September 15, 2016

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New clinical guidelines for lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM), a rare lung disease

The American Thoracic Society (ATS) and the Japanese Respiratory Society (JRS) have published new clinical practice guidelines for the diagnosis and management of lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM), a rare lung disease that primarily affects women of child-bearing age.

The guidelines are published in the Sept. 15 issue of the ATS's American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine and are available.

LAM is a systemic disease that affects about five per million women. In with LAM, neoplastic smooth muscle-like cells arise from an unknown source, infiltrate the lung and result in cystic changes. Lung function declines at two to four times the normal rate, often punctuated by repeated lung collapses. Most patients are breathless with daily activities and require supplemental oxygen within 10 years of onset of symptoms.

The European Respiratory Society published comprehensive LAM guidelines in 2010. Over the last six years, however, rapid advances in LAM science have identified an effective treatment and a useful diagnostic biomarker. LAM experts within the ATS and JRS communities joined forces to develop recommendations for these new diagnostic and therapeutic tools.

The guidelines, written by a 27-member multidisciplinary committee of clinicians and scientists, make five recommendations related to the diagnosis and treatment of the disease based on a systematic review of medical studies published through May 2015. The strength of the recommendations and the quality of the evidence supporting them were rated using the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation, or GRADE, approach.

Joel Moss, MD, PhD, deputy chief, cardiovascular and pulmonary branch, of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, and Francis X. McCormack, MD, director of the division of pulmonary, and sleep medicine at the University of Cincinnati, chaired the guidelines committee. Input from LAM patients was obtained through a questionnaire distributed by the LAM Foundation.

The committee made five key recommendations based on evidence of varying quality:

Dr. Moss emphasized that the guidelines should be applied with due consideration to clinical context and to the special circumstances affecting individual patients. "No two patients are alike," he said. "The guidelines cannot take into account all of the complexities that clinicians face when making treatment decisions for patients with a rare lung disease."

Dr. McCormack added, "The sirolimus and VEGF-D recommendations were based on moderate quality evidence, but overall the evidence base for LAM is limited. The literature search only uncovered two randomized, controlled trials. As the field evolves, recommendations regarding hormonal therapies and other interventions are likely to change."

The guidelines also highlight research opportunities related to each of the recommendations. Among those are the:

Dr. Moss said that the guidelines committee tackled additional questions relating to diagnostic utility of computed tomography, pneumothorax and pulmonary transplantation in patients with LAM that will be submitted for publication in late 2016.

"The LAM will need to be updated frequently," added Dr. McCormack, "because the pace of discovery in LAM continues to accelerate."

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