Science and Research

Cystic Fibrosis Microbiome-directed Antibiotic Therapy Trial in Exacerbations Results Stratified (CFMATTERS): Results of a multi-centre randomised controlled trial

BACKGROUND: This study explores the effectiveness and safety of microbiome-directed-antimicrobial-therapy versus usual-antimicrobial-therapy in adult cystic fibrosis pulmonary exacerbations. METHODS: A multi-centre two-arm parallel randomised control trial conducted across Europe/North-America enrolled 223 participants (January 2015 - August 2017). All participants were chronically colonised with Pseudomonas aeruginosa and were randomised 1:1 into two study-arms. The "usual-therapy group" received 2-weeks of IV ceftazidime 3g thrice-daily (for allergies: aztreonam 2g thrice-daily) and tobramycin 5-10mg·kg(-1) once-daily. The "microbiome-directed group" received the same usual-therapy plus an additional antibiotic with greatest presumed activity against the 2nd, 3rd and 4th most abundant genera present in the sputum microbiome, selected by a Consensus Expert Treatment Panel. The primary outcome was change in percentage of predicted FEV(1) (ppFEV(1)) at 14 days post initiation of antibiotics. Secondary outcomes examined ppFEV(1) at 7 days, 28 days, and 3 months; time-to-next exacerbation; symptom burden at 7 days; Health Related Quality of Life (HRQoL) at 28 days; and number of exacerbations and IV antibiotic days at 12 months. RESULTS: 149 participants had an eligible exacerbation (usual-therapy n=83, microbiome-directed therapy n=66). There was no difference between the groups for ppFEV(1) at day 14 (-1.1%, 95%CI -3.9 to 1.7; p=0.46), or ppFEV(1) measured at other time-points, or for time-to-next exacerbation (microbiome-directed versus usual-therapy Hazard Ratio 0.91 [95%CI 0.60 to 1.38; p=0.66]). The microbiome-directed group trended to have more IV days (median 42 versus 28; p=0.08) and more subsequent exacerbations (median 3 versus 2; p=0.044) the following year. There were no appreciable differences in symptom burden; however, HRQoL sub-scores were consistently worse in the microbiome-directed group (-4.3 points versus usual therapy (95%CI -8.3 to -0.3, p=0.033). CONCLUSION: The addition of a third antibiotic based on sputum microbiome sequencing analysis did not result in improved clinical outcomes.

  • Plant, B. J.
  • Einarsson, G. G.
  • Deasy, K. F.
  • Dahly, D.
  • Singh, P. K.
  • Barry, P. J.
  • Goss, C. H.
  • Fajac, I.
  • Vagg, T.
  • Durieu, I.
  • Flanagan, E.
  • O'Callaghan, G.
  • Martin, C.
  • Burgel, P. R.
  • Haworth, C. S.
  • Floto, R. A.
  • Downey, D. G.
  • Dupont, L. J.
  • Jones, A. M.
  • Elborn, J. S.
  • Eustace, J. A.
  • Mall, M. A.
  • Tunney, M. M.
Publication details
DOI: 10.1183/13993003.02443-2024
Journal: Eur Respir J
Work Type: Original
Location: Assoziierter Partner
Disease Area: CFBE
Partner / Member: BIH
Access-Number: 40506211


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