1. Sputum biomarkers and the prediction of clinical outcomes in patients with cystic fibrosis.
- Author
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Theodore G Liou, Frederick R Adler, Ruth H Keogh, Yanping Li, Judy L Jensen, William Walsh, Kristyn Packer, Teresa Clark, Holly Carveth, Jun Chen, Shaunessy L Rogers, Christen Lane, James Moore, Anne Sturrock, Robert Paine, David R Cox, and John R Hoidal
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Lung function, acute pulmonary exacerbations (APE), and weight are the best clinical predictors of survival in cystic fibrosis (CF); however, underlying mechanisms are incompletely understood. Biomarkers of current disease state predictive of future outcomes might identify mechanisms and provide treatment targets, trial endpoints and objective clinical monitoring tools. Such CF-specific biomarkers have previously been elusive. Using observational and validation cohorts comprising 97 non-transplanted consecutively-recruited adult CF patients at the Intermountain Adult CF Center, University of Utah, we identified biomarkers informative of current disease and predictive of future clinical outcomes. Patients represented the majority of sputum producers. They were recruited March 2004-April 2007 and followed through May 2011. Sputum biomarker concentrations were measured and clinical outcomes meticulously recorded for a median 5.9 (interquartile range 5.0 to 6.6) years to study associations between biomarkers and future APE and time-to-lung transplantation or death. After multivariate modeling, only high mobility group box-1 protein (HMGB-1, mean=5.84 [log ng/ml], standard deviation [SD] =1.75) predicted time-to-first APE (hazard ratio [HR] per log-unit HMGB-1=1.56, p-value=0.005), number of future APE within 5 years (0.338 APE per log-unit HMGB-1, p
- Published
- 2012
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