Abstract
The approvals of nintedanib and pirfenidone changed the treatment paradigm in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), and increased our understanding of the underlying disease mechanisms. Nonetheless, many challenges and unmet needs remain in the management of patients with IPF and other progressive fibrosing interstitial lung diseases.
This review describes how the nintedanib clinical programme has helped to address some of these challenges. Data from this programme have informed changes to the IPF diagnostic guidelines, the timing of treatment initiation, and the assessment of disease progression. The use of nintedanib to treat patients with advanced lung function impairment, concomitant emphysema, patients awaiting lung transplantation and patients with IPF and lung cancer is discussed. The long-term use of nintedanib and an up-to-date summary of nintedanib in clinical practice are discussed. Directions for future research, namely emerging therapeutic options, precision medicine and other progressive fibrosing interstitial lung diseases, are described.
Further developments in these areas should continue to improve patient outcomes.
Keywords: nintedanib, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, literature review, challenges
Introduction
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a chronic, progressive interstitial lung disease (ILD) of unknown cause in which patients experience worsening lung function resulting from progressive fibrosis. IPF is associated with high rates of morbidity and mortality [1]. Two pharmacological therapies (nintedanib and pirfenidone) have been shown to slow decline in lung function in patients with IPF [1–5]. The United States Food and Drug Administration and European Medicines Agency approvals of nintedanib and pirfenidone changed the treatment paradigm in IPF and increased understanding of the underlying disease mechanisms [5]. However, these approvals raised new questions in the management of ILD, and prior unmet needs remain to be addressed. Such needs can be observed in the following areas: diagnosis; timing of treatment initiation; assessment of treatment response and disease progression; treatment of special patient populations; long-term treatment; and management of other forms of progressive fibrosing ILD (Fig. 1). This review will discuss these challenges in the context of data from the nintedanib clinical programme (Phase II, III and IV clinical trials) and from routine clinical practice in real-world settings (observational cohorts including registries).
Diagnosis
In the 2011 ATS/ERS/JRS/ALAT guidelines for IPF diagnosis and treatment, the diagnosis of IPF required exclusion of other potential causes of pulmonary fibrosis, and identification of a usual interstitial pneumonia (UIP) pattern by high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT). If a UIP pattern was not clearly identified (“possible” or “inconsistent with UIP”) by HRCT, confirmation of diagnosis via surgical lung biopsy (SLB) was recommended [14]. SLB is associated with an elevated risk of acute exacerbation, pneumothorax and mortality, and may therefore be inappropriate for some patients [15–18].
Reported rates of SLB usage in clinical practice vary. Of patients (N = 417) in the Australian IPF registry diagnosed with IPF, 15% underwent SLB, but 16.5% had radiological features inconsistent with UIP and did not undergo SLB to confirm their diagnosis [19]. In a study of US claims data for patients over 65 years of age with a diagnosis code for IPF, 2518 patients had claims for diagnostic tests for IPF, of which 2.3% had claims for SLB [20]. SLB was used in 26.5% of patients with IPF in the National IPF Registry in Spain, and in 34.1% of patients in the INSIGHTS-IPF registry in Germany [21, 22]. Data from a Europe-wide registry showed that SLB was used in 32% of patients in 2009, but only in 8% of patients in 2016, a decrease attributed to increased use of transbronchial cryobiopsy (cTBB) [23].
An analysis of computed tomography scans and lung biopsies from multiple centres and trials examined the HRCT category of “possible UIP”, defined in the 2011 guidelines, and divided it into “probable UIP” and “indeterminate UIP” (Table 1). In a cohort analysis of pulmonary fibrosis, patients with “probable UIP” by HRCT were significantly more likely to have “probable” or “definite UIP” by SLB than those with “indeterminate UIP” by HRCT [24]. This suggests that patients with “probable” and “indeterminate UIP” should not be grouped together [24]. Furthermore, a post-hoc analysis of the INPULSIS trials found that patients with a clinical diagnosis of IPF who had not undergone SLB, but who had traction bronchiectasis without honeycombing by HRCT (similar to patients with “probable UIP” categorized above), had a similar disease course and response to nintedanib as those with honeycombing by HRCT or UIP confirmed by SLB [25]. Altogether, these data suggest that there exists a group of patients within the radiological “possible UIP” group, recommended for SLB according to the 2011 guidelines, whose SLB is likely to confirm a UIP pattern and thus a diagnosis of IPF, and who experience similar disease course and response to treatment as patients with confirmed diagnoses of IPF.
Table 1.
