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Lung clearance index may detect early peripheral lung disease in sickle cell anemia

Lung clearance index may detect early peripheral lung disease in sickle cell anemia
Lung clearance index may detect early peripheral lung disease in sickle cell anemia
Rationale: chronic lung injury is common in sickle cell anemia (SCA) and worsens outcomes. Sensitive lung function tests might predict reversible disease that might benefit from therapeutic interventions. 

Objectives: to evaluate whether lung clearance index (LCI) (measuring global ventilation inhomogeneity), intraacinar ventilation inhomogeneity (S acin), and conductive ventilation inhomogeneity (S cond) are more frequently abnormal than lung volumes in young people with SCA. 

Methods: nitrogen multiple-breath washout, spirometry, and body plethysmography were cross-sectionally evaluated at steady state in subjects with SCA (hemoglobin SS) and healthy control subjects aged 8–21 years from London, United Kingdom. 

Results: thirty-five patients (51% boys, mean 6 SD age, 16.4 6 3.5 yr) and 31 control subjects (48% boys; 16.2 6 3.2 yr) were tested. There were significant differences between the study and control groups in mean LCI (mean difference, 0.42 units; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.22 to 0.63; P = 0.0001), S acin (mean difference, 0.014 units; 95% CI, 0.001 to 0.026; P = 0.04), forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV 1) (mean difference, 20.79 z-scores; 95% CI, 21.28 to 20.30; P = 0.002), forced vital capacity (FVC) (mean difference, 20.80 z-scores; 95% CI, 21.28 to 20.31, P = 0.002), and total lung capacity (mean difference, 20.76 z-scores; 95% CI, 21.25 to 20.29, P = 0.002), but not in S cond and FEV 1-to-FVC ratio. Whereas 29% (10 of 35) of patients had LCI . 95th percentile of control subjects, 23% (8 of 35) had abnormal FEV 1 (,5th percentile of the reference population).

Conclusions: LCI detected slightly more abnormalities than lung volumes in young people with SCA. Significant differences from control subjects in LCI and S acin but not in S cond and FEV 1to-FVC ratio suggest that the lung function changes were most likely owing to patchy peripheral lung disease.
children, lung function, multiple-breath washout, sickle cell anemia
2329-6933
1507-1515
Arigliani, Michele
af785188-9e5c-494e-ac80-22043d451802
Kirkham, Fenella J.
1dfbc0d5-aebe-4439-9fb2-dac6503bcd58
Sahota, Sati
f9b12b9d-4b65-42db-97b2-30db56b9d84e
Riley, Mollie
c2d95be7-03bc-4280-80b4-2d4e485031f2
Liguoro, Ilaria
aed9fb81-67b0-48f6-b5e6-c240d38153bc
Castriotta, Luigi
408b17d8-b708-4cd7-8c1c-f4e9f0205eb7
Gupta, Atul
ef653ca8-50c8-4aab-a094-68e8c9879242
Rees, David
6f9221c6-44e3-411a-9e2f-704286fd3e1e
Inusa, Baba
830cfc6c-2482-4986-b2d3-9edd5cf2d9f5
Aurora, Paul
b48d730e-5690-4073-9869-3101eac63d18
et al.
Arigliani, Michele
af785188-9e5c-494e-ac80-22043d451802
Kirkham, Fenella J.
1dfbc0d5-aebe-4439-9fb2-dac6503bcd58
Sahota, Sati
f9b12b9d-4b65-42db-97b2-30db56b9d84e
Riley, Mollie
c2d95be7-03bc-4280-80b4-2d4e485031f2
Liguoro, Ilaria
aed9fb81-67b0-48f6-b5e6-c240d38153bc
Castriotta, Luigi
408b17d8-b708-4cd7-8c1c-f4e9f0205eb7
Gupta, Atul
ef653ca8-50c8-4aab-a094-68e8c9879242
Rees, David
6f9221c6-44e3-411a-9e2f-704286fd3e1e
Inusa, Baba
830cfc6c-2482-4986-b2d3-9edd5cf2d9f5
Aurora, Paul
b48d730e-5690-4073-9869-3101eac63d18

Arigliani, Michele, Kirkham, Fenella J. and Sahota, Sati , et al. (2022) Lung clearance index may detect early peripheral lung disease in sickle cell anemia. Annals of the American Thoracic Society, 19 (9), 1507-1515. (doi:10.1513/AnnalsATS.202102-168OC).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Rationale: chronic lung injury is common in sickle cell anemia (SCA) and worsens outcomes. Sensitive lung function tests might predict reversible disease that might benefit from therapeutic interventions. 

Objectives: to evaluate whether lung clearance index (LCI) (measuring global ventilation inhomogeneity), intraacinar ventilation inhomogeneity (S acin), and conductive ventilation inhomogeneity (S cond) are more frequently abnormal than lung volumes in young people with SCA. 

Methods: nitrogen multiple-breath washout, spirometry, and body plethysmography were cross-sectionally evaluated at steady state in subjects with SCA (hemoglobin SS) and healthy control subjects aged 8–21 years from London, United Kingdom. 

Results: thirty-five patients (51% boys, mean 6 SD age, 16.4 6 3.5 yr) and 31 control subjects (48% boys; 16.2 6 3.2 yr) were tested. There were significant differences between the study and control groups in mean LCI (mean difference, 0.42 units; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.22 to 0.63; P = 0.0001), S acin (mean difference, 0.014 units; 95% CI, 0.001 to 0.026; P = 0.04), forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV 1) (mean difference, 20.79 z-scores; 95% CI, 21.28 to 20.30; P = 0.002), forced vital capacity (FVC) (mean difference, 20.80 z-scores; 95% CI, 21.28 to 20.31, P = 0.002), and total lung capacity (mean difference, 20.76 z-scores; 95% CI, 21.25 to 20.29, P = 0.002), but not in S cond and FEV 1-to-FVC ratio. Whereas 29% (10 of 35) of patients had LCI . 95th percentile of control subjects, 23% (8 of 35) had abnormal FEV 1 (,5th percentile of the reference population).

Conclusions: LCI detected slightly more abnormalities than lung volumes in young people with SCA. Significant differences from control subjects in LCI and S acin but not in S cond and FEV 1to-FVC ratio suggest that the lung function changes were most likely owing to patchy peripheral lung disease.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 28 January 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 February 2022
Additional Information: Funding Information: The authors thank the participants and acknowledge the support of the European Respiratory Society, Fellowship LTRF 2018, and the National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre (IS-BRC-1215-20012) at Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust and University College London. The authors especially thank the respiratory physiologists at Great Ormond Street Hospital (Emma Raywood, Ms.C., and Emma Coward, Ms.C.), who contributed to performing the lung function tests in the participants. Supported by the European Respiratory Society, Fellowship LTRF 2018, and the Great Ormond Street Hospital Biomedical Research Centre. Publisher Copyright: Copyright © 2022 by the American Thoracic Society.
Keywords: children, lung function, multiple-breath washout, sickle cell anemia

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 485190
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/485190
ISSN: 2329-6933
PURE UUID: 28ec05a1-cbe7-44c0-a643-bf67ccff561c
ORCID for Fenella J. Kirkham: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2443-7958

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Date deposited: 30 Nov 2023 17:59
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:53

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Contributors

Author: Michele Arigliani
Author: Sati Sahota
Author: Mollie Riley
Author: Ilaria Liguoro
Author: Luigi Castriotta
Author: Atul Gupta
Author: David Rees
Author: Baba Inusa
Author: Paul Aurora
Corporate Author: et al.

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