While ABPA and CPA represent two distinct manifestations of Aspergillus-related lung disease, there is an overlap of investigations that are currently used for the diagnosis of these entities. In a previous study, the authors have demonstrated that 22% of subjects with CPA fulfilled the obligatory criteria for ABPA. While the preferable therapy in patients with ABPA is systemic glucocorticoids, the primary therapy in CPA is oral triazoles. However, a different management protocol in the "overlap group" with low doses of glucocorticoids and triazoles, needs to be systematically explored. In this study the investigators intend to compare the clinical outcomes in subjects with ABPA-CPA overlap treated either with oral azoles or a combination of systemic glucocorticoids and oral azoles.
Aspergillus causes a variety of pulmonary disorders depending on the host immunity. In immunocompetent hosts, it can cause allergic diseases, the prototype being allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA). In immunosuppressed host, it causes life-threatening invasive disease. Chronic pulmonary aspergillosis (CPA) represents chronic Aspergillus infection of the pulmonary parenchyma in subjects with normal or slightly suppressed immunity, and generally an underlying structural lung disease (previously treated pulmonary tuberculosis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, sarcoidosis, diffuse parenchymal lung disease and others). The diagnosis of CPA is based on the presence of clinical symptoms (low-grade fever, weight loss, malaise, chronic cough, recurrent hemoptysis and others), radiological features (combination of one or more cavities and presence of fungal ball or fibrosis, pericavitary infiltrates, consolidation, nodules and pleural thickening) and the demonstration of either direct (growth of Aspergillus on sputum or bronchoalveolar lavage fluid \[BALF\] culture) or indirect (elevated serum or BALF galactomannan index or A.fumigatus-specific IgG or precipitin in serum) evidence of Aspergillus infection. Primarily seen in patients with asthma and cystic fibrosis, the diagnosis of ABPA is currently made on the combination of clinical (low grade fever, hemoptysis and others), radiological (bronchiectasis, mucus impaction, centrilobular nodules and others) and immunological (A.fumigatus-specific IgE and IgG, total IgE, and elevated eosinophils) findings. While ABPA and CPA represent two distinct manifestations of Aspergillus-related lung disease, there is an overlap of investigations that are currently used for the diagnosis of these entities. For example, A.fumigatus-specific IgG and Aspergillus precipitins are used both in diagnosing ABPA and CPA.(10) The culture of respiratory tract secretions can demonstrate the growth of Aspergillus in both these disorders. Also, ABPA is a predisposing condition for developing CPA and it is likely that both ABPA and CPA may coexist. In a previous study, the authors have demonstrated that 22% of subjects with CPA fulfilled the obligatory criteria for ABPA. While CPA is primarily due to dysfunction of Th-1 immunity, ABPA represents an inflammatory response due to Th-2 hyper response. Thus, it is possible that subjects with ABPA-CPA overlap could have components of both heightened inflammatory response and local immune dysfunction thereby perpetuating structural lung damage. While the preferable therapy in patients with ABPA is systemic glucocorticoids, the primary therapy in CPA is oral triazoles. However, a different management protocol in the "overlap group" with low doses of glucocorticoids and triazoles, needs to be systematically explored. In this study the investigators intend to compare the clinical outcomes in subjects with ABPA-CPA overlap treated either with oral azoles or a combination of systemic glucocorticoids and oral azoles.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
104
Oral prednisolone 0.5 mg/Kg body weight tapered over 4 months and oral itraconazole (400 mg/day). The dose of itraconazole will be adjusted according to therapeutic drug monitoring to achieve a serum trough level of 0.5 microgram/mL. traconazole will be given for 12 months
Oral itraconazole (400 mg/day). The dose of itraconazole will be adjusted according to therapeutic drug monitoring to achieve a serum trough level of 0.5 microgram/mL. Itraconazole will be given for 12 months
Chest clinic, PGIMER
Chandigarh, India
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITINGChest clinic
Chandigarh, India
RECRUITINGFavourable response at six months after the randomization
Proportion of subjects with an overall favourable response at six months after the randomization. The overall response will be categorized as favourable: improved or stable clinical response with radiologically improved or stable disease
Time frame: 6 months after randomization
Overall favourable response at 12 months after randomization
Proportion of subjects with an overall favourable response at 12 months after the randomization. The overall response will be categorized as favourable: improved or stable clinical response with radiologically improved or stable disease
Time frame: 12 months after randomization
frequency of relapses at 18-months after randomization
Relapse: will be defined as persistent worsening of symptoms (for 14 days or more) as measured by VAS and radiological worsening. The subjects will be investigated for other causes of worsening such as bacterial infection or reinfection/reactivation of tuberculosis before labelling the worsening due to relapse of CPA. A relapse will be defined as an event that occurs 3 months after stopping treatment
Time frame: 18 months after randomization
adverse events in either arm
Adverse events due to systemic glucocorticoids and oral itraconazole will be assessed at 2 weeks after treatment initiation and then at 3 months interval till treatment completion
Time frame: 12 months after randomization
Serum total IgE response to treatment
proportion of subjects with 25% reduction in serum IgE at 6 weeks after treatment initiation
Time frame: 6 weeks after treatment initiation
Serum total IgE during relapse
Proportion of subjects with 50% increase in serum IgE during relapse
Time frame: 18 months after randomization
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