Study author, reference | Patient subgroup | HRCT results | SLB results | Diagnosis by 2011 guidelines [14] | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cohort study involving 201 patients with pulmonary fibrosis who underwent lung biopsy within 1 year of chest CT scan | |||||
Chung [24] | Probable UIP* | Reticulation, little or no honeycombing | Definite*/probable* UIP 82% | IPF | Probable UIP* by HRCT was more likely to have UIP confirmed by SLB than indeterminate UIP* by HRCT |
Indeterminate*18% | Probable IPF | ||||
Indeterminate for UIP* | Indeterminate | Definite*/probable* UIP 54% | IPF | ||
Indeterminate*46% | Probable IPF | ||||
Post-hoc analysis of pooled data from the INPULSIS trials on 1061 patients with honeycombing and/or diagnosis of UIP by SLB | |||||
Raghu [25] | Honeycombing or SLB | Honeycombing | Not specified | IPF | Disease progression & response to nintedanib similar between groups |
Not specified | UIP | ||||
No honeycombing or SLB | Features of possible UIP and traction bronchiectasis, no honeycombing | None available | SLB required |
*Definite UIP: peripheral and basilar predominant pulmonary fibrosis characterized by reticulation, honeycombing, and absence of findings to suggest another specific diagnosis; probable UIP: peripheral and basilar predominant pulmonary fibrosis with reticulation, little/no honeycombing but with otherwise typical features of UIP; indeterminate UIP: pulmonary fibrosis with imaging findings not sufficient to reach a definite, probable, or inconsistent with UIP diagnosis [24]
CT Computed tomography, HRCT High-resolution computed tomography, IPF Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, SLB Surgical lung biopsy, UIP Usual interstitial pneumonia
These studies, and others, led to the definition of a “probable UIP” category in the Fleischner Society White Paper and in the updated ATS/ERS/JRS/ALAT diagnosis guidelines, both published in 2018. The 2018 guidelines include a conditional recommendation for SLB in patients with “probable UIP;” the Fleischner Society White Paper discusses that SLB may be unnecessary in these patients, depending on clinical context [26–28].
The 2018 ATS/ERS/JRS/ALAT guidelines note that, for patients with substantial physiological impairment or comorbidities, SLB may have an unfavourable benefit/risk ratio [27]. cTBB is potentially associated with less morbidity and mortality than SLB, and may be more appropriate than SLB for some patients in experienced centres [26, 27, 29, 30]. A real-world study in patients (N = 109) with ILD found no instances of mortality or acute exacerbation within 90 days following cTBB, and that 73.4% of the histological samples obtained had clear diagnostic patterns [31]. A multicentre study of patients (N = 65) with ILD in Australia who each underwent both cTBB and SLB found that the histopathology was consistent in 70.8% of cases. Multidisciplinary diagnosis using samples obtained via cTBB or SLB agreed in 76.9% of cases [32, 33]. However, a smaller study (N = 21) suggested that, although 81% of cTBB samples had diagnostic patterns, concordance between patterns in cTBB and SLB samples may be low [34]. All three studies noted that multidisciplinary discussions were necessary to obtain diagnoses, and that histology was only part of the evidence that contributed to IPF diagnosis [31, 34]. The lack of a standardized procedure for cTBB and the paucity of evidence from large prospective trials means that SLB remains the recommended procedure for most patients [26, 27].
In addition to imaging and histological tests, other procedures can assist in the diagnosis of IPF. Analysis of the composition of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid can help in the diagnostic work-up of suspected IPF, specifically to exclude alternative diagnoses. Serological testing, particularly for antinuclear antibodies, rheumatoid factor, myositis panel and anticyclic citrullinated peptide levels can specifically help in the differential diagnoses of ILDs associated with connective tissue disorders [26, 27].
When to initiate treatment
The 2015 ATS/ERS/JRS/ALAT IPF treatment guidelines contain conditional recommendations for nintedanib and pirfenidone, but make no suggestions regarding timing of treatment initiation [35]. Real-world data suggest that many patients are not treated with approved IPF therapies immediately after diagnosis, despite the insidious, progressive nature of IPF. In a 2016 European patient chart survey, 53.6% of patients with IPF (N = 1783) were not treated with nintedanib or pirfenidone [36]. A retrospective review of Finnish (n = 158) and Swedish (n = 174) patients with IPF found that, from 2014 to 2016, 45 (29.6%) Finnish and 111 (69.4%) Swedish patients were prescribed nintedanib or pirfenidone [37]. Both studies suggested that patients with higher forced vital capacity (FVC) were less likely to receive antifibrotic treatment [36, 37].
In a physician survey, approximately 50% of responders cited reasons such as “stable” or “asymptomatic” disease, or “good” lung function, for waiting and observing patients before prescribing antifibrotic therapy, and 23% thought that the adverse effects of treatment outweighed the benefits in patients with preserved lung function [38]. Despite this, one observational study of patients in the UK receiving nintedanib found that nintedanib discontinuation rates were lowest in patients with higher FVC (≥ 80%) [39].
Clinical data regarding the efficacy of nintedanib in patients with preserved FVC have been published. Subgroup analyses of the INPULSIS trials have suggested that the treatment effect of nintedanib is consistent across subgroups of disease severity, defined by FVC (> 70 or ≤ 70% pred) and diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide (DLCO) (> 40 or ≤ 40% pred) at baseline [40, 41]. Furthermore, data show that the annual rate of lung function decline is already pronounced in patients with more preserved lung function and is similar between subgroups of patients with FVC > 90% or FVC ≤ 90% at baseline who received placebo in the INPULSIS trials (224.6 and 223.6 mL/year, respectively) [42]. In the recent INMARK trial, patients with preserved FVC at baseline (mean 97.5%) receiving nintedanib had a FVC change of +5.9 mL over 12 weeks, whereas those receiving placebo had a change of −70.2 mL (P = 0.0008) over 12 weeks [43]. This aligned with FVC changes observed over 12 weeks in patients with less preserved FVC at baseline (mean 79.6%) in the INPULSIS trials (Fig. 2) [2]. Taken together, these data suggest that the rate of decline in FVC in patients with IPF is not dependent on lung function impairment at baseline and is clinically significant in patients with only limited functional impairment.
