Abstract
Background: The benefit of antibiotic treatment of acute drops
in FEV 1 percent predicted (FEV 1pp) has
been clearly established, but data from the early 2000’s showed
inconsistent treatment. Further, there is no empirical evidence for what
magnitude of drop is clinically significant. Methods: We used
data from the CF Foundation Patient Registry (CFFPR) from 2016-2019 to
determine the association between treatment (any IV antibiotics, only
oral or newly prescribed inhaled antibiotics, or no antibiotic therapy)
following a decline of ≥5% from baseline FEV 1pp and
return to 100% baseline FEV 1pp days using
multivariable logistic regression including an interaction between the
magnitude of decline and treatment category. Results: Overall,
16,495 PWCF had a decline : 16.5% were treated with IV antibiotics,
25.0% non-IV antibiotics, and 58.5% received no antibiotics.
Antibiotic treatment was more likely for those with lower lung function,
history of a positive PA culture, older age and larger FEV
1 decline (p<0.001). Treatment with IV
antibiotics or oral/inhaled antibiotics was associated with a higher
odds of recovery to baseline compared to no treatment across all levels
of decline, including declines of 5-10%. Conclusions: A large
proportion of acute drops in FEV1 pp continue to be
untreated, especially in younger patients and those with higher baseline
lung function. Acute drops as small as 5% predicted are less likely to
be recovered if antibiotic treatment is not prescribed. These findings
suggest the need for more aggressive antimicrobial treatment of acute
drops in FEV 1, including those of a magnitude
previously believed to be associated with self-recovery.