Respiration | 2021

Improving Survival in Lymphangioleiomyomatosis: A 16-Year Observational Study in a Large Cohort of Patients

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Background: Over the last 2 decades, great progress has been made in the understanding of the clinical aspects and pathogenesis of lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM), leading to publication of guidelines and approval of an effective therapy. Objectives: Aim of our study was to describe how the management and the natural history of this rare disease have changed after the publication of the ERS and American Thoracic Society/Japanese Respiratory Society guidelines and the introduction of sirolimus. Methods: We examined 162 LAM patients followed at our center between 2001 and 2017, reporting clinical characteristics and diagnostic approach. Response to sirolimus in patients undergoing long-term treatment and mortality risk, estimated in terms of cumulative incidence taking into account organ transplantation as a competing cause of the event, were evaluated. The difference in the cumulative incidence between the patients admitted to the observation before 2011 and after 2011, year of the publication of the MILES trial for the efficacy of sirolimus, has also been estimated. Results: Sixty-one patients had a histological diagnosis (22 from 2010 onward). 101 patients received a radiological diagnosis according to the guidelines criteria. Pulmonary function tests remained stable over a 3-year treatment period in patients who received sirolimus for over 12 months. The cumulative incidence of mortality after 10 years in the whole population was 25.5%. The cumulative incidence of mortality after 5 years was significantly lower in patients who entered the study since 2011 (after publication of the MILES trial) than in patients who entered the study before. Conclusions: We provide the data supporting the long-term efficacy of sirolimus therapy in a large cohort of patients with functional impairment and other manifestations of the disease. Our results also suggest that the advent of sirolimus and the publication of international guidelines changed the natural history of the disease lowering the mortality and reducing the need of invasive diagnostic techniques.

Volume 100
Pages 989 - 999
DOI 10.1159/000516330
Language English
Journal Respiration

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