of its components, peribronchial thickening and mucus plugging, had significantly decreased, indicating improvement in CT scan abnormalities. At long-term follow-up and as compared to baseline, FEV1, CF-CT score, peribronchial thickening score and mucus plugging score had also significantly improved. In contrast, there was a significant increase of the bronchiectasis score (figure 1). Comparison between short- and long-term follow-up did not show any significant difference in FEV1 or CT-scores. There was a good correlation between CF-CT score and FEV1 (r= –0.73, p<0.001) and a moderate correlation between interscan changes of FEV1 and CF-CT scores (r= –0.51, p<0.001).
To the best of our knowledge, this study is the first to report long-term CT changes in CF patients treated with ivacaftor. It is also the largest study reporting CT changes associated with ivacaftor and the first to evaluate its effect by using the CF-CT score on the whole lung following volumetric chest CT examination. Our results show a significant improvement of CF-CT scores on both short- and long-term follow-up. This improvement is mainly related to a significant decrease of the peribronchial thickening and mucus plugging scores, which are known to represent reversible CT changes during exacerbations in CF patients [11]. Sheik et al. [8] reported similar improvement of peribronchial thickening, mucus plugging and Brody scores at 1 year follow-up in 10 patients treated with ivacaftor. However, they also found a significant decrease of the bronchiectasis score whereas we observed a significant increase of this score on long-term follow-up. This could be due to better visualisation after decrease of bronchial thickening and mucus plugging. Bronchiectasis results in irreversible changes with the destruction of elastic tissues [12]. The decrease in the bronchiectasis score reported in the study by Sheik et al. [8] might be due to under-sampling, since scoring was based on only four CT images and not on the whole lung CT acquisition. Interestingly, we found most of the CT lesion improvement occurred during the first year of treatment and remained stable on long-term follow-up, a pattern for improvement that was also reported for lung function [13]. The good correlations we report between CT scores and FEV1 suggest CT is a valuable method for monitoring changes on ivacaftor treatment. Despite being only moderate, the correlation between interscan changes of FEV1 and CF-CT score in our study was higher than that previously reported between changes of FEV1/forced vital capacity and visual score (r= –0.51 versus –0.39) [14].
Our study has several limitations. First, due to the retrospective design, CT examinations were performed at different time points and only eight patients had both short- and long-term follow-up CT examinations and there was no standardisation of the CT parameters among the centres. However, only three of the 52 CT scans had slice thicknesses >1.25 mm. The remaining consisted in high-resolution protocols. Second, we did not evaluate interobserver agreement for visual scoring, since only one radiologist could receive intensive training in a reference centre. The limited number of available trained scorers is a well-known limitation of visual CT scores [15]. Lastly, evaluating treatment efficacy with CT raises concerns about radiation dose, even though recent improvements of the CT technology allow for dramatic dose reduction.
In conclusion, our study shows that CT is a valuable method for monitoring CF patients treated with ivacaftor. Decrease of mucus plugging and peribronchial thickening occurred during the first year and remained stable on long-term follow-up, whereas bronchiectasis score slightly increased, possibly because of improved visualisation, after mucus plugging clearance.
Acknowledgements
The investigators are: Isabelle Danner-Boucher (Pulmonary Dept, G&R Laënnec Hospital, Nantes, France), Benoît Desrues (Pulmonary Dept, Pontchaillou Hospital, Rennes, France), Stéphane Dominique (Pulmonary Dept, Charles Nicolle Hospital, Rouen, France), Isabelle Durieu (Dept of Internal Medicine, Hospices Civils de Lyon et Université Claude Bernard Lyon1, Pierre-Bénite, France), Dominique Grenet (Pulmonary Dept, Foch Hospital, Suresnes, France), Anne-Cécile Henriet (Pulmonary Dept, Bretonneau Hospital, Tours, France), Anne Prevotat (Pulmonary Dept, Calmette Hospital, Lille, France).
Footnotes
Conflict of interest: Disclosures can be found alongside the online version of this article at erj.ersjournals.com
- Received November 17, 2015.
- Accepted March 12, 2016.
- Copyright ©ERS 2016