IPF Life Expectancy in 2026: What the Statistics Don’t Tell You

Elderly man using oxygen mask representing IPF idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis life expectancy and what current research and new treatments show in 2026

⚠️ Medical Disclaimer: This article is for educational and informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult your pulmonologist or healthcare provider regarding your individual prognosis and treatment options. Clinical information sourced from peer-reviewed literature, FDA announcements, and publicly available clinical trial data as cited throughout this article.

Key Takeaways

  • The historical median survival estimate of 3–5 years after IPF diagnosis predates the widespread availability of antifibrotic therapies — and the outlook has measurably improved since then
  • OFEV (nintedanib) and Esbriet (pirfenidone) have both been shown to slow lung function decline by approximately 50% compared to placebo in landmark clinical trials
  • In October 2025, the FDA approved Jascayd (nerandomilast) — the first new IPF treatment in over a decade — offering patients a third treatment option with a different mechanism of action
  • AI-driven drug discovery is now identifying new IPF targets that human researchers had not previously found, accelerating the pipeline dramatically
  • More than 80 companies are developing over 100 therapies for IPF as of 2024 — the research landscape has never been more active
  • QuickRx provides free OFEV copay assistance navigation — call (917) 830-2525

If you or someone you love has just been diagnosed with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, there is a good chance the first statistic you encountered was brutal: a median survival of 3 to 5 years. We are not going to pretend that number does not exist — because it does, and it matters, and anyone living with IPF deserves honesty about what they are facing.

But here is what that number does not tell you: it was calculated largely before the treatments we now have were widely available. And the story of IPF in 2025 and beyond looks meaningfully different.

This article starts with the hard truth — and then takes you somewhere more hopeful, because the science has earned it.

“One of the hardest conversations we have with IPF patients is around the statistics they’ve read online. What I try to help them understand is that those numbers come from an era before the treatments we have now. The research is moving fast — and our job at QuickRx is to make sure cost is never the reason someone can’t access the medications that are giving people more time.”

Julia Kravtsova PharmD Head Patient Navigator QuickRx Specialty Pharmacy
Julia Kravtsova, PharmD, Head Patient Navigator at QuickRx Specialty Pharmacy

The reality of an IPF diagnosis — what the numbers say

Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis is a progressive, chronic lung disease in which scar tissue — fibrosis — forms in the lungs, gradually replacing healthy tissue and making breathing harder over time. The word “idiopathic” means the exact cause remains unknown, which makes it both difficult to prevent and difficult to treat.

The statistics are sobering — but they belong to an era that is already changing.

Median survival after diagnosis
2–5 yrs
Pre-antifibrotic era data
Die from IPF, not just with it
60%
Most after acute exacerbation
Delay: symptoms to diagnosis
1–2 yrs
Lung function already impaired
US deaths in 3-year period
67,843
2020–2022 (CDC MMWR)

Sources: AJRCCM 2011 · CDC MMWR 2025 · Medscape IPF Overview

These numbers are real, and patients and caregivers deserve to understand them. But they are also, increasingly, the numbers of a different era of IPF care — one that existed before two FDA-approved antifibrotic medications fundamentally changed the disease trajectory for hundreds of thousands of patients worldwide.


Why those statistics are already becoming outdated

The frequently cited 3–5 year survival estimate originates from studies conducted largely before 2014 — the year both OFEV (nintedanib) and Esbriet (pirfenidone) received FDA approval as the first-ever treatments shown to slow the progression of IPF.

Before 2014, there was no approved treatment that meaningfully altered the disease course. The statistics reflected a disease in an era of best supportive care only — symptom management, oxygen, pulmonary rehabilitation — without anything capable of reducing the rate of lung scarring itself.

Real-world data published in the American Journal of Managed Care now shows that antifibrotic therapy use is associated with improvement in life expectancy in real-world IPF populations — not just in tightly controlled clinical trials. Lung transplantation — now increasingly performed for IPF patients — offers approximately 89% 1-year survival and 74% 3-year survival for those who qualify.

The course of IPF still varies widely. Some patients experience rapid progression. Others remain relatively stable for years. No medication currently available cures IPF or reverses existing scarring. But the trajectory of what is possible has shifted — and it continues to shift.


OFEV — still the gold standard, still the most accessible option today

OFEV (nintedanib) remains the most prescribed, most studied, and most accessible first-line treatment for IPF in 2026. Manufactured by Boehringer Ingelheim and FDA-approved in October 2014, it now has over a decade of real-world safety and efficacy data behind it — along with robust copay assistance programs that make it affordable for most commercially insured patients. While newer medications are exciting, OFEV is what is available, proven, and accessible right now. The evidence behind it is some of the most important data in the history of this disease.

In the landmark INPULSIS-1 and INPULSIS-2 clinical trials, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, nintedanib reduced the annual rate of forced vital capacity (FVC) decline — the primary measure of lung function loss — by approximately 50% compared to placebo. The chart below shows what that means in real numbers.

