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Association of sputum and blood eosinophil concentrations with clinical measures of COPD severity: an analysis of the SPIROMICS cohort

Authors :
Annette T Hastie
Fernando J Martinez
Jeffrey L Curtis
Claire M Doerschuk
Nadia N Hansel
Stephanie Christenson
Nirupama Putcha
Victor E Ortega
Xingnan Li
R Graham Barr
Elizabeth E Carretta
David J Couper
Christopher B Cooper
Eric A Hoffman
Richard E Kanner
Eric Kleerup
Wanda K O'Neal
Richard Paine
Stephen P Peters
Neil E Alexis
Prescott G Woodruff
MeiLan K Han
Deborah A Meyers
Eugene R Bleecker
Wayne H Anderson
Richard C Boucher
Russell P Bowler
Stephanie A Christenson
Alejandro P Comellas
Gerard J Criner
Ronald G Crystal
Mark T Dransfield
Christine M Freeman
Robert J Kaner
Eric C Kleerup
Jerry A Krishnan
Lisa M LaVange
Stephen C Lazarus
John D Newell
Elizabeth C Oelsner
Robert Paine
Stephen I. Rennard
Donald P Tashkin
Mary Beth Scholand
J Michael Wells
Robert A Wise
Source :
The Lancet Respiratory Medicine. 5:956-967
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2017.

Abstract

Summary Background Increased concentrations of eosinophils in blood and sputum in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) have been associated with increased frequency of exacerbations, reduced lung function, and corticosteroid responsiveness. We aimed to assess whether high eosinophil concentrations in either sputum or blood are associated with a severe COPD phenotype, including greater exacerbation frequency, and whether blood eosinophils are predictive of sputum eosinophils. Methods We did a multicentre observational study analysing comprehensive baseline data from SPIROMICS in patients with COPD aged 40–80 years who had a smoking history of at least 20 pack-years, recruited from six clinical sites and additional subsites in the USA between Nov 12, 2010, and April 21, 2015. Inclusion criteria for this analysis were SPIROMICS baseline visit data with complete blood cell counts and, in a subset, acceptable sputum counts. We stratified patients on the basis of blood and sputum eosinophil concentrations and compared their demographic characteristics, as well as results from questionnaires, clinical assessments, and quantitative CT (QCT). We also analysed whether blood eosinophil concentrations reliably predicted sputum eosinophil concentrations. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01969344). Findings Of the 2737 patients recruited to SPIROMICS, 2499 patients were smokers and had available blood counts, and so were stratified by mean blood eosinophil count: 1262 patients with low ( 1 percentage predicted than the low sputum eosinophil group both before (65·7% [IQR 51·8–81·3] vs 75·7% [59·3–90·2], p vs 82·9% [67·8–95·9], p=0·001) bronchodilation. QCT density measures for emphysema and air trapping were significantly higher in the high sputum eosinophil group than the low sputum eosinophil group. Exacerbations requiring corticosteroids treatment were more common in the high versus low sputum eosinophil group (p=0·002). FEV 1 percentage predicted was significantly different between low and high blood eosinophil groups, but differences were less than those observed between the sputum groups. The high blood eosinophil group had slightly increased airway wall thickness (0·02 mm difference, p=0·032), higher St George Respiratory Questionnaire symptom scores (p=0·037), and increased wheezing (p=0·018), but no evidence of an association with COPD exacerbations (p=0·35) or the other indices of COPD severity, such as emphysema measured by CT density, COPD assessment test scores, Body-mass index, airflow Obstruction, Dyspnea, and Exercise index, or Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease stage. Blood eosinophil counts showed a weak but significant association with sputum eosinophil counts (receiver operating characteristic area under the curve of 0·64, p Interpretation In a large, well characterised cohort of former and current smoking patients with a broad range of COPD severity, high concentrations of sputum eosinophils were a better biomarker than high concentrations of blood eosinophils to identify a patient subgroup with more severe disease, more frequent exacerbations, and increased emphysema by QCT. Blood eosinophils alone were not a reliable biomarker for COPD severity or exacerbations, or for sputum eosinophils. Clinical trials targeting eosinophilic inflammation in COPD should consider assessing sputum eosinophils. Funding National Institutes of Health, and National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.

Details

ISSN :
22132600
Volume :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet Respiratory Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ad257504949e63522637dde556ec2886