'Keep them well': New cystic fibrosis medications move closer to a cure - Action News
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'Keep them well': New cystic fibrosis medications move closer to a cure

Results of a new drug trial suggest the next generation of medications, known as CFTR modulators, show potential to correct the genetic defect that causes cystic fibrosis and halt the disease's destructive progression.

Genetic disorder worsens with time but intervening earlier could spare children from damaged lungs

On her Facebook page, Chelsea Gagnon documented how she took an inhaled medication to keep her airways open after starting on a new combination treatment in July. (Chelsea Gagnon)

With every breath she takes, Chelsea Gagnon can feelhow the lung-scarring damage of cystic fibrosis adds up over time.

The 28-year-old Montrealer saysa bad cold or flu that might keep an otherwise healthy person home from work for a couple days can for her set off a cycle of debilitating lung infections that require potent antibiotics and multiple hospital visits.

"About six times a year, I need IV medication because the oral antibiotics don't work," saidGagnon,who was diagnosed at birth with the genetic disorder that often leaves her lungs clogged with thick mucus and vulnerable to bacterial infections.

"So then you go for the stronger stuff. They would tire me out, and then it would be kind of a cycle of me getting sick and being tired and getting the IV and being even more tired so that I never fully recover."

That wasn't the case when she was a kid. She says the respiratory infections back then were less frequent and less severe.

Chelsea Gagnon has always been physically active to keep her cardiovascular system and muscles as strong as possible. (Sukhdev Benning)

And that's exactly how doctors and researchers would like to keep it for cystic fibrosis patients, particularly the young ones who have yet to suffer the kind of permanent damage that couldleave sections of their lungs unusable and ultimately cut years off their life.

Results of a new drug trial published in The Lancet Respiratory Medicine journalsuggestthe next generation of medications, known as CFTR modulators, show potential to actually correct the genetic defect that causes cystic fibrosis and halt the disease's destructive progression.

Intervene early

Cystic fibrosis is caused by having two copies of amutated geneforthe cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulatorprotein (CFTR), which is active in cells lining certainorgans, including the lungs. In people with the mutation, the protein is defective, and salt and water aren't able to flow into cells properly. That's one reason why a patient's mucus gets so thick.

Currently,cysticfibrosis is managed mainly with antibiotics andmucolytics, whichhelp patients to clear the mucus from their lungs before theybecome infected.

But CFTR modulators are designed to targetthesource of the problem rather than simply control the symptoms.

By intervening earlier with the new medications, researchers are hopeful children with the disease will be able to avoid the kind of accumulation of scarring and other damage experienced by people like Gagnon.

Dr. FelixRatjen, head of respiratory medicine at Toronto's Sick Kids Hospital, led therandomized children's trialthat featured a combination of two CFTR modulators lumacaftor and ivacaftor versus a placebo.

The cocktail, sold asOrkambi,is intended for those with the most common form ofcystic fibrosis and who don't produce enoughCFTRprotein. Doctors saythat's about 38 per cent of Canadian patients who could be candidates for the drug combination, alongside other treatments.

By targeting an underlying genetic defect in cystic fibrosis, new treatments change the course of the disease, said Dr. Felix Ratjen. (Sick Kids)

Ivacaftor, sold as Kalydeco, helps the protein made by the CFTR gene to function better, and lumacaftoris aCFTR corrector compound that helps bring more of the protein to the cell surface, where it can be activated.

The trial, which was funded by the drug combination'smanufacturer, Vertex Pharmaceuticals from whom Ratjen received grants included results from 102 children from Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver, the U.S., Europe and Australia who received at least one dose of the cocktail, and 101 others in the placebo group.

'In the not too distant future, we will have drugs that will allow individuals living with cystic fibrosis to have close to, if not normal, levels of CFTR function, which would be effectively a cure.'-JohnWallenburg,CysticFibrosis Canada

Ratjen said the trial showed the drug combination helps reduce the amount of lung-clogging mucus inchildren aged six to 11.

The impact of CFTR modulators means pediatricians can shift their goals, said Dr. Melinda Solomon, director of the cystic fibrosis clinic at Sick Kids, and one of the co-investigators for the research.

"Our goal is to keep them well," Solomon said. "Treat the underlying disease before it creates deterioration and symptoms."

Pharmaceutical companies are developing more CFTR modulators targeting various mutations, said Dr. Carla Colombo of theCysticFibrosis Centre at the University of Milan, who wrote a commentary published with the study.

Colombo said safety is a key concern for young patients, which is why doctors need to watch closely for liver damage in children taking the medications.

Prevent damage

ForCysticFibrosis Canada, the immediate focus is to get the new drugs to patients as soon as possible, said John Wallenburg, chief scientific officer for the non-profit,charitable organization based in Toronto. He said that will require bringing governments and manufacturers together to negotiate an affordable price.

"At some point in the not too distant future, we will have drugs that will allow individuals living withcysticfibrosis to have close to, if not normal, levels of CFTR function, which would be effectively acure," he said.

Health Canada has approvedKalydecoandOrkambifor sale, butaccess remains a challenge.

The Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health (CADTH), theindependent organization set up by the provinces, territories and federal governmentto evaluate whether to fund certain drugs and procedures,recommended Orkambinot be reimbursedby government health plans for eligible individuals aged 12 and up.

In itscost-benefit analysis, CADTH's expert panel called forfurther evidenceto support the efficacy of the drug combination, which theyestimated costs $682 per day or $248,988 a year.Patients could potentially have totake the drug for the rest of their life

Wallenburg acknowledges that CFTRmodulators won't be an option for all cystic fibrosis patients, and that they don't address other related conditions such as diabetes and liver disease.

"Long term, our goal is also to ensure that patients who have already accumulated a certain amount of damage, if you will ... are not left behind," he said.

When Gagnon tried to take lumacaftorandivacaftorduring previous clinical trials, it didn't work out because of a conflict with one of her othermedications. In July,she started taking the combination again and says, "So far, so good."

She said the potential of CFTR modulators to help children is "amazing."

"It would be so great if [for] kids today, there was no time for the infections to happen," she said. "You're just preventing all the damage."