Treatment With Mycophenolate and Cyclophosphamide Leads to Clinically Meaningful Improvements in Patient‐Reported Outcomes in Scleroderma Lung Disease: Results of Scleroderma Lung Study II

Objective Our objective was to determine if treatment with cyclophosphamide (CYC) and mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) improves patient‐reported outcomes (PROs) among patients with systemic sclerosis‐related interstitial lung disease (SSc‐ILD). Methods This study examined PROs in patients with SSc‐ILD (N...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Elizabeth R. Volkmann, Donald P. Tashkin, Holly LeClair, Michael D. Roth, Grace Kim, Jonathan Goldin, Philip J. Clements, Daniel E. Furst, Dinesh Khanna
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-06-01
Series:ACR Open Rheumatology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/acr2.11125
id doaj-887177cce1a94cf4b5f078215fc99f0a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-887177cce1a94cf4b5f078215fc99f0a2020-11-25T03:18:06ZengWileyACR Open Rheumatology2578-57452020-06-012636237010.1002/acr2.11125Treatment With Mycophenolate and Cyclophosphamide Leads to Clinically Meaningful Improvements in Patient‐Reported Outcomes in Scleroderma Lung Disease: Results of Scleroderma Lung Study IIElizabeth R. Volkmann0Donald P. Tashkin1Holly LeClair2Michael D. Roth3Grace Kim4Jonathan Goldin5Philip J. Clements6Daniel E. Furst7Dinesh Khanna8University of California Los AngelesUniversity of California Los AngelesUniversity of California Los AngelesUniversity of California Los AngelesUniversity of California Los AngelesUniversity of California Los AngelesUniversity of California Los AngelesUniversity of California, Los Angeles, University of Washington, Seattle, and University of Florence Florence ItalyUniversity of Michigan Medical School Ann ArborObjective Our objective was to determine if treatment with cyclophosphamide (CYC) and mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) improves patient‐reported outcomes (PROs) among patients with systemic sclerosis‐related interstitial lung disease (SSc‐ILD). Methods This study examined PROs in patients with SSc‐ILD (N = 142) who participated in the Scleroderma Lung Study II, a randomized controlled trial comparing MMF for 2 years with oral CYC for 1 year followed by 1 year of a placebo. Joint models were created to evaluate the course of PROs over 2 years. The difference in PRO scores from baseline to 24 months was measured, and the percentage of patients meeting the minimum clinically important difference (MCID) was calculated. Correlations between PROs and SSc‐ILD disease severity measures were also examined. Results Treatment with CYC and MMF led to improvements in several PROs with no between‐treatment differences. Scores for the Transitional Dyspnea Index (TDI) and St. George’s Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) improved significantly over 2 years, and 29%/24% and 28%/25% of participants in the CYC/MMF groups met or exceeded the MCID estimates for TDI and SGRQ, respectively. At baseline, the forced vital capacity (FVC) percentage predicted (FVC%‐predicted) did not correlate with the Baseline Dyspnea Index or SGRQ. However, improvements in the FVC%‐predicted were weakly associated with improvements in dyspnea (assessed by the TDI) and SGRQ scores. Conclusion Treatment with CYC and MMF improved overall health‐related quality of life in patients with SSc‐ILD. The relationship between PRO measures and the FVC was relatively weak, suggesting that PROs provide complementary information about treatment efficacy not captured by changes in the FVC alone in this patient population.https://doi.org/10.1002/acr2.11125
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elizabeth R. Volkmann
Donald P. Tashkin
Holly LeClair
Michael D. Roth
Grace Kim
Jonathan Goldin
Philip J. Clements
Daniel E. Furst
Dinesh Khanna
spellingShingle Elizabeth R. Volkmann
Donald P. Tashkin
Holly LeClair
Michael D. Roth
Grace Kim
Jonathan Goldin
Philip J. Clements
Daniel E. Furst
Dinesh Khanna
Treatment With Mycophenolate and Cyclophosphamide Leads to Clinically Meaningful Improvements in Patient‐Reported Outcomes in Scleroderma Lung Disease: Results of Scleroderma Lung Study II
ACR Open Rheumatology
author_facet Elizabeth R. Volkmann
Donald P. Tashkin
Holly LeClair
Michael D. Roth
Grace Kim
Jonathan Goldin
Philip J. Clements
Daniel E. Furst
Dinesh Khanna
author_sort Elizabeth R. Volkmann
title Treatment With Mycophenolate and Cyclophosphamide Leads to Clinically Meaningful Improvements in Patient‐Reported Outcomes in Scleroderma Lung Disease: Results of Scleroderma Lung Study II
