Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis: recent trials and current drug therapy
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis: recent trials and current drug therapy
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a chronic fibrotic lung disease with increasing incidence; the median survival is only 35 months and as yet no therapy has been proven to prolong survival. Recent unexpected randomised controlled trial (RCT) results and the conflicting evaluations of drug efficacy by regulatory agencies when considering the approval of pirfenidone have emphasised that we remain in the first stages of both our understanding of disease-relevant therapeutic targets and in our ability to investigate these putative targets with well-designed RCT. Three phase III trials are, however, anticipated to report results in 2014 and there is cautious optimism that we may be entering an era of mechanism-based anti-fibrotic therapies proven by large RCT to modify disease progression. We must now address how to practically translate these therapies safely and with maximal efficacy from a homogenous RCT population to the 'real-life' heterogeneous population of patients with IPF. The role of a formal multi-disciplinary team meeting in a specialist centre with expertise in IPF is key to this. New methodological and ethical research challenges will arise as we enter an era of potential combination therapy; standardized, robust RCT design will be central to meeting these challenges if we are to enable ongoing progress in our aim of increasing both the length and quality of life of patients with IPF.
353-363
Jones, Mark G.
a6fd492e-058e-4e84-a486-34c6035429c1
Fletcher, Sophie
71599088-9df7-4d4a-8570-aef773ead0fe
Richeldi, Luca
47177d9c-731a-49a1-9cc6-4ac8f6bbbf26
2013
Jones, Mark G.
a6fd492e-058e-4e84-a486-34c6035429c1
Fletcher, Sophie
71599088-9df7-4d4a-8570-aef773ead0fe
Richeldi, Luca
47177d9c-731a-49a1-9cc6-4ac8f6bbbf26
Jones, Mark G., Fletcher, Sophie and Richeldi, Luca
(2013)
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis: recent trials and current drug therapy.
Respiration, 86 (5), .
(doi:10.1159/000356958).
(PMID:24296982)
Abstract
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a chronic fibrotic lung disease with increasing incidence; the median survival is only 35 months and as yet no therapy has been proven to prolong survival. Recent unexpected randomised controlled trial (RCT) results and the conflicting evaluations of drug efficacy by regulatory agencies when considering the approval of pirfenidone have emphasised that we remain in the first stages of both our understanding of disease-relevant therapeutic targets and in our ability to investigate these putative targets with well-designed RCT. Three phase III trials are, however, anticipated to report results in 2014 and there is cautious optimism that we may be entering an era of mechanism-based anti-fibrotic therapies proven by large RCT to modify disease progression. We must now address how to practically translate these therapies safely and with maximal efficacy from a homogenous RCT population to the 'real-life' heterogeneous population of patients with IPF. The role of a formal multi-disciplinary team meeting in a specialist centre with expertise in IPF is key to this. New methodological and ethical research challenges will arise as we enter an era of potential combination therapy; standardized, robust RCT design will be central to meeting these challenges if we are to enable ongoing progress in our aim of increasing both the length and quality of life of patients with IPF.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 26 November 2013
Published date: 2013
Organisations:
Clinical & Experimental Sciences
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Local EPrints ID: 369098
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/369098
ISSN: 0025-7931
PURE UUID: 15ded8b3-ec2b-42f5-a594-de585883ab47
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Date deposited: 24 Sep 2014 12:45
Last modified: 21 Sep 2024 02:15
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Author:
Sophie Fletcher
Author:
Luca Richeldi
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