Table 1.
Study | Comparisons | Results treated by AAT augmentation versus untreated | Evidence level |
---|---|---|---|
Seersholm et al40 | FEV1 decline in German patients treated with AAT and Danish untreated patients | FEV1 decline in treated Germans was 56 mL/year, less than the 75 mL/year in Danes (P = 0.02) | C |
Alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency registry study group41 | Nonrandomized comparison of patients receiving AAT augmentation with untreated patients | Decreased mortality (risk ratio 0.64), (P = 0.02) in patients with FEV1 35%–49% predicted decline in FEV1 was less with augmentation: 66 versus 93 mL/year, (P = 0.03) | C |
Dirksen et al43 | Randomized placebo controlled trial in 56 patients over 3 years | CT scan progression of emphysema less in treated patients, (P = 0.07); no difference in FEV1 | B |
Wencker et al44 | Retrospective comparison of decline in FEV1 before and after treatment | Decline in FEV1 34 mL/year less after therapy than the 49 mL/year before therapy (P = 0.019) | C |
Chapman et al45 | Meta-analysis of the above studies and patients on AAT treatment with matched controls from the Canadian AAT registry (total n = 1509) | Positive effect of AAT augmentation with reduction in FEV1 decline by 26% (17.9 mL/year). Effect due to subjects with FEV1 30%–65% of predicted | C |
Dirksen et al46 | Randomized weekly AAT augmentation versus placebo for 2.0–2.5 years (total n = 77) | Trend suggestive of reduction in progression of emphysema by CT densitometry (P = 0.049–0.084) | B |
Gotzsche and Johansen47 | Cochrane meta-analysis of Dirksen’s two placebo controlled randomized trials | Lung density deteriorated less in treated group (P = 0.03) | B |
Stockley et al48 | Integrated analysis of Dirksen’s two placebo controlled randomized trials | Yearly loss in lung density in treated group significantly less than placebo 1.73 g/L versus 2.74 g/L, (P = 0.006) | B |
Abbreviations: AAT, α1-antitrypsin; CT, computerized tomography; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in one second.