D30-19 Bronchial Rheoplasty for Chronic Bronchitis: 24-Month Results From the Rhesolve Study
M G Lester, A Valipour, G J Criner, M Castro, J Hovda, D Dibardino, R Kern, J S Kurman, F C SciurbaAbstract
Rationale
Chronic bronchitis (CB), a common phenotype of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), is characterized by pathologic mucus hypersecretion and is associated with substantial morbidity, impaired quality of life, and progressive functional decline, with prior studies demonstrating an average worsening of approximately one point/year on the COPD Assessment Test (CAT). Bronchial rheoplasty (BR) with RheOx® combines mechanical mucous plug disimpaction with pulsed electric field (PEF) energy to ablate and restore the airway mucosa. The RheSolve study was designed to provide evidence of safety and efficacy versus mechanical disimpaction alone. Primary endpoint results have been previously reported; final 2-year outcomes are reported here.
Methods
RheSolve was a prospective, randomized, double-blind study enrolling 273 patients with COPD and moderate-to-severe CB across 37 centers in the United States and Europe. Participants were randomized 2:1 to BR (n = 185) or a mechanical control procedure (n = 88). Following unblinding at 12 months, 75% of control patients crossed over to BR, precluding valid randomized comparisons beyond that time point; therefore, longer-term outcomes were evaluated using within-patient changes from baseline in the BR cohort. Outcomes included CAT, St George’s Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ), Cough and Sputum Assessment Questionnaire (CASA-Q), and pulmonary function tests (PFTs).
Results
Patients in the BR group represented a moderate to severe COPD CB phenotype at baseline (FEV1 60.9% predicted, emphysema (-950 HU) 11.0%, CAT 27.2 points, SGRQ 64.4) with most patients (93%) receiving a combination of ≥ 2 long-acting medications (LABA, LAMA, inhaled corticosteroids). The BR procedure was well-tolerated with no SAEs related to the device or procedure beyond 12 months. Both groups demonstrated clinically meaningful improvements in CAT, SGRQ, and CASA-Q at 12 months (P < 0.001), which were sustained in the BR group through 24 months. Follow-up was limited to 1 year in the mechanical control group, with outcomes demonstrating a modest regression towards baseline at 12 months (Figure). PFTs were also stable to improved in the BR group (changes from baseline to 24 months: FEV1 % Predicted 0.9 (±10.8) P = 0.319, FVC % Predicted 2.8% (±14.0) P = 0.02, FEV1/FVC -0.5% (±7.2) P = 0.449).
Conclusions
BR with RheOx® (e.g.,mechanical mucous plug disimpaction and PEF delivery) demonstrated clinically meaningful symptom improvement that was sustained through 24 months supporting BR as a therapeutic option for patients with persistent symptoms despite appropriate medical therapy.
This abstract is funded by: Galvanize Therapeutics