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Does bacterial density in cystic fibrosis sputum increase prior to pulmonary exacerbation?

Does bacterial density in cystic fibrosis sputum increase prior to pulmonary exacerbation?
Does bacterial density in cystic fibrosis sputum increase prior to pulmonary exacerbation?

Background: Cystic Fibrosis (CF) lung disease is characterised by an inexorable decline in lung function, punctuated by periods of symptomatic worsening known as pulmonary exacerbations (referred to here as CFPE). Despite their clinical significance, the cause of CFPE remains undetermined. It has been suggested that an increase in bacterial density may be a trigger, although this has not been shown empirically.

Methods: here, a previously validated quantitative PCR-based approach was used to assess numbers of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and of total bacteria in respiratory secretions from patients during the period leading up to CFPE. Sputum samples collected from 12 adult CF patients were selected retrospectively to fall approximately 21, 14, 7 and 0 days prior to CFPE diagnosis. In addition, the relationships between clinical parameters (FEV(1), temperature and patient reported outcome measures) and microbiological data were investigated.

Results: no significant changes either in total bacterial or P. aeruginosa numbers were identified prior to CFPE. Of all the correlations tested, only temperature showed a significant correlation with total bacterial numbers in the period leading to CFPE.

Conclusions: these findings strongly suggest that CFPE do not generally result from increased bacterial density within the airways. Instead, data presented here are consistent with alternative models of pulmonary exacerbation.

Adolescent, Adult, Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use, Bacterial Load, Cystic Fibrosis/microbiology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pneumonia, Bacterial/diagnosis, Pseudomonas Infections/diagnosis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa/genetics, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, Respiratory Function Tests, Severity of Illness Index, Sputum/microbiology, Young Adult
1569-1993
357-365
Stressmann, Franziska A.
4d9bc3a9-dfc5-4957-9888-d4e245ab139a
Rogers, Geraint B.
bd90d82a-4150-4e01-a755-b81559586da2
Marsh, Peter
18f63c35-264b-4ec9-8505-9c57bf707ad2
Lilley, Andrew K.
72218d64-8cf6-4c8c-b15d-f9318703075a
Daniels, Thomas W.V.
9a8ab6f0-2eb9-4703-b536-f86923888213
Carroll, Mary P.
b836d262-6b07-4006-9c81-26653a26588b
Hoffman, Lucas R.
96da3b2b-cc89-4c0b-8819-fc3920459778
Jones, Graeme
afb3ee51-6c9f-4e82-83ab-0776087805de
Allen, Collette E.
068bf430-20e1-4df2-8118-fac02c261200
Patel, Nilesh
80e4ce75-e037-4adf-a7a5-7c8e4253566d
Forbes, Benjamin
5a92eda9-33a1-4038-aaed-58ff19b936e4
Tuck, Andrew
90d0a731-080b-4872-8fc0-45cd71db1e2c
Bruce, Kenneth D.
09fa4b3f-2183-4e6e-933d-70a3c1b20b5d
Stressmann, Franziska A.
4d9bc3a9-dfc5-4957-9888-d4e245ab139a
Rogers, Geraint B.
bd90d82a-4150-4e01-a755-b81559586da2
Marsh, Peter
18f63c35-264b-4ec9-8505-9c57bf707ad2
Lilley, Andrew K.
72218d64-8cf6-4c8c-b15d-f9318703075a
Daniels, Thomas W.V.
9a8ab6f0-2eb9-4703-b536-f86923888213
Carroll, Mary P.
b836d262-6b07-4006-9c81-26653a26588b
Hoffman, Lucas R.
96da3b2b-cc89-4c0b-8819-fc3920459778
Jones, Graeme
afb3ee51-6c9f-4e82-83ab-0776087805de
Allen, Collette E.
068bf430-20e1-4df2-8118-fac02c261200
Patel, Nilesh
80e4ce75-e037-4adf-a7a5-7c8e4253566d
Forbes, Benjamin
5a92eda9-33a1-4038-aaed-58ff19b936e4
Tuck, Andrew
90d0a731-080b-4872-8fc0-45cd71db1e2c
Bruce, Kenneth D.
09fa4b3f-2183-4e6e-933d-70a3c1b20b5d

Stressmann, Franziska A., Rogers, Geraint B., Marsh, Peter, Lilley, Andrew K., Daniels, Thomas W.V., Carroll, Mary P., Hoffman, Lucas R., Jones, Graeme, Allen, Collette E., Patel, Nilesh, Forbes, Benjamin, Tuck, Andrew and Bruce, Kenneth D. (2011) Does bacterial density in cystic fibrosis sputum increase prior to pulmonary exacerbation? Journal of Cystic Fibrosis, 10 (5), 357-365. (doi:10.1016/j.jcf.2011.05.002).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Cystic Fibrosis (CF) lung disease is characterised by an inexorable decline in lung function, punctuated by periods of symptomatic worsening known as pulmonary exacerbations (referred to here as CFPE). Despite their clinical significance, the cause of CFPE remains undetermined. It has been suggested that an increase in bacterial density may be a trigger, although this has not been shown empirically.

Methods: here, a previously validated quantitative PCR-based approach was used to assess numbers of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and of total bacteria in respiratory secretions from patients during the period leading up to CFPE. Sputum samples collected from 12 adult CF patients were selected retrospectively to fall approximately 21, 14, 7 and 0 days prior to CFPE diagnosis. In addition, the relationships between clinical parameters (FEV(1), temperature and patient reported outcome measures) and microbiological data were investigated.

Results: no significant changes either in total bacterial or P. aeruginosa numbers were identified prior to CFPE. Of all the correlations tested, only temperature showed a significant correlation with total bacterial numbers in the period leading to CFPE.

Conclusions: these findings strongly suggest that CFPE do not generally result from increased bacterial density within the airways. Instead, data presented here are consistent with alternative models of pulmonary exacerbation.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 15 May 2011
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 August 2011
Keywords: Adolescent, Adult, Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use, Bacterial Load, Cystic Fibrosis/microbiology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pneumonia, Bacterial/diagnosis, Pseudomonas Infections/diagnosis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa/genetics, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, Respiratory Function Tests, Severity of Illness Index, Sputum/microbiology, Young Adult

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 487806
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487806
ISSN: 1569-1993
PURE UUID: c5c6a6ca-1611-4713-aee3-12058370e2ca

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Date deposited: 05 Mar 2024 18:29
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 07:51

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Contributors

Author: Franziska A. Stressmann
Author: Geraint B. Rogers
Author: Peter Marsh
Author: Andrew K. Lilley
Author: Thomas W.V. Daniels
Author: Mary P. Carroll
Author: Lucas R. Hoffman
Author: Graeme Jones
Author: Collette E. Allen
Author: Nilesh Patel
Author: Benjamin Forbes
Author: Andrew Tuck
Author: Kenneth D. Bruce

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