Top Banner
Significant Strides in the Treatment of Cystic Fibrosis Rebekah F. Brown, MD Center Director, Cystic Fibrosis Center at Vanderbilt
60

Significant Strides in the Treatment of Cystic Fibrosis

Feb 09, 2016

Download

Documents

keren

Significant Strides in the Treatment of Cystic Fibrosis. Rebekah F. Brown, MD Center Director, Cystic Fibrosis Center at Vanderbilt. Objectives. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Significant Strides in the Treatment of Cystic Fibrosis

Rebekah F. Brown, MDCenter Director, Cystic Fibrosis

Center at Vanderbilt

Page 2: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Objectives

1. At the end of this presentation, participants will have an understanding of the pathophysiology of cystic fibrosis and targets of treatment for children and adults with cystic fibrosis.

2. Provide an overview of the advancements in treatment of children and adults with cystic fibrosis.

Page 3: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

What is Cystic Fibrosis?• Autosomal recessive • Most common life shortening inherited

disease in Caucasians– 1 in 2500-3000 births

• CF Transmembrane Regulator (Cl- channel) defect– Affects lungs, GI tract, liver, pancreas, sweat

glands, vas deferens

Davies J et al. 2007Rowe S et al. 2005

Page 4: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Historical Perspective• “The child will soon die whose forehead tastes

salty when kissed”—17th centuryGerman Children’s Songs and Games from Switzerland

• 1938 -- CF of the pancreas – Dr. Dorothy Andersen (pathologist)

• 1943 “mucoviscidosis”– Dr. Sydney Farber (pathologist)

Page 5: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Historical Perspective

• 1948 heat wave in New York– Dr. Paul di Sant’Agnese – Hyponatremic dehydration – CF – Sweat with excessive salt content (1953)sweat

chloride as diagnostic test for CF

Joseph Levy Memorial Lecture & Ettore Rossi Medal Lecture at European CF Conference in Birmingham in 2004 by Dr. Jim Littlewood

Page 6: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Historical Perspective

• 1980s Improved Survival– Acid resistant pancreatic enzymes– Fat soluble vitamin replacement– Nasal potential difference—Knowles 1981

• Late 1980s– CF defect noted on Chromosome 7

Page 7: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Historical Perspective

• 1989– CFTR (CF transmembrane conductance regulator)

gene – Delta F508 mutation—most common

• > 1700 mutations www.genet.sickkids.on.ca/cftr

STILL NO CURE…YET

Page 8: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

CFTR Models of Disease in CF

Airway lumen—Normal function

CFTR

Cl-

ENaC

Na+

NaCl

NaCl NaCl

NaClH2O

H2O

Simplified Diagram

Na+Inhibits

intracellular

Page 9: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Without Cystic Fibrosis

cilia

Airway Lumen

Airway surface fluid

Cilia have room to beat back and forth--clear the airway of particles, bacteria, etc.

Plenty of fluid to allow inflammatory cells to find and kill bacteria, viruses, etc.

Mucus

Page 10: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

CFTR Models of Disease in CF

Airway lumen—CF

CFTR

Cl-

ENaC

Na+H2O

InhibitsH2O

Cl-

Simplified Diagram

intracellular

Page 11: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Cystic Fibrosis

cilia

Airway lumen—patient with CF

Airway surface fluid

Cilia matted down in thick mucus and cannot rid airway of foreign particles.

Necrosis of neutrophils releases DNA and actin thick, tenacious mucus

Mucus

Page 12: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

What does this mean for a patient?

Page 13: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

CF Clinical Disease• Sinopulmonary

– Chronic Sinusitis and Nasal polyposis– Bronchiectasis, Reduced lung function– Respiratory Failure

• GI– Pancreatic insufficiency– Failure to Thrive/Malnutrition– Meconium ileus/Distal Intestinal Obstruction Syndrome– Liver Disease– CF Related Diabetes

Page 14: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

CF with Mosaicism

Page 15: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

CF with Pneumothorax, bronchiectasis, mucous plugging

Page 16: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Right Lower Lobe—non-CF patient

Page 17: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Right Lower Lobe in Cystic Fibrosis

Page 18: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Right Upper Lobe in Cystic Fibrosis

