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Featured researches published by Oliver Vit.


The Lancet Respiratory Medicine | 2017

Long-term efficacy and safety of α1 proteinase inhibitor treatment for emphysema caused by severe α1 antitrypsin deficiency: an open-label extension trial (RAPID-OLE).

Noel G. McElvaney; Jonathan Burdon; Mark Holmes; Allan R. Glanville; Peter Wark; Philip J. Thompson; Paul Hernandez; Jan Chlumsky; Helmut Teschler; Joachim H. Ficker; Niels Seersholm; Alan Altraja; Riitta Mäkitaro; Joanna Chorostowska-Wynimko; Marek Sanak; Paul I Stoicescu; Eeva Piitulainen; Oliver Vit; Marion Wencker; Michael A. Tortorici; Michael Fries; Jonathan Edelman; Kenneth R. Chapman

BACKGROUND Purified α1 proteinase inhibitor (A1PI) slowed emphysema progression in patients with severe α1 antitrypsin deficiency in a randomised controlled trial (RAPID-RCT), which was followed by an open-label extension trial (RAPID-OLE). The aim was to investigate the prolonged treatment effect of A1PI on the progression of emphysema as assessed by the loss of lung density in relation to RAPID-RCT. METHODS Patients who had received either A1PI treatment (Zemaira or Respreeza; early-start group) or placebo (delayed-start group) in the RAPID-RCT trial were included in this 2-year open-label extension trial (RAPID-OLE). Patients from 22 hospitals in 11 countries outside of the USA received 60 mg/kg per week A1PI. The primary endpoint was annual rate of adjusted 15th percentile lung density loss measured using CT in the intention-to-treat population with a mixed-effects regression model. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00670007. FINDINGS Between March 1, 2006, and Oct 13, 2010, 140 patients from RAPID-RCT entered RAPID-OLE: 76 from the early-start group and 64 from the delayed-start group. Between day 1 and month 24 (RAPID-RCT), the rate of lung density loss in RAPID-OLE patients was lower in the early-start group (-1·51 g/L per year [SE 0·25] at total lung capacity [TLC]; -1·55 g/L per year [0·24] at TLC plus functional residual capacity [FRC]; and -1·60 g/L per year [0·26] at FRC) than in the delayed-start group (-2·26 g/L per year [0·27] at TLC; -2·16 g/L per year [0·26] at TLC plus FRC, and -2·05 g/L per year [0·28] at FRC). Between months 24 and 48, the rate of lung density loss was reduced in delayed-start patients (from -2·26 g/L per year to -1·26 g/L per year), but no significant difference was seen in the rate in early-start patients during this time period (-1·51 g/L per year to -1·63 g/L per year), thus in early-start patients the efficacy was sustained to month 48. INTERPRETATION RAPID-OLE supports the continued efficacy of A1PI in slowing disease progression during 4 years of treatment. Lost lung density was never recovered, highlighting the importance of early intervention with A1PI treatment. FUNDING CSL Behring.


European Respiratory Journal | 2018

Safety of biweekly alpha1 antitrypsin treatment in the RAPID program

Timm Greulich; Jan Chlumsky; Marion Wencker; Oliver Vit; Michael Fries; Thomas Chung; Amgad Shebl; Claus Vogelmeier; Kenneth R. Chapman; Noel G. McElvaney

α1-antitrypsin (α1-AT) deficiency is a hereditary disorder characterised by an abnormally low concentration of functional α1-AT in blood and tissues [1]. The primary role of α1-AT is to protect elastin-containing tissues, most notably the lung, against the destructive activity of proteolytic enzymes [2]. Patients with severe α1-AT deficiency present with serum α1-AT concentrations <11 μM and are prone to destruction of the lung tissue, often developing respiratory symptoms and emphysema in the fourth or fifth decade of life [3, 4]. Administration of 120 mg·kg−1 α1-antitrypsin on a biweekly basis was safe and well tolerated http://ow.ly/CVbz30lUBum


British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 2017

Quantitative disease progression model of α‐1 proteinase inhibitor therapy on computed tomography lung density in patients with α‐1 antitrypsin deficiency

Michael A. Tortorici; James A. Rogers; Oliver Vit; Martin Bexon; Robert A. Sandhaus; Jonathan Burdon; Joanna Chorostowska-Wynimko; Philip J. Thompson; James M. Stocks; Noel G. McElvaney; Kenneth R. Chapman; Jonathan Edelman

