Diffuse bronchiectasis of genetic or idiopathic origin
Diffuse bronchiectasis of genetic or idiopathic origin
Bronchiectasis is a significant cause of morbidity and mortality. It is the end point of a pathological process. We should be aiming to identify at risk patients before they develop bronchiectasis and to treat them aggressively to prevent disease progression. With improved social conditions and health care, infective causes of bronchiectasis have diminished in higher-income countries, and genetic causes are therefore relatively more common. The underlying cause of bronchiectasis should always be sought and readdressed, for example as discoveries of innate immune defects are made. ‘Idiopathic bronchiectasis’ should be a diagnosis of last resort. This chapter reviews potential genetic causes of bronchiectasis and suggests a plan for investigating the underlying aetiology. Management is discussed but it is important to note that suggested treatment strategies are often extrapolated from evidence in bronchiectasis associated with cystic fibrosis; this is likely to be inappropriate in diseases of differing pathophysiology. Rare lung diseases need to be moved out of the ‘orphan’ category by instigating multi-centre, multi-national clinical trials and producing disease-specific evidence-based guidelines.
Lucas, Jane
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Pike, Katy
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Walker, Woolf T.
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Shoemark, Amelia
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Lucas, Jane
5cb3546c-87b2-4e59-af48-402076e25313
Pike, Katy
2efa89c8-804f-4565-8ad7-66adf7459702
Walker, Woolf T.
b9981f69-8c4e-441d-93d7-d45e65341576
Shoemark, Amelia
6197d7b4-f36b-47bf-b138-373e1aa4b63b
Lucas, Jane, Pike, Katy, Walker, Woolf T. and Shoemark, Amelia
(2020)
Diffuse bronchiectasis of genetic or idiopathic origin.
In,
Orphan Lung Diseases. A Clinical Guide to Rare Lung Disease.
(In Press)
Record type:
Book Section
Abstract
Bronchiectasis is a significant cause of morbidity and mortality. It is the end point of a pathological process. We should be aiming to identify at risk patients before they develop bronchiectasis and to treat them aggressively to prevent disease progression. With improved social conditions and health care, infective causes of bronchiectasis have diminished in higher-income countries, and genetic causes are therefore relatively more common. The underlying cause of bronchiectasis should always be sought and readdressed, for example as discoveries of innate immune defects are made. ‘Idiopathic bronchiectasis’ should be a diagnosis of last resort. This chapter reviews potential genetic causes of bronchiectasis and suggests a plan for investigating the underlying aetiology. Management is discussed but it is important to note that suggested treatment strategies are often extrapolated from evidence in bronchiectasis associated with cystic fibrosis; this is likely to be inappropriate in diseases of differing pathophysiology. Rare lung diseases need to be moved out of the ‘orphan’ category by instigating multi-centre, multi-national clinical trials and producing disease-specific evidence-based guidelines.
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Accepted/In Press date: 22 November 2020
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Local EPrints ID: 448019
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/448019
PURE UUID: 4b331e58-c7ae-46b7-9d2d-2253ea64242b
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Date deposited: 30 Mar 2021 16:34
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:46
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Contributors
Author:
Katy Pike
Author:
Woolf T. Walker
Author:
Amelia Shoemark
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