Pharmacotherapeutic group: Immunosuppressants, other immunosuppressants, ATC Code: L04AX05.
The mechanism of action of pirfenidone has not been fully established. However, existing data suggest that pirfenidone exerts both antifibrotic and anti-inflammatory properties in a variety of in vitro systems and animal models of pulmonary fibrosis (bleomycin- and transplant-induced fibrosis).
IPF is a chronic fibrotic and inflammatory pulmonary disease affected by the synthesis and release of pro-inflammatory cytokines including tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) and interleukin-1-beta (IL-1β) and pirfenidone has been shown to reduce the accumulation of inflammatory cells in response to various stimuli.
Pirfenidone attenuates fibroblast proliferation, production of fibrosis-associated proteins and cytokines, and the increased biosynthesis and accumulation of extracellular matrix in response to cytokine growth factors such as, transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-β) and platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF).
Clinical efficacy:
The clinical efficacy of pirfenidone has been studied in four Phase 3, multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled studies in patients with IPF. Three of the Phase 3 studies (PIPF-004, PIPF-006, and PIPF-016) were multinational, and one (SP3) was conducted in Japan.
PIPF-004 and PIPF-006 compared treatment with pirfenidone 2403 mg/day to placebo. The studies were nearly identical in design, with few exceptions including an intermediate dose group (1,197 mg/day) in PIPF-004. In both studies, treatment was administered three times daily for a minimum of 72 weeks. The primary endpoint in both studies was the change from Baseline to Week 72 in percent predicted Forced Vital Capacity (FVC). In the combined PIPF-004 and PIPF-006 population treated with the dose of 2,403 mg/d comprising in total 692 patients, the median baseline percent predicted FVC values were 73.9% in the pirfenidone group and 72.0% in the placebo group (range: 50-123% and 48-138%, respectively), and the median baseline percent predicted Carbon Monoxide Diffusing Capacity (DLco) 45.1% in the pirfenidone group and 45.6% in the placebo group (range: 25-81% and 21-94%, respectively). In PIPF-004, 2.4% in the pirfenidone group and 2.1% in the placebo group had percent predicted FVC below 50% and/or percent predicted DLco below 35% at Baseline. In PIPF-006, 1.0% in the pirfenidone group and 1.4% in the placebo group had percent predicted FVC below 50% and/or percent predicted DLco below 35% at Baseline.
In study PIPF-004, the decline of percent predicted FVC from Baseline at Week 72 of treatment was significantly reduced in patients receiving pirfenidone (N=174) compared with patients receiving placebo (N=174; p=0.001, rank ANCOVA). Treatment with pirfenidone also significantly reduced the decline of percent predicted FVC from Baseline at Weeks 24 (p=0.014), 36 (p<0.001), 48 (p<0.001), and 60 (p<0.001). At Week 72, a decline from baseline in percent predicted FVC of ≥10% (a threshold indicative of the risk of mortality in IPF) was seen in 20% of patients receiving pirfenidone compared to 35% receiving placebo (Table 2).
Table 2: Categorical assessment of change from Baseline to Week 72 in percent predicted FVC in study PIPF-004
| | Pirfenidone 2,403 mg/day (N=174) | Placebo (N=174) |
| Decline of ≥10% or death or lung transplant | 35 (20%) | 60 (34%) |
| Decline of less than 10% | 97 (56%) | 90 (52%) |
| No decline (FVC change >0%) | 42 (24%) | 24 (14%) |
Although there was no difference between patients receiving pirfenidone compared to placebo in change from Baseline to Week 72 of distance walked during a six minute walk test (6MWT) by the prespecified rank ANCOVA, in an ad hoc analysis, 37% of patients receiving pirfenidone showed a decline of ≥50 m in 6MWT distance, compared to 47% of patients receiving placebo in PIPF-004.
In study PIPF-006, treatment with pirfenidone (N=171) did not reduce the decline of percent predicted FVC from Baseline at Week 72 compared with placebo (N=173; p=0.501). However, treatment with pirfenidone reduced the decline of percent predicted FVC from Baseline at Weeks 24 (p<0.001), 36 (p=0.011), and 48 (p=0.005). At Week 72, a decline in FVC of ≥10% was seen in 23% of patients receiving pirfenidone and 27% receiving placebo (Table 3).