The INMARK trial featured a 12-week randomized, placebo-controlled period followed by a 40-week period in which all patients received open-label nintedanib, allowing for the assessment of a 12-week delay in treatment initiation in patients with IPF [12]. Nintedanib significantly reduced lung function decline in the initial 12-week period, and decline in FVC over the 40-week period was similar to that observed in the nintedanib arm of the INPULSIS trials. While the difference in FVC decline after 52 weeks was not significant between groups, the 12-week delay in treatment did not appear to be fully compensated for over the 52-week trial period. The proportions of patients with an absolute FVC decline of ≥ 10% or death over 52 weeks were 25% and 30% in the nintedanib and placebo groups, respectively [43].
An analysis of data from clinical practice in Seoul, South Korea indicated that low FVC was a risk factor for acute exacerbations [44]. Post-hoc analyses of the INPULSIS trials, and of the STEP-IPF trial of sildenafil in patients with IPF, indicated that patients with lower FVC are at greater risk of acute exacerbations than those with preserved lung function [40, 45, 46]. In two such analyses, nintedanib was associated with a lower risk of acute exacerbations compared with placebo [45, 47].
Collectively, these data suggest that there is no significant difference in the rate of lung function decline between patients with less impaired lung function and those with more impaired lung function, and that the treatment benefit of nintedanib is consistent irrespective of lung function impairment at baseline. While the 2015 ATS/ERS/JRS/ALAT IPF treatment guidelines contain no recommendations regarding timing of nintedanib or pirfenidone initiation, several other guidelines for IPF do [35]. German guidelines state that antifibrotic therapy should be recommended to symptomatic patients at time of diagnosis [48]. A Swiss position paper suggests proposing treatment to patients with IPF when diagnosis is made, especially for patients who have experienced disease progression [49]. French guidelines recommend treating patients with IPF when the patient is diagnosed [50].
Assessing disease progression and treatment response
FVC and DLCO are the pulmonary function tests (PFTs) most frequently used to assess disease progression [51]. A post-hoc analysis of the INPULSIS trials found that FVC decline over 24 weeks was not predictive of further FVC decline in the following 24 weeks of treatment, reflecting the heterogeneous course of IPF [52]. Similarly, a ≥ 10% decline in FVC after 52 weeks in the INPULSIS trials was not predictive of further FVC decline in the first year of the INPULSIS-ON extension study, although it was associated with higher mortality than an FVC decline of < 10% [52]. Concordant data were reported for the CAPACITY and ASCEND trials of pirfenidone [53]. Most patients who continued treatment with either drug did not have a decline in FVC of ≥ 10%, irrespective of prior FVC declines, supporting the continuation of IPF therapy in patients who experience declines in FVC [52, 53]. These results suggest that changes in FVC do not necessarily reflect response to antifibrotic treatment in individual patients.
Change in disease extent quantified by automated interpretation of HRCT is being evaluated as a method of assessing disease progression, but is not established in clinical practice [51, 54]. A quantitative lung fibrosis (QLF) score, derived from HRCT images, has been developed in patients with systemic sclerosis-associated ILD (SSc-ILD) [55]. Change in QLF score correlates with decline in FVC and DLCO in patients with IPF [56]. Data from a prospective trial suggest that nintedanib treatment is associated with a numerically smaller degree of fibrotic change in lungs, by QLF score [7].
Automated interpretation of lung sounds is another potential measure of disease progression in IPF. “Velcro” crackles at baseline, measured by digital auscultation, are associated with the presence of UIP in patients with ILD [57]. A prospective pilot study found that longitudinal changes in lung sounds were associated with clinical deterioration in patients with IPF [58].
Change in St George's Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) scores is a validated measure of quality of life (QoL) in IPF and was a secondary endpoint in the INPULSIS trials [2]. The change in SGRQ total score from baseline was significantly less (corresponding to less deterioration in QoL) in the nintedanib arm of INPULSIS-2 compared with placebo. However, there was no significant difference in SGRQ score between the nintedanib and placebo arms of INPULSIS-1, nor was a significant difference seen in the pooled analysis of the two trials [2]. The suggested minimum important difference in SGRQ score, based on data from the BUILD-1 trial of bosentan in IPF, is between 5–8 points over 6 months [59]. However, an analysis of data from the INPULSIS trials suggested that changes of 4–11 points over 52 weeks were clinically meaningful, although the authors state that further sensitivity analyses are required [60].
The INMARK trial assessed serum levels of neoepitopes (degradation products of the extracellular collagen matrix that accumulates in the lungs of patients with pulmonary fibrosis) for their prognostic value in patients with IPF [12]. Prior work found that the rates of change of six neoepitopes, including C-reactive protein degraded by matrix metalloproteinases 1 and 8 (CRPM), were associated with disease progression and mortality [61]. The primary endpoint of INMARK was the rate of change of serum CRPM after 12 weeks [12]. While there was no significant difference in the rate of change of CRPM between the nintedanib and placebo arms, rising CRPM levels over 12 weeks (compared with falling or stable CRPM levels) were associated with disease progression over 52 weeks. These results confirmed the association of CRPM with disease progression, but did not show that rates of change in neoepitope concentrations were predictive of treatment response [12, 43]. Similarly, a post-hoc analysis of the CAPACITY and ASCEND trials of pirfenidone found that C-C motif ligand 18 was prognostic for disease progression, but found no markers predictive of treatment response [62].