Page 19: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

CF Related Liver Disease

Page 20: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Treatment of Pulmonary Disease• Daily, maintenance airway clearance• Early and aggressive treatment of

exacerbations• Treatment of Pseudomonas colonization• Elimination of smoke exposure

Page 21: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Treatment of GI Disease• Pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy• Fat soluble vitamin supplementation

– A, D, E, and K• Early and aggressive treatment of constipation

and malabsorption• Nutritional supplementation

Page 22: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Cystic Fibrosis Patient Registry 2011

Page 23: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Other Manifestations of CF

• Absence of the vas deferens– Men diagnosed at infertility clinics

• Sweat– Risk for hyponatremic, hypochloremic dehydration

Page 24: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Treatment of Cystic Fibrosis

Page 25: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Airway Clearance Medications

Page 26: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Airway Clearance“Be Happy”

• B bronchodilator• H hypertonic saline• A airway clearance• P pulmozyme• I inhaled corticosteroid• I inhaled antibiotic

Page 27: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Hypertonic Saline (7% Normal Saline)

• Increase 1 hour rates of mucus clearance• Increase 24 hour rates of mucus clearance

compared to baseline• Improved FEV1 (mean 4-6%)• Bronchospasm—bronchodilator pretreatment• Infants: no improvement compared to

isotonic saline in one studyElkins MR, et al. 2006

Donaldson SH, et al. 2006Rosenfeld M, et al. 2012

Page 28: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Dornase Alfa (Pulmozyme, recombinant human DNAse1,

rhDNAse)• Cleaves DNA in mucus

– Possible action in cleaving DNA in biofilm of bacteria improving sensitivity to antibiotics

• Reduced risk of exacerbations by 28%Shak S, et al. 1995

Jones AP, et al. 2010

Wagener JS, et al. 2012

Kaplan JB, et al. 2012

Sawicki GS, et al. 2012

Page 29: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

• Lung function improvement sustained at least 2 years

• Chronic use associated with 15% reduction in odds of subsequent year mortality

Dornase Alfa (Pulmozyme, recombinant human DNAse1,

rhDNAse)

Shak S, et al. 1995

Jones AP, et al. 2010

Wagener JS, et al. 2012

Kaplan JB, et al. 2012

Sawicki GS, et al. 2012

Page 30: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Inhaled Antibiotics

• Usually inhaled tobramycin• Alternate month on/month off to reduce

antibiotic resistance• Only available in nebulized form—time

consuming• Also use aztreonam, vancomycin,

colistimethate

Page 31: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Airway Clearance Devices

• Vibrate secretions off airway wall– Patient performs huff cough to mobilize secretions

out of airway• Manual Chest Percussion• Vest physiotherapy• Patient effort dependent devices: variable or

fixed positive expiratory pressure

Page 32: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

DAY IN THE LIFE OF A CF PATIENT

Page 33: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Be Happy• Bronchodilator (5–15 min)• Wait 15 min• Hypertonic saline (15-20 min)• Airway Clearance (30 min)• Dornase alfa (5 min)• Inhaled Corticosteroids (5-15 min)• Inhaled Antibiotic (15-20 min) Total 1 ½

hours

Page 34: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

CF Patient’s Day When Well• Airway clearance = 100 minutes x 2 • Pancreatic enzymes with every meal, snack, etc.• Vitamins, acid blockers, ursodiol (liver disease)• Eat, eat, eat to maintain good nutrition• Go to school +/- work +/- extracurricular

activities• Have a life!

Page 35: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Inflammation in Cystic Fibrosis

Page 36: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Inflammation in Cystic Fibrosis• Begins in early infancy

– Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from infants with increased neutrophils, proinflammatory mediators in airways and neutrophil elastase

– Inflammation excessive to bacterial burden• Neutrophil dominated phenotype of

inflammation• Infection with specific bacteria

Khan TZ, et al. 1995Balough K, et al. 1995Konstan MW, et al. 1997Armstrong DS, et al. 1997Noah TL, et al. 1997Muhlebach MS, et al. 1999Sly PD, et al. 2009Stick SM, et al. 2009

Page 37: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Anti-Inflammatory Medications

• Ideal medication– Start early– Prevent disease progression– Minimal side effects– Minimal effects on bacterial burden or

colonization

Page 38: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Corticosteroids• Systemic

