AI Article Synopsis

  • Intravenous alpha-1 antitrypsin (AAT) augmentation therapy is crucial for treating lung disease related to alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency (AATD), but it's not available in the UK despite its global use.
  • A study compared US patients receiving this therapy with a control group of AATD patients who had never received it, focusing on quality of life (QOL) and survival outcomes using statistical analysis.
  • Results showed that while the therapy group had slightly better QOL scores and better median survival rates, the differences were not significant enough to definitively prove the therapy's effectiveness, suggesting the need for alternative measures to assess disease progression.

Article Abstract

Background: Intravenous alpha-1 antitrypsin (AAT) augmentation therapy is the only specific treatment available for alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency (AATD)-related lung disease. It is widely used worldwide but remains unavailable to patients with AATD in the United Kingdom. While randomized trials of augmentation therapy have demonstrated biochemical efficacy and lung tissue preservation using computed tomography (CT) densitometry, these studies were not adequately powered to demonstrate effectiveness in well-accepted clinical endpoints such as quality of life (QOL) or survival. We used large, prospectively followed AATD patient populations in the United States and United Kingdom to explore these important clinical endpoints.

Methods: Our inclusion criterion was adults with severe AATD and associated lung disease. The treatment group was U.S. AATD patients receiving augmentation therapy for lung disease. The control group was augmentation therapy naïve AATD patients. Multivariable regression and survival analyses were used to assess QOL and mortality outcomes respectively.

Results: Mean annual deterioration of the St George's Respiratory Questionnaire total score was 1.43 points greater/year in the control group compared to those receiving augmentation therapy (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.47 to 2.39, =0.003). At 7 years, median survival was 82.7% (95% CI 75.3 to 90.7) for the control group versus 87.8% (95% CI 82.8 to 93.2) in the augmentation group, =0.66. There was significant heterogeneity between cohorts.

Conclusions: A comparison of 2 highly characterized AATD cohorts was not able to reliably determine if AAT augmentation therapy improves QOL or mortality in patients with severe AATD-related lung disease. Alternative surrogate biomarkers of disease progression, such as CT lung density, may be a more pragmatic option.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10392875PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.15326/jcopdf.2022.0339DOI Listing

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