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Upper Airway Cell Transcriptomics Identify a Major New Immunological Phenotype with Strong Clinical Correlates in Young Children with Acute Wheezing.

Authors :
Khoo, S.
Read, J.
Franks, K.
Zhang, Guicheng
Bizzintino, J.
Coleman, L.
McCrae, C.
Öberg, L.
Troy, N.
Prastanti, F.
Everard, J.
Oo, S.
Borland, M.
Maciewicz, R.
Le Souëf, P.
Laing, I.
Bosco, A.
Khoo, S.
Read, J.
Franks, K.
Zhang, Guicheng
Bizzintino, J.
Coleman, L.
McCrae, C.
Öberg, L.
Troy, N.
Prastanti, F.
Everard, J.
Oo, S.
Borland, M.
Maciewicz, R.
Le Souëf, P.
Laing, I.
Bosco, A.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Asthma exacerbations are triggered by rhinovirus infections. We employed a systems biology approach to delineate upper-airway gene network patterns underlying asthma exacerbation phenotypes in children. Cluster analysis unveiled distinct IRF7hi versus IRF7lo molecular phenotypes, the former exhibiting robust upregulation of Th1/type I IFN responses and the latter an alternative signature marked by upregulation of cytokine and growth factor signaling and downregulation of IFN-?. The two phenotypes also produced distinct clinical phenotypes. For IRF7lo children, symptom duration prior to hospital presentation was more than twice as long from initial symptoms (p = 0.011) and nearly three times as long for cough (p < 0.001), the odds ratio of admission to hospital was increased more than 4-fold (p = 0.018), and time to recurrence was shorter (p = 0.015). In summary, our findings demonstrate that asthma exacerbations in children can be divided into IRF7hi versus IRF7lo phenotypes with associated differences in clinical phenotypes.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1099668396
Document Type :
Electronic Resource