Narrative review finds insufficient evidence for CFTR modulator monotherapy in cystic fibrosis with F508del homozygosity
This is a narrative review that synthesized evidence from 10 early-phase, placebo-controlled randomized trials involving 424 participants with cystic fibrosis who have two F508del variants. The review focused on single CFTR modulator monotherapy versus placebo or another single modulator, assessing survival, quality of life, lung function, adverse effects, and pulmonary exacerbations.
The authors found no deaths reported in the included studies. They concluded there were no clinically relevant improvements in quality of life and insufficient evidence to determine effects on lung function. No studies demonstrated differences between CFTR modulator monotherapy and placebo for the risk of mild, moderate, or severe adverse effects or for time to first pulmonary exacerbation.
Key limitations noted by the authors include that the longest study lasted just 29 days, only two studies received no pharmaceutical company funding, and the certainty of evidence was rated as very low for two comparisons (lumacaftor versus placebo and cavosonstat versus placebo).
The review's scope was limited to immediate-term outcomes, and the authors emphasize a lack of evidence to support monotherapy with a CFTR modulator for people with cystic fibrosis who have two F508del variants. Practice relevance is constrained by the very low certainty of the evidence and the short duration of the trials.