Abstract

Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a chronic progressive fibrotic lung disease with unknown cause. While the drugs nintedanib and pirfenidone have been approved for the treatment of IPF, they only slow disease progression and can induce several side-effects, suggesting that there is still an unmet need to develop new efficacious drugs, and interventions strategies, to combat this disease. We have recently developed a sheep model of pulmonary fibrosis for the preclinical testing of novel anti-fibrotic drugs. The aim of this study was to assess the effects of pirfenidone to ascertain its suitability as a benchmark for comparing other novel therapeutics in this sheep model. To initiate localized fibrosis, sheep were given two infusions of bleomycin (0.6 U/ml per infusion), a fortnight apart, to a specific lung segment. The contralateral lung segment in each sheep was infused with saline to act as an internal control. Two weeks after the final bleomycin infusion, either pirfenidone or methylcellulose (vehicle control) were administered orally to sheep twice daily for 5 weeks. Results showed that sheep treated with pirfenidone had improved lung function, ameliorated fibrotic pathology, lower numbers of active myofibroblasts, and reduced extra cellular matrix deposition when compared with the relevant measurements obtained from control sheep treated with vehicle. This study showed that pirfenidone can attenuate bleomycin-induced pulmonary fibrosis in sheep, and can therefore be used as a positive control to assess other novel therapeutics for IPF in this model.

Full Text
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