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Airway bacterial load and FEV1 decline in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Airway bacterial load and FEV1 decline in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Airway bacterial load and FEV1 decline in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is characterized by an accelerated decline in lung function and progressive airway inflammation. Bacteria have been isolated from the lower airway of stable COPD patients, and airway inflammation has been related to bacterial load and type. The relationship between bacterial colonization, airway inflammation, and lung function decline remains uncertain. We studied 30 patients with COPD, mean (SD) FEV1 0.947 (0.329), 34.8% (13.6%) predicted, for 12 months. Sputum collected at recruitment and the end of the study was analyzed for cytokines and for quantitative bacteriology. The decline in FEV1 was 57.6 (137.6) ml year-1. Bacterial growth was identified in all subjects, with an initial count of 107.47(0.91) cfu ml-1 rising to 107.93(0.81) cfu ml-1 at the end of the study (p = 0.019). FEV1 decline was related to this increase in airway bacterial load (r = 0.59, p = 0.001). FEV1 decline was greater in subjects who exhibited a change in the colonizing bacterial type compared with those with persistence of a single bacterial species over the study period (p = 0.017). Higher sputum interleukin (IL-8) was associated with greater declines in FEV1 (p = 0.03). Rising airway bacterial load and species changes are associated with greater airway inflammation and accelerated decline in FEV1. Bacterial colonization in COPD is an important factor in disease progression.
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, bacterial colonization, FEV1 decline, airway inflammation
1073-449X
1090-1095
Wilkinson, Tom M.A.
8c55ebbb-e547-445c-95a1-c8bed02dd652
Patel, Irem S.
9ff5ffaf-f08f-412c-b13f-1b428cf8d338
Wilks, Mark
24d75534-cec0-4c4a-8a12-55a8d367fa7a
Donaldson, Gavin C.
48128ec1-2e2d-4ad8-9183-5eb8e70b0cd0
Wedzicha, Jadwiga A.
da6d3d6a-9098-4681-9ab6-b5bad0325e52
Wilkinson, Tom M.A.
8c55ebbb-e547-445c-95a1-c8bed02dd652
Patel, Irem S.
9ff5ffaf-f08f-412c-b13f-1b428cf8d338
Wilks, Mark
24d75534-cec0-4c4a-8a12-55a8d367fa7a
Donaldson, Gavin C.
48128ec1-2e2d-4ad8-9183-5eb8e70b0cd0
Wedzicha, Jadwiga A.
da6d3d6a-9098-4681-9ab6-b5bad0325e52

Wilkinson, Tom M.A., Patel, Irem S., Wilks, Mark, Donaldson, Gavin C. and Wedzicha, Jadwiga A. (2003) Airway bacterial load and FEV1 decline in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 167 (8), 1090-1095. (doi:10.1164/rccm.200210-1179OC).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is characterized by an accelerated decline in lung function and progressive airway inflammation. Bacteria have been isolated from the lower airway of stable COPD patients, and airway inflammation has been related to bacterial load and type. The relationship between bacterial colonization, airway inflammation, and lung function decline remains uncertain. We studied 30 patients with COPD, mean (SD) FEV1 0.947 (0.329), 34.8% (13.6%) predicted, for 12 months. Sputum collected at recruitment and the end of the study was analyzed for cytokines and for quantitative bacteriology. The decline in FEV1 was 57.6 (137.6) ml year-1. Bacterial growth was identified in all subjects, with an initial count of 107.47(0.91) cfu ml-1 rising to 107.93(0.81) cfu ml-1 at the end of the study (p = 0.019). FEV1 decline was related to this increase in airway bacterial load (r = 0.59, p = 0.001). FEV1 decline was greater in subjects who exhibited a change in the colonizing bacterial type compared with those with persistence of a single bacterial species over the study period (p = 0.017). Higher sputum interleukin (IL-8) was associated with greater declines in FEV1 (p = 0.03). Rising airway bacterial load and species changes are associated with greater airway inflammation and accelerated decline in FEV1. Bacterial colonization in COPD is an important factor in disease progression.

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More information

Published date: 15 May 2003
Keywords: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, bacterial colonization, FEV1 decline, airway inflammation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 47984
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/47984
ISSN: 1073-449X
PURE UUID: 6a0e45cf-116c-4211-91b5-77a12066cc4b

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Date deposited: 16 Aug 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 09:41

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Contributors

Author: Irem S. Patel
Author: Mark Wilks
Author: Gavin C. Donaldson
Author: Jadwiga A. Wedzicha

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