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CT and Functional MRI to Evaluate Airway Mucus in Severe Asthma

Authors :
Parameswaran Nair
Colm Boylan
Manali Mukherjee
Dante P. I. Capaldi
Ehsan A. Haider
Rachel L. Eddy
Grace Parraga
Sarah Svenningsen
Source :
Chest. 155:1178-1189
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2019.

Abstract

Intraluminal contributor(s) to airflow obstruction in severe asthma are patient-specific and must be evaluated to personalize treatment. The occurrence and functional consequence of airway mucus in the presence or absence of airway eosinophils remain undetermined.The objective of this study was to understand the functional consequence of airway mucus in the presence or absence of eosinophils and to identify biomarkers of mucus-related airflow obstruction.Mucus plugs were quantified on CT scans, and their contribution to ventilation heterogeneity (using MRI ventilation defect percent [VDP]) was evaluated in 27 patients with severe asthma. Patients were dichotomized based on sputum eosinophilia such that the relationship between mucus, eosinophilia, and ventilation heterogeneity could be investigated. Fractional exhaled nitric oxide (Feno) and related cytokines in sputum were measured.Mucus plugging was present in 100% of asthma patients with sputum eosinophils and 36% of those without sputum eosinophils (P = .0006) and was correlated with MRI VDP prebronchodilator (r = 0.68; P = .0001) and postbronchodilator (r = 0.72; P .0001). In a multivariable regression, both mucus and eosinophils contributed to the prediction of postbronchodilator MRI VDP (RBoth airway eosinophils and mucus can contribute to ventilation heterogeneity in patients with severe asthma. Patients in whom mucus is the dominant cause of airway obstruction have evidence of an upregulated IL-4/IL-13 pathway that could be identified according to increased Feno level.

Details

ISSN :
00123692
Volume :
155
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chest
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8707d4a23d5bb602e104e4a950830544
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chest.2019.02.403