– Improved lung function– Significant side effects—impaired glucose

tolerance, growth impairment, cataracts• Continued even after steroids discontinued• Discontinuation of steroids lead to quicker rate of FEV1

declineno longer significantly different from placebo group

– Other risks: osteopenia/osteoporosis Auerbach HS, et al. 1985Matthews WJ, et al. 1980

Rosenstein BJ, et al. 1991Lai HC, et al. 2000

Page 39: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Corticosteroids• Inhaled

– Inhibit NFĸB activation, decreased LPS-induced release of IL-6 and IL-8

– No benefit demonstrated when given to CF patients

• Insufficient evidence to determine if beneficial or harmful

– Discontinuation CF patients in UK—no significant harm during short observation

– Used if asthma + CFEscotte S, et al. 2003Escotte S, et al. 2002

Ren CL, et al. 2002Balfour-Lynn IM, et al. 2006

Page 40: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Ibuprofen• High dose ibuprofen based on

pharmacokinetics for peak plasma concentrations 50-100 micrograms/ml– Doses typically 20-30 mg/kg

• Less decline in lung function, less weight loss, fewer hospitalizations, less CXR findings

• 5-13 y/o—annual rate of decline of FEV1 reduced by 88% Konstan MW, et al. 1995

Lands LC, et al. 2007Konstan MW, et al. 2007

Oermann CM, et al. 1999Konstan MW, et al. 2008

Page 41: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Ibuprofen• Less than 10% of CF patients on ibuprofen• Why?

– Pharmacokinetics not locally available– Side effects/safety

• GI hemorrhage requiring hospitalization higher• Renal failure

• Recommendation to consider in CF patients with mild disease Konstan MW, et al. 1995

Lands LC, et al. 2007Konstan MW, et al. 2007

Oermann CM, et al. 1999Konstan MW, et al. 2008

Page 42: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Azithromycin• Decreases rate of pulmonary exacerbations• Improves lung function• Question of use in absence of Pseudomonas

• Anti-inflammatory properties felt to be secondary to both antimicrobial and immunomodulatory effects Jaffe A, et al. 1998

Wolter J, et al. 2002Equi A, et al. 2002

Saiman L, et al. 2003Hoffmann N, et al. 2007

Clement A, et al. 2006Southern KW, et al. 2012

Page 43: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

New Categories of Therapies in CF

Page 44: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Human GeneticsNucleus: mRNA transcription and splicing

ER: translation and folding

Golgi: protein maturation

Vesicles: protein transport

Cell Surface Membrane

Page 45: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Human Genetics—Types of Mutations

Normal gene: DURING THE LECTURE PEOPLE SLEPT UNTIL THE END

Missense mutation: DURING THE LECTURE PEOPLE SWEPT UNTIL THE END

Nonsense (stop codon) mutation: DURING THE LECTURE PEOPX

Deletion: DURING THE LECTURE SLEPT UNTIL THE END

Insertion: DURING THE LECTURE PEOPLE SLEPT QUIETLY UNTIL THE END

Frameshift: DURING THE LECTURE PEOPLE SEPTU NTILTH EEN D

Page 46: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Classes of CFTR Defects

I—absenceII—premature

degradationIII—disordered

regulationIV—defective Cl

conductance or channel gating

V—reduced numberVI—accelerated

turnover

VIIV

III

VI

II

ER

Golgi Proteosome

Adapted from Rowe S et al. NEJM. 2005; 352.

Page 47: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Two Broad Categories of CFTR Mutations

• Mutations affect1. Quantity

– Little to no protein (Classes I and II)– Some protein (Classes V and VI)

2. Function– Gating defect (Class III)—channel does not open– Conductance defect (Class IV)—”narrow channel”

opens but not as much Cl transported

Page 48: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Mutation Class Specific Medications: The Future of CF

Treatment• Treat the underlying defect• How much CFTR function is needed?