Treatment of special populations
The efficacy of nintedanib in slowing FVC decline was first suggested by the results of the Phase II TOMORROW study, then confirmed in the two replicate Phase III INPULSIS trials [2, 63]. However, further scrutiny is required in some subgroups of patients because of their exclusion from INPULSIS (patients with advanced lung function impairment), comorbidities (patients with severe concomitant emphysema), or the mechanism of action of nintedanib as an angiogenesis inhibitor (patients awaiting lung transplantation; patients with IPF and lung cancer).
Patients with advanced lung function impairment
Patients with PFTs indicative of advanced lung function impairment (FVC ≤ 50% or DLCO ≤ 30%) were excluded from the INPULSIS trials, hence the efficacy of nintedanib in these patients was not established upon the drug’s approval [2]. The clinical trial INSTAGE examined the efficacy and safety of nintedanib in combination with sildenafil, compared with nintedanib and placebo, in patients with advanced disease defined by DLCO ≤ 35%. While the trial did not meet its primary endpoint (superiority of the combination versus nintedanib alone in the change from baseline in SGRQ total score), the rate of FVC decline in patients treated with nintedanib over 24 weeks aligned with that of patients treated with nintedanib in the INPULSIS trials, whose lung function was less impaired. No new safety signals were identified in INSTAGE, and the most common adverse event (AE) was diarrhoea [11, 64].
While patients entering the INPULSIS trials were required to have limited lung function impairment, measured by FVC and DLCO, no such restrictions applied to patients entering the INPULSIS-ON extension study [6, 65]. Of 731 patients who entered INPULSIS-ON and had baseline FVC measurements, 41 (5.6%) had FVC ≤ 50%, while 690 (94.4%) had FVC > 50%. FVC measurements at week 48 were available in 24 and 558 patients with FVC ≤ 50% and FVC > 50%, respectively. Relative and absolute declines in FVC over 48 weeks did not differ between these groups, and were similar to those observed over 52 weeks in patients treated with nintedanib in the INPULSIS trials [65]. Taken together, the data from INSTAGE and INPULSIS-ON suggest that the efficacy of nintedanib extends to patients with more advanced disease and is similar to that in patients with less functional impairment, and that nintedanib has a manageable safety profile irrespective of baseline PFTs [11, 65]. In the future, trials for particular subgroups of patients, such as those with more advanced disease, should be considered.
A single-centre retrospective study of patients with IPF (N = 186) in Philadelphia, USA, found that patients who received nintedanib (n = 57) in clinical practice had lower mean FVC (66%) and DLCO (35%) than those in the INPULSIS trials (79.8% and 47.4%, respectively); no new safety signals were observed despite this [66]. In a single-centre retrospective study in Budapest, Hungary, patients receiving nintedanib (N = 22) were divided into two subgroups, one with FVC < 50% (n = 10), and one with FVC of 50–60% (n = 12). Median survival did not differ between subgroups (444 and 447 days, respectively). The most common AEs were gastrointestinal and elevated liver enzymes. The authors noted that patients with FVC < 50% represented approximately 10% of the total IPF population of their centre [67]. A recent study in Japan examined the effects of nintedanib in patients (N = 22), 8 of whom had advanced lung function impairment (FVC < 50 or DLCO/alveolar volume either <30% pred or unmeasurable), and found that the most common AEs in these patients were diarrhoea and elevated serum aminotransferase levels [68].
Lastly, a single-centre retrospective study in Seoul divided patients (N = 108) with IPF into subgroups of more advanced (FVC < 50% or DLCO < 30%) and less advanced (FVC ≥ 50% or DLCO ≥ 30%) lung function impairment at baseline. Most patients (97.2%) experienced AEs; most frequently diarrhoea (50%) and decreased appetite (45.4%). No new safety signals were identified. FVC decline with nintedanib was similar in both subgroups (−1.4% and −3.5% per year for more and less advanced disease, respectively), and was in turn similar to the rate of decline observed in the INPULSIS trials (−2.8% and −3.1% for INPULSIS 1 & 2, respectively) [2, 69].
Patients with concomitant emphysema
Patients with IPF and emphysema typically present with more preserved FVC than those with isolated IPF [70, 71]. DLCO, conversely, is often lower than in patients with IPF alone, possibly because of an additive effect of IPF and emphysema, and the higher frequency of pulmonary hypertension (PH) associated with IPF and emphysema [71–73]. In addition to altered PFTs at discrete timepoints, longitudinal FVC decline appears lower in patients with emphysema and IPF [70, 71]. Stratification of patients with IPF and emphysema by extent of emphysema according to HRCT was used to show that patients with an extent of emphysema of ≥ 15% experienced significantly less FVC decline over 48 weeks than those with an extent of emphysema of < 15%. This finding suggests that longitudinal FVC decline is not an appropriate measure of disease progression in patients with IPF and an extent of emphysema of ≥ 15% [70].
In contrast with other clinical trials, the presence of emphysema at baseline was not an exclusion criterion in the INPULSIS trials [2]. A post-hoc analysis of patients with or without emphysema (assessed by interpretation of HRCT scans by a single expert radiologist) in the INPULSIS trials found no significant between-group differences in FVC decline, change in SGRQ total score from baseline, or the risk of first acute exacerbation. These results suggest that the treatment effect of nintedanib is not affected by the presence of emphysema at baseline [74].
Patients awaiting lung transplantation
Lung transplantation is recommended for the treatment of IPF in eligible patients [14, 35, 75, 76]. Nintedanib is an inhibitor of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), platelet-derived growth factor and fibroblast growth factor (FGF) pathways [77]. Inhibition of the VEGF pathway has been associated with an increased risk of bleeding events [77–81]. VEGF and FGF are involved in wound healing, and potential disruption of this process warrants consideration in patients undergoing lung transplantation [80, 82].
