Reference
Konstan, Michael W, et al. “Epidemiologic Study of Cystic Fibrosis: 25 Years of Observational Research”. Pediatr. Pulmonol., vol. 56, no. 5, May 2021, pp. 823–836.
Abstract
The Epidemiologic Study of Cystic Fibrosis (ESCF) was a
prospective observational study of over 32,000 people with
cystic fibrosis (CF) from 250 clinical care sites in North
America from 1994 to 2005. Begun as a pharmacovigilance study in
connection with the approval of dornase alfa in 1993, ESCF was
open to all people with CF treated at any participating site in
the United States or Canada. In addition to obtaining safety and
effectiveness data on dornase alfa, ESCF collected
encounter-based data to characterize the natural history and
management of CF with a special focus on lung disease. During
the study, 32,178 patients reported at least one encounter,
contributing 869,136 encounters, 622,592 pulmonary function
tests, 432,896 cultures, and 118,563 pulmonary exacerbations
treated with intravenous antibiotics. Although ESCF data
collection concluded in 2005, through a collaboration with the
U.S. Cystic Fibrosis Foundation Patient Registry, additional
follow-up data through 2017 was available for two-thirds of
patients. This allowed for updating of CF genotype and survival
information. Fifty-six peer-reviewed publications (cited over
3600 times) resulted from this study. In this manuscript we
summarize the published ESCF manuscripts in thematic groups with
key study findings and brief comments, and speculate on how ESCF
findings will inform future data registries and patient care
practices.