Journal article icon

Journal article

Lung function decline and variable airway inflammatory pattern: longitudinal analysis of severe asthma.

Abstract:
BACKGROUND: Eosinophilic airway inflammation measured by using induced sputum is an important treatment stratification tool in patients with severe asthma. In addition, sputum eosinophilia has been shown to be associated with severe exacerbations and airflow limitation. OBJECTIVES: We sought to identify whether eosinophilic inflammation in sputum is associated with FEV₁ decrease in patients with severe asthma and whether we could identify subgroups of decrease behavior based on the variation of eosinophilic airway inflammation over time. METHODS: Ninety-seven patients with severe asthma from the Glenfield Asthma Cohort were followed up with scheduled 3-month visits; the median duration of follow-up and number of visits was 6 years (interquartile range, 5.6-7.6 years) and 2.7 visits per year. Induced sputum was analyzed for eosinophilic inflammation at scheduled visits. Linear mixed-effects models were used to identify variables associated with lung function and overall decrease. In addition, using individual patients' mean and SD sputum eosinophil percentages over time, a 2-step cluster analysis was performed to identify patient clusters with different rates of decrease. RESULTS: FEV₁ decrease was -25.7 mL/y in the overall population. Postbronchodilator FEV₁ was also dependent on exacerbations, age of onset, height, age, sex, and log10 sputum eosinophil percentages (P < .001). Three decrease patient clusters were identified: (1) noneosinophilic with low variation (mean decrease, -14.0 mL/y), (2) eosinophilic with high variation (mean decrease, -40.9 mL/y), and (3) hypereosinophilic with low variation (mean decrease in lung function, -19.2 mL/y). CONCLUSION: The amplitude of sputum eosinophilia was associated with postbronchodilator FEV₁ in asthmatic patients. In contrast, high variability rather than the amplitude at baseline or over time of sputum eosinophils was associated with accelerated FEV₁ decrease.
Publication status:
Published

Actions

Access Document

Publisher copy:
10.1016/j.jaci.2014.04.005

Authors


Journal:
Journal of allergy and clinical immunology More from this journal
Volume:
134
Issue:
2
Pages:
287-294
Publication date:
2014-08-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1097-6825
ISSN:
0091-6749


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:470394
UUID:
uuid:e879b00a-cc60-4d6e-9295-94d551e27d2e
Local pid:
pubs:470394
Source identifiers:
470394
Deposit date:
2014-07-04
ARK identifier:

Terms of use


Views and Downloads






If you are the owner of this record, you can report an update to it here: Report update to this record

TO TOP