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Longitudinalstudie bei iv-Substitution von a1-PI
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Longitudinal Follow-up of Patients With
a1-Protease Inhibitor Deficiency Before
and During Therapy With IV a1-Protease
Inhibitor
Marion Wencker, MD; Bernward Fuhrmann, MD; Norbert Banik, MD, PhD;
Nikolaus Konietzko, MD, PhD, for the Wissenschaftliche Arbeitsgemeinschaft zur
Therapie von Lungenerkrankungen
(CHEST 2001; 119:737-744)
Background: The efficacy of IV augmentation therapy with human a1-protease inhibitor (a1-Pi) in
patients with severe a1-Pi deficiency is still under debate.
Study objectives: To evaluate the progression of emphysema in patients with a1-Pi deficiency
before and during a period in which they received treatment with a1-Pi.
Design: Multicenter, retrospective cohort study.
Setting: Outpatient clinics of 26 university clinics and pulmonary hospitals.
Patients: Ninety-six patients with severe a1-Pi deficiency receiving weekly augmentation therapy
with human a1-Pi, 60 mg/kg of body weight, had a minimum of two lung function measurements
before and two lung function measurements after augmentation therapy was started. Lung
function data were followed up for a minimum of 12 months both before and during treatment
(mean, 47.5 months and 50.2 months, respectively).
Measurements and results: Patients were grouped according to the severity of their lung function
impairment. The change in FEV1 was compared during nontreatment and treatment periods. In
the whole group, the decline in FEV1 was significantly lower during the treatment period (49.2
mL/yr vs 34.2 mL/yr, p 5 0.019). In patients with FEV1 > 65%, IV a1-Pi treatment reduced the
decline in FEV1 by 73.6 mL/yr (p 5 0.045). Seven individuals had a rapid decline of FEV1 before
treatment, and the loss in FEV1 could be reduced from 256 mL/yr to 53 mL/yr (p 5 0.001).
Conclusion: Some patients with severe a1-Pi deficiency and well-preserved lung function show a
rapid decline in FEV1. These patients profit from weekly IV therapy with human a1-Pi and have
less rapid decline if treated. Early detection of patients at risk and early start of augmentation
therapy may prevent accelerated loss of lung tissue.
Editorial:
CHEST / 119 / 3 / MARCH, 2001 677
a1-Antitrypsin Deficiency
Therapy
Pieces of the Puzzle
The article by Marion Wencker et al in this issue
of CHEST (see page 737) fits another piece
within the yet-unfinished jigsaw puzzle of the pathophysiology
and treatment of a1-antitrypsin (AAT)
deficiency. The molecular and cellular mechanisms
leading to this deficiency are among the best understood
of the genetic conditions leading to an increased
risk for organ dysfunction. The single aminoacid
substitution seen in the most common form of
AAT deficiency leads to an altered conformation of
this protein as it is translated in the hepatocyte.1 This
provokes insertion of the reactive loop of one Z
mutation AAT molecule into the A-sheet of another
Z mutation AAT molecule, resulting in polymerization
and accumulation of AAT within the hepatocyte
cytoplasm.2 This, in turn, leads to the characteristic
periodic acid-Schiff-positive, diastase-resistant hepatocyte
granules and a low serum level of this
important serine proteinase inhibitor. Lowered levels
of AAT bathing the lungs leads to the possibility
of connective tissue degradation by phagocyte proteinases,
normally inhibited by physiologic concentrations
of AAT.3 The insights gained from studying
AAT deficiency have provided the basis for our
growing comprehension of the mechanisms leading
to COPD in general.
Despite this understanding of the basic pathophysiologic
mechanisms, it has been difficult to design
studies testing the treatment of this disorder. While
the prevalence of AAT deficiency in US and European
communities is relatively high (as many as
100,000 individuals on each continent), only approximately
6% of affected individuals have been identified
to date. Thus, large randomized trials become
difficult to enroll. IV augmentation therapy using
pooled human plasma AAT (Prolastin; Bayer Biologics;
Research Triangle Park, NC) was approved in
the United States and several European countries
approximately 10 years ago. This approval was based
on "biochemical efficacy": the replacement of a
deficient serum protein. The presence of a wellaccepted
therapeutic option makes the implementation
of placebo-controlled trials of clinical efficacy
problematic.