Concerns regarding the use of nintedanib in patients undergoing lung transplantation have not borne out in clinical practice [83–88]. A single-centre study of patients in Belgium receiving nintedanib (n = 2) or pirfenidone (n = 7) observed no bleeding events or wound healing impairment for 20–39 days post-operation [89]. In a larger, single-centre retrospective study of patients who underwent lung transplantations in Germany (N = 287), 62 patients had IPF, for which 23 were undergoing treatment with pirfenidone and 7 were undergoing treatment with nintedanib. No significant increases in intra-operative blood loss, intra- and post-operative use of blood products, wound healing disorders or anastomotic complications were observed between patients with IPF who received nintedanib or pirfenidone and those who did not [90]. A study of patients with ILD undergoing bilateral lung transplantation in Vienna, Austria or Hannover, Germany found that, of 100 patients diagnosed with IPF, 23 received pirfenidone and 13 received nintedanib within 4 weeks prior to surgery. Such use of nintedanib or pirfenidone was not associated with increases in bleeding events, impaired wound healing, or mortality after a median follow-up of 21 months [91].
Patients with IPF and lung cancer
IPF is a risk factor for lung cancer [92–94]. The reported prevalence of lung cancer in patients with IPF varies from 3–48%, and it is associated with shorter survival times than IPF alone [94–96]. Nintedanib, in combination with docetaxel, is indicated after first-line therapy for the treatment of non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with adenocarcinoma tumour histology [97]. Nintedanib is known to hinder angiogenesis, which is essential for tumour growth, metastasis and progression [77, 98]. Nintedanib, therefore, has theoretical potential in the treatment of lung cancer associated with IPF, although the most common histotype of lung cancer in IPF is squamous cell carcinoma, and nintedanib is indicated for adenocarcinoma [93, 94, 97, 98].
Chemotherapy, surgical procedures and radiotherapy are all associated with a high risk of acute exacerbations in patients with IPF and lung cancer. Surgery-related mortality is increased in patients with IPF and lung cancer, compared with patients with lung cancer alone [94, 99].
Evidence for the efficacy of nintedanib in patients with IPF and NSCLC is available from a single case study, in which a nodule later identified as squamous cell carcinoma in a patient with IPF remained stable with nintedanib treatment, but increased in size after discontinuation [100]. The J-SONIC trial is investigating the efficacy of nintedanib (compared with no nintedanib) in patients with NSCLC and IPF who are receiving carboplatin and nanoparticle albumin-bound paclitaxel [101].
Long-term treatment
The INPULSIS trials showed that nintedanib treatment slows disease progression in patients with IPF over 52 weeks [2]. IPF is a chronic progressive disease that requires treatment for longer than 52 weeks, hence extension studies of the INPULSIS trials (and the Phase II TOMORROW trial) have been conducted [6, 102].
In the INPULSIS-ON extension study, patients (N = 734), who received either placebo (n = 304) or nintedanib (n = 430) in INPULSIS, were treated with open-label nintedanib. The mean exposure to nintedanib in INPULSIS-ON was 31.5 months (range 0.0–56.3); the mean total exposure in INPULSIS and INPULSIS-ON was 44.7 months (11.9–68.3). No new safety signals were identified, and the most common AE was diarrhoea. The overall safety profile of nintedanib over the 4-year INPULSIS-ON extension study was similar to that established in the earlier 52-week INPULSIS trials [6].
In the INPULSIS trials, more patients in the nintedanib groups reported a "myocardial infarction" event than in the placebo groups (2.7% vs 1.2%). Conversely, more patients in the placebo groups reported an "ischaemic disease" event than in the nintedanib group (3.1% vs 1.7%) [103]. This imbalance in reported myocardial infarction was not observed in clinical trials of nintedanib in patients with SSc-ILD (SENSCIS) or in patients with other progressive fibrosing ILDs (INBUILD) [104, 105]. Reported bleeding events in the INPULSIS trials, including epistaxis and contusion, were higher in nintedanib groups than in placebo groups, and serious bleeding events were reported with similar incidence between groups [88, 103]. Rates of major adverse cardiovascular events, myocardial infarction and bleeding events in INPULSIS-ON were similar to or lower than those observed in the INPULSIS trials, suggesting that continued nintedanib treatment is not associated with an increase in the risk of these events [6].
Lung function decline over 192 weeks was assessed as an exploratory endpoint in INPULSIS-ON. The annual rate of FVC decline was 135.1 mL, 145.0 mL in patients who continued nintedanib, and 119.7 mL in patients who initiated nintedanib in INPULSIS-ON [6]. The annual rate of FVC decline in the INPULSIS trials was 113.6 mL for patients receiving nintedanib, and 223.5 mL for patients receiving placebo [2, 6]. This suggests that the treatment benefit of nintedanib could extend beyond 4 years [6].
Use of nintedanib in real-world clinical practice
Nintedanib is currently authorized in over 70 countries for the treatment of IPF. The estimated cumulative exposure from first approval in October 2014 through end of May 2019 is > 80,000 patient-years [106]. The available real-world data support the safety and efficacy profiles of nintedanib that were established in clinical trials [83, 86, 107–111]. Observational studies have reported declines in FVC of < 5% over 9–11 months in most patients treated with nintedanib [85, 109, 110]. Diarrhoea remains the most commonly reported AE, occurring in 33–73% of patients [39, 66, 68, 83–86, 108–110]. In the INPULSIS trials, 63% of patients who received nintedanib reported diarrhoea, compared with 18% of patients who received placebo [2]. Reported discontinuation rates range from 11–45% [39, 66, 84–87, 109, 110]. No new safety signals or increases in bleeding or cardiovascular events have been reported [39, 66, 83–87, 91, 108–110].
