• Scientific reports · Nov 2018

    Clinical Trial

    Sweat rate analysis of ivacaftor potentiation of CFTR in non-CF adults.

    • Jeeyeon Kim, Miesha Farahmand, Colleen Dunn, Carlos E Milla, Rina I Horii, Thomas Ewart A C EAC Department of Psychology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, 94305, USA., Richard B Moss, and Jeffrey J Wine.
    • Cystic Fibrosis Research Laboratory, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, 94305, USA.
    • Sci Rep. 2018 Nov 2; 8 (1): 16233.

    AbstractTo determine if ivacaftor (Kalydeco) influences non-CF human CFTR function in vivo, we measured CFTR-dependent (C-sweat) and CFTR-independent (M-sweat) rates from multiple identified sweat glands in 8 non-CF adults. The two types of sweating were stimulated sequentially with intradermal injections of appropriate reagents; each gland served as its own control via alternating off-on drug tests on both arms, given at weekly intervals with 3 off and 3 on tests per subject. We compared drug effects on C-sweating stimulated by either high or low concentrations of β-adrenergic cocktail, and on methacholine-stimulated M-sweating. For each subject we measured ~700 sweat volumes from ~75 glands per arm (maximum 12 readings per gland), and sweat volumes were log-transformed for statistical analysis. T-tests derived from linear mixed models (LMMs) were more conservative than the familiar paired sample t-tests, and show that ivacaftor significantly increased C-sweating stimulated by both levels of agonist, with a larger effect in the low cocktail condition; ivacaftor did not increase M-sweat. Concurrent sweat chloride tests detected no effect of ivacaftor. We conclude that ivacaftor in vivo increases the open channel probability (PO) of WT CFTR, provided it is not already maximally stimulated.

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