The article by Wencker at al attempts to evaluate
the clinical efficacy of pooled human plasma AAT
therapy using a multicenter, retrospective trial design,
evaluating the same patients both before and
after initiation of therapy. Previous studies from this
group and from the United States National Institutes
676 Editorials
of Health a1-Antitrypsin Deficiency Registry had
detected a decrease in the rate of decline of FEV1
and improved mortality in treated individuals whose
lung function was moderately impaired. The current
study of 96 patients showed a statistically significant
lower rate of decline of FEV1 in the whole group
during augmentation therapy compared with the
pretreatment period. The mean difference in rate of
decline was 14.9 mL/yr. Interestingly, there was not
a significant difference in the pretreatment-posttreatment
rate of decline (23.7 mL/yr) in 25 patients
with FEV1 , 30% predicted. The difference in
pretreatment-posttreatment rate of decline was
larger (11.6 mL/yr) but not statistically significant in
60 patients with FEV1 30 to 65% predicted. The
pretreatment-posttreatment rate of decline was
greatest (73.6 mL/yr) and statistically significant in
11 patients with FEV1 . 65% predicted. Seven
patients with a rapid decline of FEV1 during the
pretreatment period within the last group had a
pretreatment-posttreatment augmentation therapy
difference in FEV1 rate of decline of 203 mL/yr; four
slow decliners showed a difference of 2 26.4 mL/yr.
One study4 has suggested that the rapid decline in
lung function seen in AAT-deficient individuals does
not follow a straight line or smooth curve but, rather,
proceeds in a stepwise fashion with each drop associated
with a lung infection or other inflammatory
process. Using the pooled information of available
studies1,5,6 leads to a potential profile of the appropriate
AAT-deficient patient to treat with augmentation
therapy: one with moderately severe obstructive
lung disease, or one with well-preserved lung
function but early evidence of a rapid decline. The
utility of treating AAT-deficient patients with advanced
COPD remains unproven; the results of the
current study in 25 patients with initial FEV1 values
, 30% predicted suggest that augmentation therapy
is not worthwhile. However, this is a retrospective
study, and the results may therefore be biased.
As recently as 1 year ago, pooled human plasma
AAT was in short supply in the United States, with
individuals with newly diagnosed conditions precluded
from initiating therapy; those already receiving
therapy were forced to reduce their doses to
amounts likely to be ineffective. As these patients
changed location, physician, or insurance, they
would find themselves unable to receive the drug.
These problems have been largely eliminated since
November 1, 1999, by an important and unique drug
distribution method: direct patient allocation (Bayer
Direct). Under this system, the drug is distributed
directly to each patient and the allocation follows the
patient regardless of changes in insurance or location.
Another clinical problem of growing magnitude, and
which bears importantly on developing screening programs
for a1-antitrypsin deficiency, is the concern
regarding potential genetic discrimination in hiring and
insurance. While the gene frequency of AAT-deficient
alleles is approximately 21 million individuals in the
United States, this condition is still considered quite
rare by the practicing physician. Just as large-scale
detection efforts were being developed, an appreciation
of genetic discrimination issues led to a tabling of
these efforts. Until legislative and regulatory proscriptions
against such discrimination are in place, the
efforts to increase detection of this genetic condition
will be thwarted. Regardless, it is anticipated that even
the current, relatively meager detection efforts will lead
to a worldwide shortage of augmentation therapy in the
near future.
In the late 1980s, we congratulated ourselves for
having "solved" the riddle of AAT deficiency and its
treatment in a mere 25 years. Now, in this new
millennium, we see that our celebrations may have
been a bit premature.
Robert A. Sandhaus, MD, PhD, FCCP
Denver, CO
Correspondence to: Robert A. Sandhaus, MD, PhD, FCCP,
Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, UCHSC,
Mail drop C272, 4200 E. Ninth Ave, Denver, CO 80262
References
1 Perlmutter DH. Misfolded proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum.
Lab Invest 1999; 79:623-638
2 Lomas DA. Loop-sheet polymerization: the mechanism of
a1-antitrypsin deficiency. Respir Med 2000; 94:S3-S6
3 Janoff A. Proteases and lung injury: a state-of-the-art minireview.
Chest 1983; 83:54S-58S
4 Blank CA, Brantly M. Clinical features and molecular characteristics
of a1-antitrypsin deficiency. Ann Allergy 1994;
72:105-120
5 Survival and FEV1 decline in individuals with severe deficiency
of a1-antitrypsin: the a1-Antitrypsin Deficiency Registry
Study Group. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 1998;
158:49-59
6 Seersolm N, Wencker M, Banik N, et al. Does a1-antitrypsin
augmentation therapy slow the annual decline in FEV1 in
patients with severe hereditary a1-antitrypsin deficiency? Eur
Respir J 1997; 10:2260-2263
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