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Neutrophil lymphocyte ratio as an indicator for disease progression in Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis

Neutrophil lymphocyte ratio as an indicator for disease progression in Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis
Neutrophil lymphocyte ratio as an indicator for disease progression in Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis
Rationale: idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a progressive fibrotic lung disease. Patients present at different stages and disease course is varied. Blood monocytes have been linked to all-cause mortality, and neutrophils to progression to IPF in patients with the indeterminate for usual interstitial pneumonia CT pattern.

Objective: to determine association between blood monocytes, neutrophils and lymphocytes levels (and their derived indexes), with lung function decline and mortality in IPF.

Methods: we performed a retrospective analysis of an IPF cohort (n=128) who had their first clinical visit at the Oxford Interstitial Lung Disease Service between 2013 and 2017. Association between blood monocytes, neutrophils, lymphocytes and derived indexes (within 4 months of visit) and decline in forced vital capacity (FVC) and all-cause mortality were assessed using Cox proportional hazard regression analysis. Kaplan-Meier analysis was used to assess time-to-event for 10% FVC decline and mortality for patients dichotomised to high and low leucocyte counts.

Results: median length of follow-up was 31.0 months (IQR 16.2–42.4); 41.4% demonstrated FVC decline >10% per year and 43.8% died. In multivariate models (incorporating age, gender and initial FVC%), raised neutrophils, lymphopaenia and neutrophil:lymphocyte ratio were associated with FVC decline (p≤0.01); while both monocytes and neutrophil levels (and their derived indexes) were associated with all-cause mortality (p≤0.01). Kaplan-Meier analysis also showed association between neutrophils and its derived indexes but not monocyte, with FVC decline.

Conclusion: blood neutrophil and lymphopaenia are more sensitive than monocytes as prognostic indicators of disease progression in those with established IPF.
2052-4439
e001202
Achaiah, Andrew
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Rathnapala, Amila
d5747354-608f-408b-94a3-4498c2bd2137
Pereira, Andrea
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Bothwell, Harriet
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Dwivedi, Kritica
b7887104-ad9a-4959-9b3b-7ac488647bd6
Barker, Rosie
2522d631-9387-41a9-beba-65e0c82e4d3e
Iotchkova, Valentina
6875f74c-f69f-49f9-906c-f4098f01cf3c
Benamore, Rachel
89eb7cc1-99bf-4a3c-9ed1-a55580915fea
Hoyles, Rachel K.
0cc27739-be35-4907-ac26-a604500d98d5
Ho, Ling-Pei
78fd2483-d7c2-4244-8ffe-e3c8a2d27e32
Achaiah, Andrew
46767290-7d70-4812-a2cd-8c111ac03405
Rathnapala, Amila
d5747354-608f-408b-94a3-4498c2bd2137
Pereira, Andrea
3b6ebc86-247f-4188-b866-b0767e775361
Bothwell, Harriet
a968f6f1-de22-42ea-bf53-5446dc3707ce
Dwivedi, Kritica
b7887104-ad9a-4959-9b3b-7ac488647bd6
Barker, Rosie
2522d631-9387-41a9-beba-65e0c82e4d3e
Iotchkova, Valentina
6875f74c-f69f-49f9-906c-f4098f01cf3c
Benamore, Rachel
89eb7cc1-99bf-4a3c-9ed1-a55580915fea
Hoyles, Rachel K.
0cc27739-be35-4907-ac26-a604500d98d5
Ho, Ling-Pei
78fd2483-d7c2-4244-8ffe-e3c8a2d27e32

Achaiah, Andrew, Rathnapala, Amila, Pereira, Andrea, Bothwell, Harriet, Dwivedi, Kritica, Barker, Rosie, Iotchkova, Valentina, Benamore, Rachel, Hoyles, Rachel K. and Ho, Ling-Pei (2022) Neutrophil lymphocyte ratio as an indicator for disease progression in Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis. BMJ Open Respiratory Research, 9 (1), e001202. (doi:10.1136/bmjresp-2022-001202).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Rationale: idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a progressive fibrotic lung disease. Patients present at different stages and disease course is varied. Blood monocytes have been linked to all-cause mortality, and neutrophils to progression to IPF in patients with the indeterminate for usual interstitial pneumonia CT pattern.

Objective: to determine association between blood monocytes, neutrophils and lymphocytes levels (and their derived indexes), with lung function decline and mortality in IPF.

Methods: we performed a retrospective analysis of an IPF cohort (n=128) who had their first clinical visit at the Oxford Interstitial Lung Disease Service between 2013 and 2017. Association between blood monocytes, neutrophils, lymphocytes and derived indexes (within 4 months of visit) and decline in forced vital capacity (FVC) and all-cause mortality were assessed using Cox proportional hazard regression analysis. Kaplan-Meier analysis was used to assess time-to-event for 10% FVC decline and mortality for patients dichotomised to high and low leucocyte counts.

Results: median length of follow-up was 31.0 months (IQR 16.2–42.4); 41.4% demonstrated FVC decline >10% per year and 43.8% died. In multivariate models (incorporating age, gender and initial FVC%), raised neutrophils, lymphopaenia and neutrophil:lymphocyte ratio were associated with FVC decline (p≤0.01); while both monocytes and neutrophil levels (and their derived indexes) were associated with all-cause mortality (p≤0.01). Kaplan-Meier analysis also showed association between neutrophils and its derived indexes but not monocyte, with FVC decline.

Conclusion: blood neutrophil and lymphopaenia are more sensitive than monocytes as prognostic indicators of disease progression in those with established IPF.

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Accepted/In Press date: 28 April 2022
Published date: 1 June 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 487655
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487655
ISSN: 2052-4439
PURE UUID: ec44598b-5353-441a-80a1-c78f0c53cd4e

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Date deposited: 29 Feb 2024 18:11
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 07:46

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Contributors

Author: Andrew Achaiah
Author: Amila Rathnapala
Author: Andrea Pereira
Author: Harriet Bothwell
Author: Kritica Dwivedi
Author: Rosie Barker
Author: Valentina Iotchkova
Author: Rachel Benamore
Author: Rachel K. Hoyles
Author: Ling-Pei Ho

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