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Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia: Longitudinal Study of Lung Disease by Ultrastructure Defect and Genotype

Authors :
Adam J. Shapiro
Margaret Rosenfeld
Stephanie D. Davis
Kelli M. Sullivan
Jessica E. Pittman
Sharon D. Dell
Jeffrey P. Krischer
Maimoona A. Zariwala
Keith R. Nykamp
Hye-Seung Lee
Carlos Milla
Thomas W. Ferkol
Scott D. Sagel
Michael R. Knowles
Margaret W Leigh
Source :
American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine. 199(2)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

In primary ciliary dyskinesia, factors leading to disease heterogeneity are poorly understood.To describe early lung disease progression in primary ciliary dyskinesia and identify associations between ultrastructural defects and genotypes with clinical phenotype.This was a prospective, longitudinal (5 yr), multicenter, observational study. Inclusion criteria were less than 19 years at enrollment and greater than or equal to two annual study visits. Linear mixed effects models including random slope and random intercept were used to evaluate longitudinal associations between the ciliary defect group (or genotype group) and clinical features (percent predicted FEVA total of 137 participants completed 732 visits. The group with absent inner dynein arm, central apparatus defects, and microtubular disorganization (IDA/CA/MTD) (n = 41) were significantly younger at diagnosis and in mixed effects models had significantly lower percent predicted FEVParticipants with IDA/MTD/CA defects, which included individuals with CCDC39 or CCDC40 mutations, had worse lung function and growth indices compared with those with outer dynein arm defects and DNAH5 mutations, respectively. The only group with a significant lung function decline over time were participants with IDA/MTD/CA defects.

Details

ISSN :
15354970
Volume :
199
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bd335d972bf88dd9be7e12b643b04137