title_short Treatment With Mycophenolate and Cyclophosphamide Leads to Clinically Meaningful Improvements in Patient‐Reported Outcomes in Scleroderma Lung Disease: Results of Scleroderma Lung Study II
title_full Treatment With Mycophenolate and Cyclophosphamide Leads to Clinically Meaningful Improvements in Patient‐Reported Outcomes in Scleroderma Lung Disease: Results of Scleroderma Lung Study II
title_fullStr Treatment With Mycophenolate and Cyclophosphamide Leads to Clinically Meaningful Improvements in Patient‐Reported Outcomes in Scleroderma Lung Disease: Results of Scleroderma Lung Study II
title_full_unstemmed Treatment With Mycophenolate and Cyclophosphamide Leads to Clinically Meaningful Improvements in Patient‐Reported Outcomes in Scleroderma Lung Disease: Results of Scleroderma Lung Study II
title_sort treatment with mycophenolate and cyclophosphamide leads to clinically meaningful improvements in patient‐reported outcomes in scleroderma lung disease: results of scleroderma lung study ii
publisher Wiley
series ACR Open Rheumatology
issn 2578-5745
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Objective Our objective was to determine if treatment with cyclophosphamide (CYC) and mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) improves patient‐reported outcomes (PROs) among patients with systemic sclerosis‐related interstitial lung disease (SSc‐ILD). Methods This study examined PROs in patients with SSc‐ILD (N = 142) who participated in the Scleroderma Lung Study II, a randomized controlled trial comparing MMF for 2 years with oral CYC for 1 year followed by 1 year of a placebo. Joint models were created to evaluate the course of PROs over 2 years. The difference in PRO scores from baseline to 24 months was measured, and the percentage of patients meeting the minimum clinically important difference (MCID) was calculated. Correlations between PROs and SSc‐ILD disease severity measures were also examined. Results Treatment with CYC and MMF led to improvements in several PROs with no between‐treatment differences. Scores for the Transitional Dyspnea Index (TDI) and St. George’s Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) improved significantly over 2 years, and 29%/24% and 28%/25% of participants in the CYC/MMF groups met or exceeded the MCID estimates for TDI and SGRQ, respectively. At baseline, the forced vital capacity (FVC) percentage predicted (FVC%‐predicted) did not correlate with the Baseline Dyspnea Index or SGRQ. However, improvements in the FVC%‐predicted were weakly associated with improvements in dyspnea (assessed by the TDI) and SGRQ scores. Conclusion Treatment with CYC and MMF improved overall health‐related quality of life in patients with SSc‐ILD. The relationship between PRO measures and the FVC was relatively weak, suggesting that PROs provide complementary information about treatment efficacy not captured by changes in the FVC alone in this patient population.
url https://doi.org/10.1002/acr2.11125
work_keys_str_mv AT elizabethrvolkmann treatmentwithmycophenolateandcyclophosphamideleadstoclinicallymeaningfulimprovementsinpatientreportedoutcomesinsclerodermalungdiseaseresultsofsclerodermalungstudyii
AT donaldptashkin treatmentwithmycophenolateandcyclophosphamideleadstoclinicallymeaningfulimprovementsinpatientreportedoutcomesinsclerodermalungdiseaseresultsofsclerodermalungstudyii
AT hollyleclair treatmentwithmycophenolateandcyclophosphamideleadstoclinicallymeaningfulimprovementsinpatientreportedoutcomesinsclerodermalungdiseaseresultsofsclerodermalungstudyii
AT michaeldroth treatmentwithmycophenolateandcyclophosphamideleadstoclinicallymeaningfulimprovementsinpatientreportedoutcomesinsclerodermalungdiseaseresultsofsclerodermalungstudyii
AT gracekim treatmentwithmycophenolateandcyclophosphamideleadstoclinicallymeaningfulimprovementsinpatientreportedoutcomesinsclerodermalungdiseaseresultsofsclerodermalungstudyii
AT jonathangoldin treatmentwithmycophenolateandcyclophosphamideleadstoclinicallymeaningfulimprovementsinpatientreportedoutcomesinsclerodermalungdiseaseresultsofsclerodermalungstudyii
AT philipjclements treatmentwithmycophenolateandcyclophosphamideleadstoclinicallymeaningfulimprovementsinpatientreportedoutcomesinsclerodermalungdiseaseresultsofsclerodermalungstudyii
AT danielefurst treatmentwithmycophenolateandcyclophosphamideleadstoclinicallymeaningfulimprovementsinpatientreportedoutcomesinsclerodermalungdiseaseresultsofsclerodermalungstudyii
AT dineshkhanna treatmentwithmycophenolateandcyclophosphamideleadstoclinicallymeaningfulimprovementsinpatientreportedoutcomesinsclerodermalungdiseaseresultsofsclerodermalungstudyii
_version_ 1724628778668261376