Elexacaftor–Tezacaftor–Ivacaftor for Cystic Fibrosis with a Single Phe508del Allele

Peter G. Middleton(The University of Sydney), Marcus Mall(German Center for Lung Research), Pavel Dřevı́nek(Charles University), Larry C. Lands(McGill University Health Centre), Edward F. McKone(University College Dublin), Deepika Polineni(University of Kansas Medical Center), Bonnie W. Ramsey(Seattle Children's Hospital), Jennifer L. Taylor‐Cousar(National Jewish Health), Elizabeth Tullis(St. Michael's Hospital), F. Vermeulen(Westmead Institute for Medical Research), Gautham Marigowda(Westmead Institute for Medical Research), Charlotte McKee(Westmead Institute for Medical Research), Samuel M. Moskowitz(Westmead Institute for Medical Research), Nitin Nair(Westmead Institute for Medical Research), J. R. K. Savage(Westmead Institute for Medical Research), C Simard(Westmead Institute for Medical Research), Simon Tian(Westmead Institute for Medical Research), David Waltz(Westmead Institute for Medical Research), Fengjuan Xuan(Westmead Institute for Medical Research), Steven M. Rowe(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Raksha Jain(Westmead Institute for Medical Research)
New England Journal of Medicine
October 31, 2019
Cited by 2,091Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: mutation and a minimal-function mutation (Phe508del-minimal function genotype), the next-generation CFTR corrector elexacaftor, in combination with tezacaftor and ivacaftor, improved Phe508del CFTR function and clinical outcomes. METHODS: ) at week 4. RESULTS: that was 13.8 points higher at 4 weeks and 14.3 points higher through 24 weeks, a rate of pulmonary exacerbations that was 63% lower, a respiratory domain score on the Cystic Fibrosis Questionnaire-Revised (range, 0 to 100, with higher scores indicating a higher patient-reported quality of life with regard to respiratory symptoms; minimum clinically important difference, 4 points) that was 20.2 points higher, and a sweat chloride concentration that was 41.8 mmol per liter lower (P<0.001 for all comparisons). Elexacaftor-tezacaftor-ivacaftor was generally safe and had an acceptable side-effect profile. Most patients had adverse events that were mild or moderate. Adverse events leading to discontinuation of the trial regimen occurred in 1% of the patients in the elexacaftor-tezacaftor-ivacaftor group. CONCLUSIONS: Elexacaftor-tezacaftor-ivacaftor was efficacious in patients with cystic fibrosis with Phe508del-minimal function genotypes, in whom previous CFTR modulator regimens were ineffective. (Funded by Vertex Pharmaceuticals; VX17-445-102 ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT03525444.).


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