Without treatment (placebo)
With OFEV (nintedanib)
Annual lung function decline (ml/year)
Without treatment
240 ml/yr
With OFEV
115 ml/yr
~52% reduction in annual lung function loss with nintedanib

Source: Richeldi et al., N Engl J Med 2014;370:2071–2082 (INPULSIS-1 & INPULSIS-2)

In INPULSIS-2, nintedanib also significantly reduced the risk of acute exacerbations. Long-term extension data confirmed that this benefit persisted for up to three years of continuous treatment, and a combined analysis shows a trend toward reduced mortality.

A separate analysis published in the Journal of Managed Care & Specialty Pharmacy found that pirfenidone (Esbriet) improved mean life expectancy by approximately 2.47 years compared to best supportive care alone. The chart below puts that in perspective.

Best supportive care only
With pirfenidone (Esbriet)
Mean life expectancy (years)
Best supportive care
6.24 yrs
With pirfenidone
8.72 yrs
+2.47 years mean life expectancy gained with pirfenidone vs. best supportive care

Source: Fisher et al., J Manag Care Spec Pharm 2017. Based on ASCEND & CAPACITY trial populations.

“OFEV doesn’t cure IPF — but it gives people more time. And more time matters enormously. Making sure every eligible patient can actually access and afford nintedanib is something we take personally at QuickRx.”

Julia Kravtsova PharmD Head Patient Navigator QuickRx Specialty Pharmacy
Julia Kravtsova, PharmD, Head Patient Navigator at QuickRx Specialty Pharmacy

Is OFEV (nintedanib) part of your IPF treatment plan?

QuickRx provides free copay assistance enrollment — most commercially insured patients pay $0 per fill. Our patient navigators handle everything at no cost to you.

Get Free OFEV Copay Assistance →

Or call us directly: (917) 830-2525


The first new IPF treatment in over a decade — approved October 2025

For eleven years after the approval of nintedanib and pirfenidone, the IPF treatment landscape remained unchanged. Then, on October 7, 2025, the FDA approved Jascayd (nerandomilast) — the first new IPF treatment in over a decade.

Nerandomilast is a first-in-class, oral, preferential inhibitor of phosphodiesterase 4B (PDE4B). Its mechanism of action is distinct from both OFEV and Esbriet — working through both immunomodulatory and antifibrotic pathways. The FDA granted it both Priority Review and Breakthrough Therapy Designation.

The approval followed the FIBRONEER-IPF Phase III trial, published in the New England Journal of Medicine in May 2025. More than 2,200 patients in over 40 countries participated. Participants on nerandomilast saw significantly less FVC decline compared to placebo — and crucially, the drug worked both as a standalone therapy and alongside existing treatments like nintedanib.

Action for Pulmonary Fibrosis called the results “a breakthrough we can actually see” — marking a turning point after more than a decade without new options.

Pre-2014
No approved treatments
Best supportive care only
Symptom management, oxygen therapy, pulmonary rehabilitation — nothing slowed the fibrosis itself. Median survival 2–5 years from diagnosis.
Oct 2014
FDA approved
OFEV (nintedanib) + Esbriet (pirfenidone)
First treatments proven to slow lung function decline — both approved the same day. FVC loss reduced by ~50%. (NEJM 2014)
2022
FDA approved
Tyvaso (treprostinil) for IPF + PAH
Inhaled treprostinil approved for IPF patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension, expanding options for a high-risk subgroup.
May 2025
Phase III results — NEJM
Nerandomilast FIBRONEER trials published
2,200+ patients in 40+ countries. Significant slowing of FVC decline vs. placebo, both standalone and add-on. (Action for PF)
Oct 2025
FDA approved — first new in a decade
Jascayd (nerandomilast) approved
First-in-class PDE4B inhibitor. Breakthrough Therapy Designation. Completely different mechanism from OFEV or Esbriet — opens door to combination therapy. (Boehringer Ingelheim)
2026+
In progress
Admilparant, Tyvaso IPF expansion, AI-discovered agents
Phase III trials ongoing. 80+ companies, 100+ therapies in development globally. (AJMC pipeline report)

What is coming next — the research pipeline

The approval of nerandomilast marks the beginning of what may be the most active and promising period in IPF drug development ever recorded. According to a 2024 pipeline analysis published in AJMC, more than 80 companies worldwide are developing more than 100 therapies for IPF — spanning preclinical through Phase III.

Notable developments include United Therapeutics’ inhaled treprostinil (Tyvaso), which posted positive Phase III TETON-2 results in September 2025. The Pulmonary Fibrosis Foundation called the TETON-2 results “a significant accomplishment for the drug development space and PF community.” Bristol Myers Squibb’s admilparant, an LPA1 receptor antagonist, is also in Phase III with results expected by October 2026.