Aims Early‐onset emphysema attributed to α‐1 antitrypsin deficiency (AATD) is frequently overlooked and undertreated. RAPID‐RCT/RAPID‐OLE, the largest clinical trials of purified human α‐1 proteinase inhibitor (A1‐PI; 60 mg kg–1 week–1) therapy completed to date, demonstrated for the first time that A1‐PI is clinically effective in slowing lung tissue loss in AATD. A posthoc pharmacometric analysis was undertaken to further explore dose, exposure and response. Methods A disease progression model was constructed, utilizing observed A1‐PI exposure and lung density decline rates (measured by computed tomography) from RAPID‐RCT/RAPID‐OLE, to predict effects of population variability and higher doses on A1‐PI exposure and clinical response. Dose–exposure and exposure–response relationships were characterized using nonlinear and linear mixed effects models, respectively. The dose–exposure model predicts summary exposures and not individual concentration kinetics; covariates included baseline serum A1‐PI, forced expiratory volume in 1 s and body weight. The exposure–response model relates A1‐PI exposure to lung density decline rate at varying exposure levels. Results A dose of 60 mg kg–1 week–1 achieved trough serum levels >11 μmol l–1 (putative ‘protective threshold’) in ≥98% patients. Dose–exposure–response simulations revealed increasing separation between A1‐PI and placebo in the proportions of patients achieving higher reductions in lung density decline rate; improvements in decline rates ≥0.5 g l–1 year–1 occurred more often in patients receiving A1‐PI: 63 vs. 12%. Conclusion Weight‐based A1‐PI dosing reliably raises serum levels above the 11 μmol l–1 threshold. However, our exposure–response simulations question whether this is the maximal, clinically effective threshold for A1‐PI therapy in AATD. The model suggested higher doses of A1‐PI would yield greater clinical effects.


European Respiratory Journal | 2015

Safety of bi-weekly infusion of A1-PI augmentation therapy in RAPID

Niels Seersholm; Robert A. Sandhaus; Kenneth R. Chapman; Jonathan Burdon; Eeva Piitulainen; James M. Stocks; Michael A. Tortorici; Tanja Rosenberg; Oliver Vit; Martin Bexon; Jonathan Edelman; N. Gerard McElvaney


European Respiratory Journal | 2016

Increased proportion of slow decliners in patients with alpha-1 protease inhibitor (A1-PI) deficiency following treatment with A1-PI

Noel G. McElvaney; Niels Seersholm; Kenneth R. Chapman; Marion Wencker; Michael Fries; Oliver Vit


European Respiratory Journal | 2015

Population pharmacokinetics of A1-PI in patients with Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency

Michael A. Tortorici; Oliver Vit; Martin Bexon; Robert A. Sandhaus; Jonathan Burdon; Eeva Piitulainen; Niels Seersholm; James M. Stocks; N. Gerard McElvaney; Kenneth R. Chapman; Jonathan Edelman


Pneumologie | 2018

Behandlung mit Alpha-1 Antitrypsin verlangsamt die Emphysemprogession unabhängig von der Ausgangs-FEV1

Joachim H. Ficker; Kenneth R. Chapman; Alice Turner; Ra Sandhaus; Oliver Vit; Michael Fries; Noel G. McElvaney; M Wencker


Pneumologie | 2018

Verträglichkeit von zwei-wöchentlichen Infusionen mit Alpha-1 Antitrypsin

Timm Greulich; M Wencker; Jan Chlumsky; Oliver Vit; Michael Fries; Thomas Chung; Kenneth R. Chapman; Noel G. McElvaney; Claus Vogelmeier


European Respiratory Journal | 2017

Alpha-1 antitrypsin (A1-PI) treatment slows emphysema progression independent of baseline FEV1

Joachim H. Ficker; Kenneth R. Chapman; Alice Turner; Robert A. Sandhaus; Marion Wencker; Oliver Vit; Michael Fries; Noel G. McElvaney


European Respiratory Journal | 2017

Safety of bi-weekly intravenous therapy with alpha-1 antitrypsin

Timm Greulich; Jan Chlumsky; Marion Wencker; Oliver Vit; Michael Fries; Thomas Chung; Claus Vogelmeier; Kenneth R. Chapman; Noel G. McElvaney

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Noel G. McElvaney

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Jonathan Burdon

St. Vincent's Health System

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Robert A. Sandhaus

University of Colorado Denver

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N. Gerard McElvaney

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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