In evidence-based medicine, N-of-1 trials are increasingly attractive for rare and heterogeneous conditions. A recent French study illustrates this convincingly in the field of cystic fibrosis. A highly effective triple therapy (ETI) is currently available in Europe, which will eventually help the 85 % of Belgian patients carrying at least one copy of the F508del mutation. Most other 2.000 or so putative mutations of this gene are poorly characterised and very rare or private. To predict the efficacy of ETI at the individual level in currently ineligible patients, sophisticated tools are advocated, but they are expensive, not widely available, often partially standardised and there still remains a «grey area» concerning their reliability in this context. With-out using them, the French study suggests that more than half of these patients show clinically meaningful responses to a 4-6 weeks trial of ETI. What makes this pragmatic, cost-effective, non-invasive and simplified approach possible (type 2 N-of-1 trials) is the dramatic and rapid efficacy of a life-saving treatment without alternative and the fact that it can be assessed using simple and robust clinical and paraclinical outcomes. Here, we describe one such trial and discuss the value and limitations of this approach.
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