The journal Expert Review of Clinical Pharmacology identified 30 experimental agents with unique mechanisms of action under evaluation for IPF in a 2024 review — a number that would have been unimaginable a decade ago.


How AI is accelerating IPF drug discovery

Perhaps the most unexpected development in IPF research is the role that artificial intelligence is beginning to play — and it is genuinely remarkable.

In 2024, results appeared in Nature Medicine from the first Phase 2a trial of a drug entirely discovered and designed by generative AI. The drug, rentosertib, developed by Insilico Medicine, targets TNIK — a kinase in fibrotic pathways that human researchers had not previously identified as an IPF drug target. The AI platform found it by integrating genomics, transcriptomics, and proteomics data simultaneously — a task that would have taken human researchers years to analyze manually.

The Phase 2a trial enrolled 71 patients at 21 sites in China. Results showed the drug was safe with early efficacy signals. A global Phase IIb study is now in planning.

This matters because AI does not just speed up drug development — it finds entirely new doors. Every novel mechanism of action identified represents a potential path to therapies that work differently, work better, or work for patients who do not respond to current options.

The future of IPF treatment is genuinely exciting — but it is still the future. OFEV (nintedanib) remains the most proven, most widely accessible, and most prescribed treatment available to IPF patients today. With over a decade of real-world data and copay assistance programs that bring the cost to $0 for most commercially insured patients, there is no reason to wait. QuickRx can help you start OFEV — or stay on it — without cost being a barrier.

Learn about free OFEV copay assistance at QuickRx →  |  (917) 830-2525

3
FDA-approved IPF treatments as of Oct 2025
80+
Companies developing IPF therapies globally
100+
Therapies in the IPF pipeline (2024)
1st
AI-designed drug to reach IPF clinical trial (2024)

Sources: AJMC 2024 pipeline report · Boehringer Ingelheim · Nature Medicine 2025


💚 Affording Your IPF Medication

The medications giving IPF patients more time — OFEV, Esbriet, and now Jascayd — are only available through specialty pharmacies, and their list prices are among the highest in all of specialty pharmacy. Most patients with commercial insurance pay little or nothing, and patients without commercial insurance have options too.

QuickRx Specialty Pharmacy provides completely free OFEV copay assistance — and our patient navigators handle everything:

  • Manufacturer copay card enrollment for commercially insured patients
  • Patient assistance program applications for uninsured or underinsured patients
  • Foundation grant identification for Medicare patients
  • Prior authorization support and insurance appeals
  • Nationwide home delivery — licensed in all 50 states

The research is giving IPF patients more time. Our job is to make sure cost is never the reason someone loses access to that time.

Call QuickRx today: (917) 830-2525

Author: Paola Larrabure, Pharma Content Manager at QuickRx Specialty Pharmacy

Medically Reviewed by: Julia Kravtsova, PharmD, Head Patient Navigator at QuickRx Specialty Pharmacy

Last Updated: April 2026

References

  1. Ley B, Collard HR, King TE Jr. Clinical course and prediction of survival in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2011;183(4):431–440. atsjournals.org
  2. Richeldi L, du Bois RM, Raghu G, et al. Efficacy and safety of nintedanib in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. N Engl J Med. 2014;370(22):2071–2082. nejm.org
  3. Fisher M, Nathan SD, Hill C, et al. Predicting life expectancy for pirfenidone in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. J Manag Care Spec Pharm. 2017;23(3-b):S17–S24. jmcp.org
  4. Richeldi L, Azuma A, Cottin V, et al. Trial of a preferential phosphodiesterase 4B inhibitor for IPF (FIBRONEER-IPF). N Engl J Med. 2025;392:2193–2202. nejm.org
  5. Boehringer Ingelheim. FDA approves Jascayd (nerandomilast) for IPF. October 9, 2025. boehringer-ingelheim.com
  6. Action for Pulmonary Fibrosis. Landmark clinical trial offers new hope. May 19, 2025. actionpf.org
  7. Pulmonary Fibrosis Foundation. October 2025 clinical trial highlights. pulmonaryfibrosis.org
  8. Ren F, et al. A generative AI-discovered TNIK inhibitor for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis: a randomized phase 2a trial. Nature Medicine. 2025. nature.com
  9. Aribindi K, Liu GY, Albertson TE. Emerging pharmacological options in the treatment of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. Expert Rev Clin Pharmacol. 2024;17(9):817–835. PMC11441789
  10. AJMC. Real-world data on the course of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. ajmc.com
  11. CDC. Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis mortality by industry and occupation. MMWR. 2025;74(7). cdc.gov
  12. Action for Pulmonary Fibrosis. Pulmonary fibrosis life expectancy. actionpf.org
  13. AJMC. Report highlights advancements in 2024 IPF pipeline. ajmc.com

Comprehensive Medical Disclaimer: This article is published by QuickRx Specialty Pharmacy for educational and informational purposes only. It is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Statistics cited in this article reflect published research data and may not predict outcomes for any individual patient. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read in this article.

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