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Cystic Fibrosis Foundation Lays Out New
Treatment Guidelines
The guidelines, a result of a two-year review of original
research and systematic review literature from 1983
to 2006, were published in the second issue for November
of the American Thoracic Society's American Journal
of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.
CF is a complex genetic disease affecting the lungs
and other organs, and is characterized by an unusually
thick, sticky mucus that renders CF victims virtually
incapable of fending off infections and pathogens.
CF is always fatal, but thanks to advances in treatment
in the last 60 years, life expectancy has increased
from just a few years to 36 years. Lung disease accounts
for 85 percent of the mortality among CF patients.
"Physicians treating patients with CF are faced
with a growing number of treatment options" wrote
lead author of the guidelines, Patrick A. Flume, M.D. "We
are hopeful that clinicians will find these recommendations
to be useful in their care of patients with CF."
The pulmonary guidelines committee assessed the clinical
efficacy and safety of the use of aerosolized antibiotics,
recombinant human DNase (dornase alfa), hypertonic
saline inhalation, anti-inflammatory agents, macrolide
antibiotics, the use of bronchodilators and N-acetylcysteine.
They analyzed the clinical results with regard to the
number of studies, strength of the study designs and
the quality and consistency of results to make their
final recommendations. Because of the general dearth
of studies on treatments in children under the age
of six, the committee restricted their recommendations
to CF patients six years of age and older.
The treatments with the strongest, most consistent
results yielding an "A"-grade positive recommendation
were:
* Inhaled tobramycin, an antibiotic, to suppress
chronic Pseudomonas aeruginosa infections in CF patients
with moderate to severe disease to improve lung function
and reduce exacerbations; and
* Dornase alfa, which degrades the free DNA that accumulates in CF mucus, thereby
loosening the mucus, promoting airway clearance, improving lung function and
reducing exacerbations.
"B" grade recommendations by the committee
are for:
* Inhaled tobramycin, to suppress chronic Pseudomonas
aeruginosa infections in CF patients with mild disease
or who are asymptomatic, to reduce exacerbations;
* Dornase alfa, for CF patients with mild disease or who are asymptomatic,
to improve lung function and reduce exacerbations;
* Hypertonic saline, which hydrates surface liquid in patients with CF, thereby
improving lung function and decreasing exacerbations; and
* £]2-adrenergic receptor agonists, which relax smooth muscles and dilate
bronchial passages, which improve lung-function in CF patients, and were well-tolerated.
The guidelines recommend against:
* Systemic corticosteroids in children because of "an
excess number of adverse events," including abnormalities
in glucose metabolism, cataracts, and percentage of
patients "colonized" with Pseudomonas (this
recommendation excludes patients who have concomitant
asthma);
* Inhaled corticosteroids, because there was no clinical benefit (this recommendation
excludes patients who have concomitant asthma); and
* Prophylactic anti-Staphylococcal antibiotics because of the lack of clinical
efficacy and an apparent increase in P. aeruginosa infections with their use.
* All other treatments lacked sufficient evidence to recommend for or against
their use.
The article includes recommendations for physicians
to help determine which therapies to use, and the order
in which they should be introduced. "There is
a challenge for the clinician to decide what therapy
to start first, or when to add another therapy," explained
Dr. Flume. "We are putting together an educational
program to assist the community in implementation of
the guidelines and hope to launch a web-based program
in January."
Still, much work remains to be done. "We were
able to support our recommendations based on the quality
of the evidence," said Dr. Flume. "But also
we could see clearly where we were lacking data. This
will allow us to lay the foundation for how those studies
should be performed." |