A 2015 systematic review found that the most common comorbidities in patients with IPF were PH, obstructive sleep apnoea, lung cancer, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (including emphysema), ischaemic heart disease (IHD) and gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GERD) [95]. A real-world study found that lung cancer, arteriosclerosis, IHD and other cardiovascular diseases were significantly associated with impaired outcome in patients with IPF [112]. With the exception of lung cancer, these comorbidities were also reported in patients in clinical practice who received nintedanib (Table 2). The presence of comorbidities at baseline did not appear to affect the safety or efficacy profile of nintedanib [66, 67, 85, 86, 110]. Similarly, concomitant medications at baseline largely had no significant effects on nintedanib treatment [66, 85, 110].
Table 2.
Study author, year [reference] | Galli, 2017 [66] | Brunnemer, 2018 [110] | Bonella, 2016 [85] | Barczi, 2019 [67] | Tzouvelekis, 2018 [86] | Kreuter, 2017 [113] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Number of patients | 57 | 64 | 62 | 22 | 94 | 623 |
Comorbidities, n (%) | ||||||
Arterial hypertension | 28 (43.8) | 19 (31) | 14 (63.6) | 41 (43.6) | ||
PH | 11 (19.3) | 5 (7.8) | 9 (40.9) | 16 (17.0) | ||
Congestive heart failure | 4 (7) | |||||
IHD | 14 (24.6) | 21 (32.8) | 8 (13) | ≤5 (22.7)a | 20 (21.3) | |
Diabetes mellitus | 15 (26.3) | 16 (25) | 9 (14.5) | 4 (18.2) | 18 (19.1) | |
GERD | 31 (54.4) | 21 (32.8) | 7 (11) | 2 (9.1) | 38 (40.4) | 192 (30.8) |
OSA | 9 (14.1) | 4 (6) | ||||
Emphysema | 12 (21.1) | 9 (14.1) | 55 (8.8) | |||
Stroke | 2 (3.1) | |||||
Concomitant medications, n (%) | ||||||
Prednisone | 10 (17.5) | |||||
Anti-acid therapy | 37 (64.9) | 22 (34.4) (PPI) | 16 (26) (PPI) | |||
Anticoagulant | 7 (12.3) | 7 (10.9) | 2 (3) | |||
Aspirin + anticoagulant | 3 (4.7) | |||||
N-acetyl cysteine | 5 (8) | |||||
MMF | 5 (8.8) | |||||
Sildenafil/tadalafil | 6 (10.5) | |||||
Anti-hypertensive | 28 (43.8) | 19 (31) |
aIncluded under "cardiovascular diseases" in [67], which also included non-IHD, left heart failure, valvular insufficiency
GERD Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease, IHD Ischaemic heart disease, IPF Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, MMF Mycophenolate mofetil, OSA Obstructive sleep apnoea, PH Pulmonary hypertension, PPI Proton pump inhibitor
In two case studies an improvement in FVC was observed after initiation of nintedanib following an acute exacerbation [114, 115]. There is a lack of real-world data on post-exacerbation survival in patients treated with nintedanib or pirfenidone. However, data from the European IPF Registry (eurIPFreg), the INSIGHTS-IPF registry (Germany) and the Australian Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis Registry suggest that patients with IPF who receive antifibrotic treatment have better overall survival than patients with IPF who do not receive nintedanib or pirfenidone [23, 116, 117]. Post-hoc analyses of the INPULSIS trials observed an association between nintedanib treatment and a numerical reduction in mortality following an acute exacerbation [45, 47].
Future directions
Emerging therapeutic strategies
Research into improved treatment options for patients with IPF continues. Several studies investigated combination therapy using nintedanib and pirfenidone. A multicentre prospective study in Japan (N = 50) observed an increase in reports of nausea and vomiting when patients receiving pirfenidone were treated with nintedanib, compared with patients receiving pirfenidone alone [118]. The addition of nintedanib to pirfenidone was not associated with any additional safety signals in a prospective international study of patients (N = 89) on a stable dose of pirfenidone [119]. In the INJOURNEY clinical trial (N = 104), the addition of pirfenidone to nintedanib was associated with an increase in gastrointestinal AEs, compared with nintedanib alone. However, 34 patients (64%) who received combination therapy completed the trial, suggesting that combination treatment is feasible in a large proportion of patients. Exploratory efficacy analysis suggested that combination therapy reduced FVC decline to a greater extent than nintedanib alone [8]. A smaller study (N = 37) observed no pharmacokinetic interactions between the two drugs [10]. Data from large, prospective studies are, however, absent.
No safety signals associated with switching from pirfenidone to nintedanib are evident from real-world data [66, 85, 120]. No difference in efficacy was observed between patients who initiated nintedanib after discontinuing pirfenidone and those who were pirfenidone-naïve. A common reason for pirfenidone discontinuation was disease progression; the efficacy of nintedanib in these patients suggests that patients who experience disease progression under pirfenidone could still benefit from treatment with nintedanib [85, 110]. In a small number of patients (n = 4) who transitioned from nintedanib to pirfenidone, no new safety signals were observed [66].