Table 3: Categorical assessment of change from Baseline to Week 72 in percent predicted FVC in study PIPF-006
| | Pirfenidone 2,403 mg/day (N=171) | Placebo (N=173) |
| Decline of ≥10% or death or lung transplant | 39 (23%) | 46 (27%) |
| Decline of less than 10% | 88 (52%) | 89 (51%) |
| No decline (FVC change >0%) | 44 (26%) | 38 (22%) |
The decline in 6MWT distance from Baseline to Week 72 was significantly reduced compared with placebo in study PIPF-006 (p<0.001, rank ANCOVA). Additionally, in an ad hoc analysis, 33% of patients receiving pirfenidone showed a decline of ≥50 m in 6MWT distance, compared to 47% of patients receiving placebo in PIPF-006.
In a pooled analysis of survival in PIPF-004 and PIPF-006 the mortality rate with pirfenidone 2403 mg/day group was 7.8% compared with 9.8% with placebo (HR 0.77 [95% CI, 0.47–1.28]).
PIPF-016 compared treatment with pirfenidone 2,403 mg/day to placebo. Treatment was administered three times daily for 52 weeks. The primary endpoint was the change from Baseline to Week 52 in percent predicted FVC. In a total of 555 patients, the median baseline percent predicted FVC and %DLCO were 68% (range: 48–91%) and 42% (range: 27–170%), respectively. Two percent of patients had percent predicted FVC below 50% and 21% of patients had a percent predicted DLCO below 35% at Baseline.
In study PIPF-016, the decline of percent predicted FVC from Baseline at Week 52 of treatment was significantly reduced in patients receiving pirfenidone (N=278) compared with patients receiving placebo (N=277; p<0.000001, rank ANCOVA). Treatment with pirfenidone also significantly reduced the decline of percent predicted FVC from Baseline at Weeks 13 (p<0.000001), 26 (p<0.000001), and 39 (p=0.000002). At Week 52, a decline from Baseline in percent predicted FVC of ≥10% or death was seen in 17% of patients receiving pirfenidone compared to 32% receiving placebo (Table 4).
Table 4: Categorical assessment of change from Baseline to Week 52 in percent predicted FVC in study PIPF-016
| | Pirfenidone 2,403 mg/day (N=278) | Placebo (N=277) |
| Decline of ≥10% or death | 46 (17%) | 88 (32%) |
| Decline of less than 10% | 169 (61%) | 162 (58%) |
| No decline (FVC change >0%) | 63 (23%) | 27 (10%) |
The decline in distance walked during a 6MWT from Baseline to Week 52 was significantly reduced in patients receiving pirfenidone compared with patients receiving placebo in PIPF-016 (p=0.036, rank ANCOVA); 26% of patients receiving pirfenidone showed a decline of ≥50 m in 6MWT distance compared to 36% of patients receiving placebo.
In a pre-specified pooled analysis of studies PIPF-016, PIPF-004, and PIPF-006 at Month 12, all-cause mortality was significantly lower in pirfenidone 2403 mg/day group (3.5%, 22 of 623 patients) compared with placebo (6.7%, 42 of 624 patients), resulting in a 48% reduction in the risk of all-cause mortality within the first 12 months (HR 0.52 [95% CI, 0.31–0.87], p=0.0107, log-rank test).
The study (SP3) in Japanese patients compared pirfenidone 1800 mg/day (comparable to 2403 mg/day in the US and European populations of PIPF-004/006 on a weight-normalised basis) with placebo (N=110, N=109, respectively). Treatment with pirfenidone significantly reduced mean decline in vital capacity (VC) at Week 52 (the primary endpoint) compared with placebo (-0.09±0.02 l versus -0.16±0.02 l respectively, p=0.042).
IPF patients with advanced lung function impairment
In pooled post-hoc analyses of studies PIPF-004, PIPF-006 and PIPF-016, in the population of advanced IPF (n = 170) with FVC < 50% at baseline and/or DLco < 35% at baseline, the annual decline of FVC in patients receiving pirfenidone (n=90) compared with patients receiving placebo (n=80) was -150.9 mL and -277.6 mL, respectively.
In MA29957, a supportive 52-week Phase IIb, multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial in IPF patients with advanced lung function impairment (DLco < 40% of predicted) and at high risk of grade 3 pulmonary hypertension, 89 patients treated with pirfenidone monotherapy had a similar decline in FVC as pirfenidone -treated patients in the post-hoc analysis of the pooled phase 3 trials PIPF-004, PIPF-006, and PIPF-016.