AI Article Synopsis

  • Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis acute exacerbation (IPF-AE) is a severe condition characterized by sudden lung damage, and guidelines suggest using high-dose steroids for treatment despite lack of proof for their effectiveness.
  • A study of hospitalized IPF patients revealed that those previously receiving immunosuppression had a significantly lower survival rate during IPF-AE compared to those who had not been treated with immunosuppressive drugs.
  • The findings indicate that avoiding steroids and immunosuppression may improve survival outcomes for IPF patients during acute exacerbations, with nearly half of the patients in the study surviving after following a specific management protocol.

Article Abstract

Background: Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis acute exacerbation (IPF-AE) constitutes IPF's most devastating event, representing the unexpected superimposition of diffuse alveolar damage of unknown etiology. Guidelines recommend high-dose steroids treatment despite unproven benefit. We hypothesized that previous immunosuppression and the administration of high-dose steroids adversely affect IPF-AE outcome.

Methods: We studied all consecutive patients hospitalized in our department for IPF deterioration from 2007 to June 2013. Our protocol consisted of immediate cessation of immunosuppression (if any), best supportive care, broad-spectrum antimicrobials and thorough evaluation to detect reversible causes of deterioration. Patients were followed-up for survival; post-discharge none received immunosuppression.

Results: Twenty-four out of 85 admissions (28%) fulfilled IPF-AE criteria. IPF-AE were analyzed both as unique events and as unique patients. As unique events 50% survived; 3 out of 12 (25%) in the group previously treated with immunosuppression whereas nine out of 12 (75%) in the group not receiving immunosuppression (p = 0.041). As unique patients 35.3% survived; 3 out of 6 (50%) in the never treated group whereas three out of 11 (27.3%) in the group receiving immunosuppression (p = 0.685). The history of immunosuppression significantly and adversely influenced survival (p = 0.035). Survival was greater in the never treated group compared to the immunosuppressed patients (p = 0.022). Post-discharge, our IPF-AE survivors had an 83% 1-year survival.

Conclusions: By applying the above mentioned protocol half of our patients survived. The history of immunosuppression before IPF-AE adversely influences survival. Avoiding steroids in IPF patients may favor the natural history of the disease even at the moment of its most devastating event.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4678631PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12890-015-0146-4DOI Listing

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