– Carriers mostly asymptomatic with 50% function– <10%--absence of vas deferens– <5%--Other CF manifestations– Increase CFTR function to 20-25%therapeutic

effects? Zhang L, et al. 2009Pettit RS, 2012

Hanrahan JW, et al. 2012

Page 49: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Potentiators• Potentiators activate the CFTR channel that is

already present at the plasma membrane• FDA approved 2/2012—ivacaftor (VX-770)

– Greater than 6 y/o with G551D mutation (gating defect)

– Improvement in pulmonary function, weight gain, sweat chloride, decreased pulmonary exacerbation rate

Ramsey BW, et al. 2011McKone EF, et al. 2011

Pettit RS, 2012Hanrahan JW, et al. 2012

Page 50: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Correctors• Correct the trafficking – moves the CFTR

channel out to the cell surface– Help the most common mutation, F508del

• Example: VX-809 Studies ongoing in combination with ivacaftor/VX-770

• Phase 2 study– Decreased sweat chloride– No significant change in spirometry (lack of

power) Clancy JP, et al. 2012Van Goor F, et al. 2011

Boyle MP, et al. 2011Pettit RS, 2012

Hanrahan JW, et al. 2012

Page 51: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

Medications that Read Through mRNA Premature Stop Codons

• Applications also in other diseases such as Duchenne’s muscular dystrophy

• Initially found gentamicin, but side effects• Ataluren (PTC-126) studies ongoing

– CFTR function (NPD) improved– Trends toward increased pulmonary function– Trends toward increased weight

Pettit R, 2012Wilschanski M, et al. 2011

Kerern E, et al. 2008Hirawat S, et al. 2007

Page 52: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

References• 1. Armstrong DS, Grimwood K, Carlin JB, et al. Lower airway inflammation in infants and young

children with cystic fibrosis. American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine 1997;156:1197-204.• 2. Auerbach HS, Williams M, Kirkpatrick JA, Colten HR. Alternate-day prednisone reduces

morbidity and improves pulmonary function in cystic fibrosis. Lancet 1985;2:686-8.• 3. Balfour-Lynn IM, Lees B, Hall P, et al. Multicenter randomized controlled trial of withdrawal of

inhaled corticosteroids in cystic fibrosis. American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine 2006;173:1356-62.

• 4. Balough K, McCubbin M, Weinberger M, Smits W, Ahrens R, Fick R. The relationship between infection and inflammation in the early stages of lung disease from cystic fibrosis. Pediatric pulmonology 1995;20:63-70.

• 5. Chmiel JF, Konstan MW. Inflammation and anti-inflammatory therapies for cystic fibrosis. Clinics in chest medicine 2007;28:331-46.

• 6. Clancy JP, Jain M. Personalized medicine in cystic fibrosis: dawning of a new era. American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine 2012;186:593-7.

Page 53: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

• 7. Clancy JP, Rowe SM, Accurso FJ, et al. Results of a phase IIa study of VX-809, an investigational CFTR corrector compound, in subjects with cystic fibrosis homozygous for the F508del-CFTR mutation. Thorax 2012;67:12-8.

• 8. Clement A, Tamalet A, Leroux E, Ravilly S, Fauroux B, Jais JP. Long term effects of azithromycin in patients with cystic fibrosis: A double blind, placebo controlled trial. Thorax 2006;61:895-902.

• 9. Cory TJ, Birket SE, Murphy BS, Mattingly C, Breslow-Deckman JM, Feola DJ. Azithromycin increases in vitro fibronectin production through interactions between macrophages and fibroblasts stimulated with Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy 2012.

• 10. Davies JC, Alton EW, Bush A. Cystic fibrosis. Bmj 2007;335:1255-9.• 11. Donaldson SH, Bennett WD, Zeman KL, Knowles MR, Tarran R, Boucher RC. Mucus clearance

and lung function in cystic fibrosis with hypertonic saline. The New England journal of medicine 2006;354:241-50.

• 12. Elkins MR, Bye PT. Inhaled hypertonic saline as a therapy for cystic fibrosis. Current opinion in pulmonary medicine 2006;12:445-52.

• 13. Elkins MR, Robinson M, Rose BR, et al. A controlled trial of long-term inhaled hypertonic saline in patients with cystic fibrosis. The New England journal of medicine 2006;354:229-40.

References

Page 54: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

• 14. Equi A, Balfour-Lynn IM, Bush A, Rosenthal M. Long term azithromycin in children with cystic fibrosis: a randomised, placebo-controlled crossover trial. Lancet 2002;360:978-84.

• 15. Escotte S, Danel C, Gaillard D, et al. Fluticasone propionate inhibits lipopolysaccharide-induced proinflammatory response in human cystic fibrosis airway grafts. The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics 2002;302:1151-7.