The aforementioned clinical trial INSTAGE assessed the effect of sildenafil and nintedanib on QoL, compared with nintedanib alone, in patients with advanced lung function impairment. While the addition of sildenafil gave only a numerical improvement in QoL, the results of this trial suggested that sildenafil might confer additional benefit in lowering the risk of disease progression in these patients [11]. Furthermore, the benefit of combination therapy on QoL may not have reached the threshold for significance because the study was underpowered, as the INSTAGE trial was powered under the assumption that the effect of sildenafil on QoL would not be affected by nintedanib therapy. The trial design did not account for the possibility of a more pronounced treatment effect of nintedanib on QoL in patients with lower FVC, as observed in subgroup analyses of the INPULSIS trials [11, 40]. Future clinical trials in patients with IPF and a greater degree of lung function impairment should take these potential design limitations into consideration. The effect of combination therapy was consistent irrespective of the presence of right heart dysfunction at baseline [64]. The treatment guidelines for IPF give a conditional recommendation against sildenafil for the treatment of IPF, but make no recommendation regarding the treatment of patients with PH and IPF [35].
GERD is a common comorbidity in IPF; however, data on the use of anti-acid therapies are conflicting. While prespecified analysis of placebo cohorts from the IPFnet programme suggested positive effects [121], a post-hoc analysis of data from the placebo arms of the CAPACITY and ASCEND trials suggested that the use of anti-acid therapies does not affect disease course in patients with IPF, and international guidelines give a conditional recommendation for these therapies in patients with IPF and GERD [35, 121, 122]. A post-hoc analysis of the INPULSIS trials found that use of anti-acid therapies (proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) and histamine-2 receptor agonists) at baseline did not affect the treatment benefit of nintedanib [123]. The treatment of GERD with PPIs might be associated with an increased risk of enteric bacterial infection [124], and data suggest that patients with IPF and FVC < 70% pred who receive anti-acid therapies are at greater risk of infections (general and pulmonary) than those who do not [122].
In addition to clinical research using existing therapies, novel pharmacotherapies are in development [125]. As nintedanib and pirfenidone are now considered standard of care in IPF, several trials of novel therapeutics (including GLPG1690 [126], PRM-151 [127], PBI-4050 [128] and pamrevlumab [129]) allowed concomitant therapy with nintedanib or pirfenidone in both treatment and placebo arms [125–129]. During a Phase II trial of PBI-4050, an inhibitor of differentiation of fibroblasts into myofibroblasts, an apparent interaction with pirfenidone was observed. Change in mean FVC from baseline to week 12 was numerically superior in the PBI-4050 plus nintedanib group (+0.06% pred) than in either the PBI-4050 alone (−1.11%) or the PBI-4050 plus pirfenidone (−2.69%) groups [128]. Future combination regimens will, therefore, be dependent on the pharmacokinetic and safety profiles of both agents.
Non-pharmacological interventions are also being explored. A systematic review found that pulmonary rehabilitation can improve exercise capacity and QoL in patients with ILD, including IPF, albeit in the short term [130]. In the SPRINT-IPF trial (NCT03717012), pulmonary rehabilitation in combination with nintedanib will be tested against nintedanib alone in patients with IPF (N = 290, planned). The primary endpoint is the change in 6-minute walk distance [131].
Precision medicine
Despite the relevance of PFTs in the assessment of disease progression, there is a paucity of biomarkers capable of predicting response to treatment or disease progression in individual patients [12, 43]. The identification of such biomarkers could help address the unmet need to develop endpoints that more accurately reflect the degree of fibrogenesis, matrix turnover and functional consequences of fibrosis [12, 132].
Other progressive fibrosing ILDs
Progressive pulmonary fibrosis is the hallmark of IPF, but this phenotype occurs in other ILDs [13, 133–136]. In general, treatment for these diseases involves off-label use of corticosteroids and immunosuppressive agents [135]. Due to mechanistic similarities between IPF and progressive fibrosing ILD, nintedanib therapy is under investigation in SSc-ILD and in other progressive fibrosing ILDs [9, 13, 104].
Systemic sclerosis is a rare autoimmune disease characterized by fibrosis of the skin and internal organs. ILD is one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality in SSc [9, 104, 137]. SSc-ILD has an estimated prevalence of 1.7–4.2 per 100,000 individuals in Europe [138]. The SENSCIS trial investigated the use of nintedanib in patients with SSc-ILD. The primary endpoint was the annual rate of FVC decline, which was −52.4 mL per year in patients receiving nintedanib (n = 288) and −93.3 mL per year in patients receiving placebo (n = 288) [104]. These rates are lower than those in the INPULSIS trials (−113.6 and −223.5 mL per year in the nintedanib and placebo arms, respectively), probably because FVC decline in SSc-ILD follows a more heterogeneous course than the irreversible progressive decline observed in patients with IPF [2, 6, 139–141]. Furthermore, the SENSCIS trial included a heterogeneous patient population, and 48% of patients were receiving continuing treatment with mycophenolate mofetil [104]. The relative reduction in FVC decline associated with nintedanib versus placebo in SENSCIS (44%) was similar to that observed in the INPULSIS trials (49%) [2, 104]. The AE profile of nintedanib in patients with SSc-ILD was similar to that observed in patients with IPF, although a higher proportion of patients reported diarrhoea (76% and 32% in the nintedanib and placebo arms, respectively) in the SENSCIS trial than in the INPULSIS trials (62% and 18% in the nintedanib and placebo arms, respectively). potentially arising from the underlying systemic disease [2, 104].
