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Analysis of oxygen uptake efficiency parameters in young people with cystic fibrosis

Analysis of oxygen uptake efficiency parameters in young people with cystic fibrosis
Analysis of oxygen uptake efficiency parameters in young people with cystic fibrosis
Purpose: this study characterised oxygen uptake efficiency (OUE) in children with mild-to-moderate cystic fibrosis (CF). Specifically, it investigated 1) the utility of OUE parameters as potential submaximal surrogates of peak oxygen uptake (VO2peak), and 2) the relationship between OUE and disease severity.

Methods: cardiopulmonary exercise test (CPET) data were collated from 72 children (36 CF, 36 age- and sex-matched controls [CON]), with OUE assessed as its highest 90-s average (plateau; OUEP), the gas exchange threshold (OUEGET) and respiratory compensation point (OUERCP). Pearson’s correlation coefficients, independent t-tests and factorial ANOVAs assessed differences between groups and the use of OUE measures as surrogates for VO2peak.

Results: a significant (p < 0.05) reduction in allometrically scaled VO2peak and all OUE parameters was found in CF. Significant (p < 0.05) correlations between measurements of OUE and allometrically scaled VO2peak, were observed in CF (r = 0.49 – 0.52) and CON (r = 0.46 – 0.52). Furthermore, measures of OUE were significantly (p < 0.05) correlated with pulmonary function (FEV1%predicted) in CF (r = 0.38 – 0.46), but not CON (r = -0.20 – 0.14). OUEP was able to differentiate between different aerobic fitness tertiles in CON but not CF.

Conclusions: OUE parameters were reduced in CF, but were not a suitable surrogate for VO2peak. Clinical teams should, where possible, continue to utilise maximal CPET parameters to measure aerobic fitness in children and adolescents with CF. Future research should assess the prognostic utility of OUEP as it does appear sensitive to disease status and severity.
1439-6319
2055-2063
Tomlinson, Owen W.
e5ac12ad-6d1c-450c-80c2-d2a4cdb789cc
Barker, Alan Robert
4e993530-deda-42e5-b3fd-c96f63b44fe6
Chubbock, Lucy V.
c42319e9-8972-4903-8b59-f17944582e6e
Stevens, Daniel
c0c18403-7e33-4050-a58a-b1b942f6df09
Saynor, Zoe L.
a4357c7d-db59-4fa5-b24f-58d2f7e74e39
Oades, Patrick J.
a75b6826-6d88-47a9-9656-f0f79a9b3a63
Williams, Craig A.
c96ddcec-3c7e-4686-b831-cbb4f004ccb0
Tomlinson, Owen W.
e5ac12ad-6d1c-450c-80c2-d2a4cdb789cc
Barker, Alan Robert
4e993530-deda-42e5-b3fd-c96f63b44fe6
Chubbock, Lucy V.
c42319e9-8972-4903-8b59-f17944582e6e
Stevens, Daniel
c0c18403-7e33-4050-a58a-b1b942f6df09
Saynor, Zoe L.
a4357c7d-db59-4fa5-b24f-58d2f7e74e39
Oades, Patrick J.
a75b6826-6d88-47a9-9656-f0f79a9b3a63
Williams, Craig A.
c96ddcec-3c7e-4686-b831-cbb4f004ccb0

Tomlinson, Owen W., Barker, Alan Robert, Chubbock, Lucy V., Stevens, Daniel, Saynor, Zoe L., Oades, Patrick J. and Williams, Craig A. (2018) Analysis of oxygen uptake efficiency parameters in young people with cystic fibrosis. European Journal of Applied Physiology, 118, 2055-2063. (doi:10.1007/s00421-018-3926-8).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Purpose: this study characterised oxygen uptake efficiency (OUE) in children with mild-to-moderate cystic fibrosis (CF). Specifically, it investigated 1) the utility of OUE parameters as potential submaximal surrogates of peak oxygen uptake (VO2peak), and 2) the relationship between OUE and disease severity.

Methods: cardiopulmonary exercise test (CPET) data were collated from 72 children (36 CF, 36 age- and sex-matched controls [CON]), with OUE assessed as its highest 90-s average (plateau; OUEP), the gas exchange threshold (OUEGET) and respiratory compensation point (OUERCP). Pearson’s correlation coefficients, independent t-tests and factorial ANOVAs assessed differences between groups and the use of OUE measures as surrogates for VO2peak.

Results: a significant (p < 0.05) reduction in allometrically scaled VO2peak and all OUE parameters was found in CF. Significant (p < 0.05) correlations between measurements of OUE and allometrically scaled VO2peak, were observed in CF (r = 0.49 – 0.52) and CON (r = 0.46 – 0.52). Furthermore, measures of OUE were significantly (p < 0.05) correlated with pulmonary function (FEV1%predicted) in CF (r = 0.38 – 0.46), but not CON (r = -0.20 – 0.14). OUEP was able to differentiate between different aerobic fitness tertiles in CON but not CF.

Conclusions: OUE parameters were reduced in CF, but were not a suitable surrogate for VO2peak. Clinical teams should, where possible, continue to utilise maximal CPET parameters to measure aerobic fitness in children and adolescents with CF. Future research should assess the prognostic utility of OUEP as it does appear sensitive to disease status and severity.

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Accepted/In Press date: 25 June 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 July 2018
Published date: 1 October 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 494039
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494039
ISSN: 1439-6319
PURE UUID: 03ddfa0f-2c51-4931-9cf8-4c47521959f5
ORCID for Zoe L. Saynor: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0674-8477

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Date deposited: 20 Sep 2024 16:31
Last modified: 21 Sep 2024 02:14

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Contributors

Author: Owen W. Tomlinson
Author: Alan Robert Barker
Author: Lucy V. Chubbock
Author: Daniel Stevens
Author: Zoe L. Saynor ORCID iD
Author: Patrick J. Oades
Author: Craig A. Williams

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