• 16. Escotte S, Tabary O, Dusser D, Majer-Teboul C, Puchelle E, Jacquot J. Fluticasone reduces IL-6 and IL-8 production of cystic fibrosis bronchial epithelial cells via IKK-beta kinase pathway. The European respiratory journal : official journal of the European Society for Clinical Respiratory Physiology 2003;21:574-81.

• 17. Hanrahan JW, Sampson HM, Thomas DY. Novel pharmacological strategies to treat cystic fibrosis. Trends in pharmacological sciences 2013;34:119-25.

• 18. Hoffmann N, Lee B, Hentzer M, et al. Azithromycin blocks quorum sensing and alginate polymer formation and increases the sensitivity to serum and stationary-growth-phase killing of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and attenuates chronic P. aeruginosa lung infection in Cftr(-/-) mice. Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy 2007;51:3677-87.

References

Page 55: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

• 19. Jaffe A, Francis J, Rosenthal M, Bush A. Long-term azithromycin may improve lung function in children with cystic fibrosis. Lancet 1998;351:420.

• 20. Jones AP, Wallis C. Dornase alfa for cystic fibrosis. Cochrane database of systematic reviews 2010:CD001127.

• 21. Kaplan JB, LoVetri K, Cardona ST, et al. Recombinant human DNase I decreases biofilm and increases antimicrobial susceptibility in staphylococci. The Journal of antibiotics 2012;65:73-7.

• 22. Khan TZ, Wagener JS, Bost T, Martinez J, Accurso FJ, Riches DW. Early pulmonary inflammation in infants with cystic fibrosis. American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine 1995;151:1075-82.

• 23. Konstan MW. Ibuprofen therapy for cystic fibrosis lung disease: revisited. Current opinion in pulmonary medicine 2008;14:567-73.

• 24. Konstan MW, Berger M. Current understanding of the inflammatory process in cystic fibrosis: onset and etiology. Pediatric pulmonology 1997;24:137-42; discussion 59-61.

• 25. Konstan MW, Byard PJ, Hoppel CL, Davis PB. Effect of high-dose ibuprofen in patients with cystic fibrosis. The New England journal of medicine 1995;332:848-54.

• 26. Konstan MW, Schluchter MD, Xue W, Davis PB. Clinical use of Ibuprofen is associated with slower FEV1 decline in children with cystic fibrosis. American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine 2007;176:1084-9.

References

Page 56: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

• 27. Lai HC, FitzSimmons SC, Allen DB, et al. Risk of persistent growth impairment after alternate-day prednisone treatment in children with cystic fibrosis. The New England journal of medicine 2000;342:851-9.

• 28. Lands LC, Milner R, Cantin AM, Manson D, Corey M. High-dose ibuprofen in cystic fibrosis: Canadian safety and effectiveness trial. The Journal of pediatrics 2007;151:249-54.

• 29. Lands LC, Stanojevic S. Oral non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug therapy for cystic fibrosis. Cochrane database of systematic reviews 2007:CD001505.

• 30. Matthews WJ, Jr., Williams M, Oliphint B, Geha R, Colten HR. Hypogammaglobulinemia in patients with cystic fibrosis. The New England journal of medicine 1980;302:245-9.

• 31. Muhlebach MS, Stewart PW, Leigh MW, Noah TL. Quantitation of inflammatory responses to bacteria in young cystic fibrosis and control patients. American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine 1999;160:186-91.

• 32. Nichols DP, Konstan MW, Chmiel JF. Anti-inflammatory therapies for cystic fibrosis-related lung disease. Clinical reviews in allergy & immunology 2008;35:135-53.

References

Page 57: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

• 33. Noah TL, Black HR, Cheng PW, Wood RE, Leigh MW. Nasal and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid cytokines in early cystic fibrosis. The Journal of infectious diseases 1997;175:638-47.

• 34. Oermann CM, Sockrider MM, Konstan MW. The use of anti-inflammatory medications in cystic fibrosis: trends and physician attitudes. Chest 1999;115:1053-8.

• 35. Pettit RS. Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator-modifying medications: the future of cystic fibrosis treatment. The Annals of pharmacotherapy 2012;46:1065-75.

• 36. Ramsey BW, Davies J, McElvaney NG, et al. A CFTR potentiator in patients with cystic fibrosis and the G551D mutation. The New England journal of medicine 2011;365:1663-72.