Nintedanib has also been investigated in patients with ILDs that have developed a progressive fibrosing phenotype. The disease in these patients is characterized by decline in lung function, increasing extent of fibrosis by HRCT, or worsening of respiratory symptoms, despite treatment with immunomodulatory therapies [13, 134]. The INBUILD trial assessed the efficacy and safety of nintedanib in patients with fibrosing ILDs and a progressive phenotype, excluding IPF [13, 142]. The primary endpoint was the annual rate of FVC decline, which was −80.8 mL in patients treated with nintedanib (n = 332), compared with −187.8 mL in patients treated with placebo (n = 331). Inclusion was based on extent of fibrosis by HRCT (≥ 10%) and a common underlying progressive phenotype rather than diagnoses of any particular ILD, and INBUILD therefore included patients with ILDs such as: hypersensitivity pneumonitis (n = 173, 26%); autoimmune-associated ILDs (n = 170, 26%), such as rheumatoid arthritis-associated ILD (n = 89, 13%) and SSc-ILD (n = 39, 6%); idiopathic non-specific interstitial pneumonia (n = 125, 19%); and unclassifiable idiopathic interstitial pneumonia (n = 114, 17%). Patients were stratified by the presence or absence of a UIP-like pattern by HRCT. The annual rates of FVC decline in patients with UIP-like pattern were −82.9 mL and −211.1 mL in patients treated with nintedanib and placebo, respectively. In patients with other HRCT patterns these were −79.0 mL and −154.2 mL, respectively. The most common AE was diarrhoea, which occurred in 67% and 25% of patients receiving nintedanib and placebo, respectively. The efficacy of nintedanib in these patients could suggest common pathobiological mechanisms in fibrosing ILDs, irrespective of clinical diagnosis [142, 143]. A real-world study of patients (N = 11) with fibrosing ILDs that had developed a progressive phenotype who were treated with either pirfenidone (n = 10) or nintedanib (n = 1) observed that antifibrotic therapy was associated with stabilization of FVC, further indicating that this approach might be a valuable treatment option [144].
Conclusion
While the treatment landscape of IPF is growing increasingly favourable, many challenges and unmet needs remain. The diagnosis of IPF is still complex, but research into new techniques that could improve the sensitivity of diagnosis and reduce the burden of histological procedures is ongoing. Lung function tests are, to date, the best measure of disease progression and, although prediction of disease progression in individual patients using PFTs remains problematic, exploration of quantification of disease progression and treatment response using HRCT, digital lung auscultation and blood biomarkers shows promise. Long-term treatment with nintedanib raised no new safety signals, and suggested that the treatment benefit extends beyond 4 years. Real-world evidence has largely corroborated the safety and efficacy profiles of nintedanib established in clinical trials. The efficacy and safety of nintedanib to treat other progressive fibrosing ILDs have been examined in clinical trials. Further developments in these areas, and in the treatment of patients with advanced lung function impairment, concomitant emphysema and lung cancer should continue to improve patient outcomes.
Acknowledgements
Medical writing assistance, in the form of the preparation and revision of the manuscript, was supported financially by Boehringer Ingelheim International GmbH and provided by Ben Daniels, PhD, BA, of AMICULUM Limited and Claire Scott, PhD, of MediTech Media, UK, under the authors’ conceptual direction and based on feedback from the authors.
Abbreviations
- AE
Adverse event
- CI
Confidence interval
- CRPM
C-Reactive protein degraded by matrix metalloproteinases 1 and 8
- CT
Computed tomography
- cTBB
Transbronchial cryobiopsy
- DLCO
Diffusing capacity of the lungs for carbon monoxide
- FGF
Fibroblast growth factor
- FVC
Forced vital capacity
- GERD
Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease
- HRCT
High-resolution computed tomography
- IHD
Ischaemic heart disease
- ILD
Interstitial lung disease
- IPF
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
- MMF
Mycophenolate mofetil
- NSCLC
Non-small-cell lung cancer
- OSA
Obstructive sleep apnoea
- PFT
Pulmonary function test
- PH
Pulmonary hypertension
- PPI
Proton pump inhibitor
- QLF
Quantitative lung fibrosis
- QoL
Quality of life
- SE
Standard error
- SGRQ
St George’s Respiratory Questionnaire
- SLB
Surgical lung biopsy
- SSc-ILD
Systemic sclerosis-associated interstitial lung disease
- UIP
Usual interstitial pneumonia
- VEGF
Vascular endothelial growth factor
Authors’ contributions
All authors meet criteria for authorship as recommended by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE). All authors were involved in the drafting of the article, and have read and approved the final version.
Funding
The page processing charges for this article have been paid by Boehringer Ingelheim.
Availability of data and materials
Data sharing is not applicable to this article as no datasets were generated or analysed.
Ethics approval and consent to participate
Not applicable.
Consent for publication
Not applicable.
Competing interests
CV has received advisory and lectures fees from F. Hoffmann-La Roche, Boehringer Ingelheim and Galapagos, outside the submitted work; SET has received honoraria for lectures from Boehringer Ingelheim and F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd; NK declares that he has no competing interests; MQ and SS are employees of Boehringer Ingelheim International GmbH; MK or his institution have received reimbursement for counselling and grants from Boehringer Ingelheim and F. Hoffmann-La Roche.
Footnotes
Publisher’s Note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
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