• 37. Ren CL. Use of modulators of airways inflammation in patients with CF. Clinical reviews in allergy & immunology 2002;23:29-39.

• 38. Rosenfeld M, Ratjen F, Brumback L, et al. Inhaled hypertonic saline in infants and children younger than 6 years with cystic fibrosis: the ISIS randomized controlled trial. JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association 2012;307:2269-77.

• 39. Rosenstein BJ, Eigen H. Risks of alternate-day prednisone in patients with cystic fibrosis. Pediatrics 1991;87:245-6.

References

Page 58: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

• 40. Rowe SM, Miller S, Sorscher EJ. Cystic fibrosis. The New England journal of medicine 2005;352:1992-2001.

• 41. Saiman L, Marshall BC, Mayer-Hamblett N, et al. Azithromycin in patients with cystic fibrosis chronically infected with Pseudomonas aeruginosa: a randomized controlled trial. JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association 2003;290:1749-56.

• 42. Sampson HM, Lam H, Chen PC, et al. Compounds that correct F508del-CFTR trafficking can also correct other protein trafficking diseases: an in vitro study using cell lines. Orphanet journal of rare diseases 2013;8:11.

• 43. Sawicki GS, Ayyagari R, Zhang J, et al. A pulmonary exacerbation risk score among cystic fibrosis patients not receiving recommended care. Pediatric pulmonology 2012.

• 44. Shak S. [rhDNase: scientific background, cloning and production]. Archives de pediatrie : organe officiel de la Societe francaise de pediatrie 1995;2:666-9.

• 45. Shak S. Aerosolized recombinant human DNase I for the treatment of cystic fibrosis. Chest 1995;107:65S-70S.

• 46. Sly PD, Brennan S, Gangell C, et al. Lung disease at diagnosis in infants with cystic fibrosis detected by newborn screening. American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine 2009;180:146-52.

References

Page 59: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

• 47. Southern KW, Barker PM, Solis-Moya A, Patel L. Macrolide antibiotics for cystic fibrosis. Cochrane database of systematic reviews 2012;11:CD002203.

• 48. Stick SM, Brennan S, Murray C, et al. Bronchiectasis in infants and preschool children diagnosed with cystic fibrosis after newborn screening. The Journal of pediatrics 2009;155:623-8 e1.

• 49. Van Goor F, Hadida S, Grootenhuis PD, et al. Correction of the F508del-CFTR protein processing defect in vitro by the investigational drug VX-809. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2011;108:18843-8.

• 50. Wagener JS, Kupfer O. Dornase alfa (Pulmozyme). Current opinion in pulmonary medicine 2012;18:609-14.

• 51. Wilschanski M, Kerem E. New drugs for cystic fibrosis. Expert opinion on investigational drugs 2011;20:1285-92.

• 52. Wilschanski M, Miller LL, Shoseyov D, et al. Chronic ataluren (PTC124) treatment of nonsense mutation cystic fibrosis. The European respiratory journal : official journal of the European Society for Clinical Respiratory Physiology 2011;38:59-69.

• 53. Wolter J, Seeney S, Bell S, Bowler S, Masel P, McCormack J. Effect of long term treatment with azithromycin on disease parameters in cystic fibrosis: a randomised trial. Thorax 2002;57:212-6.

References

Page 60: Significant Strides in the  Treatment  of Cystic Fibrosis

• 54. Wolter JM, Seeney SL, McCormack JG. Macrolides in cystic fibrosis: is there a role? American journal of respiratory medicine : drugs, devices, and other interventions 2002;1:235-41.

• 55. Kerern E, Hirawat S, Armoni S, et al. Effectiveness of PTC124 treatment of cystic fibrosis caused by nonsense mutations: a prospective phase II trial. Lancet 2008; 372:719-27.

• 56. Boyle MP, et al. Abstract. Pediatr Pulmonol 2011; suppl 34: 287.• 57. McKone EF, et al. Abstract. Pediatr Pulmonol 201; suppl 34: 284.• 58. Hirawat S, Welch EM, Elfring GL, et al. Safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of PTC124, a

nonaminoglycoside nonsense mutation suppressor, following single- and multiple-dose administration to healthy male and female adult volunteers. J Clin Pharmacol 2007; 47: 430-44.

References