Patients with M. abscessus pulmonary disease who are treated with multidrug antibiotic therapy and surgery or antibiotic therapy alone had similar clinical outcomes. However, surgical resection, in addition to antibiotics, may offer a prolonged microbiologic response.
Rationale: Among patients with nontuberculous mycobacterial lung disease is a subset of previously healthy women with a slender body morphotype, often with scoliosis and/or pectus excavatum. We hypothesize that unidentified factors predispose these individuals to pulmonary nontuberculous mycobacterial disease. Objectives: To compare body morphotype, serum adipokine levels, and whole-blood cytokine responses of patients with pulmonary nontuberculous mycobacteria (pNTM) with contemporary control subjects who are well matched demographically. Methods: We enrolled 103 patients with pNTM and 101 uninfected control subjects of similar demographics. Body mass index and body fat were quantified. All patients with pNTM and a subset of control subjects were evaluated for scoliosis and pectus excavatum. Serum leptin and adiponectin were measured. Specific cytokines important to host-defense against mycobacteria were measured in whole blood before and after stimulation. Measurements and Main Results: Patients with pNTM and control subjects were well matched for age, gender, and race. Patients with pNTM had significantly lower body mass index and body fat and were significantly taller than control subjects. Scoliosis and pectus excavatum were significantly more prevalent in patients with pNTM. The normal relationships between the adipokines and body fat were lost in the patients with pNTM, a novel finding. IFN-g and IL-10 levels were significantly suppressed in stimulated whole blood of patients with pNTM. Conclusions: This is the first study to comprehensively compare body morphotype, adipokines, and cytokine responses between patients with NTM lung disease and demographically matched controls. Our findings suggest a novel, predisposing immunophenotype that should be mechanistically defined.Keywords: leptin; adiponectin; pectus excavatum; scoliosis; Marfan syndrome Chronic lung disease due to nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) is a growing public health concern (1-3). Recent studies estimate the incidence in the United States to be five to six cases per 100,000 and as high as 15.5 cases per 100,000 in persons over 50 years of age (3-5). Because the duration of symptomatic NTM lung disease is often years, the prevalence of disease is estimated to be 10 to 40 cases per 100,000 (1).In the United States, the most common NTM species associated with lung disease are Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC), Mycobacterium kansasii, and Mycobacterium abscessus. Although NTM are widespread in water and soil (6, 7), relatively few persons develop disease. Thus, intact immunity is likely pivotal for protection against NTM.Chronic lung disease is the most common form of NTM infection, manifested by two main radiographic patterns: (i) an upper lobe fibrocavitary pattern that occurs mostly in men with underlying lung disease such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and (ii) a nodular-bronchiectasis pattern that often involves the right middle lobe and lingula and which appears to be more common in women with no clear risk factors (8)...
Currently recommended regimens for MAC lung disease yield important pharmacologic interactions and low concentrations of key drugs including macrolides. Pharmacodynamic indices for rifampicin, clarithromycin, amikacin, and moxifloxacin are seldom met. This may partly explain the poor outcomes of currently recommended treatment regimens. Trials of new drugs and new dosing strategies are needed.
Purpose: To describe patient/family and logistical barriers to participation in university-based, early-phase cancer clinical trials for adults age Ն 65 years, and to identify influences on their decisions to participate. Participants and Methods:In-person surveys were administered to subjects age Ն 65 years with advanced tumors who had received prior chemotherapy. Subjects were recruited from private medical oncology practices collaborating with the University of Colorado and Moffitt Cancer Center research networks.Results: Three hundred individuals (51% age 65 to 74 and 49% age 75 or older) responded. Overall, 60% reported one or more barriers to participation in an early-phase trial; logistical barriers such as driving or time demands (34%) or reluctance to be treated at a university center (21%) were most common.Seniors age 75 or older were more reluctant to be treated at a university center (27% v 14%; P ϭ .005), or concerned about loss of continuity with their primary oncologist (24% v 15%, P ϭ .05). Older seniors were also significantly more reluctant than younger seniors to consider treatments with substantial nausea, vomiting, or fatigue. Older and younger seniors differed little in their preferred sources of information; both age groups emphasized the importance of the primary oncologist (100%), a nurse who provides experimental treatment (93%), other patients (83%) or acquaintances who had received experimental treatment (83%). Conclusion:Potential strategies to overcome barriers to enrollment of seniors into early-phase trials include providing more information about trials to community oncologists and prospective enrollees and assisting these individuals in navigating logistical barriers to enrollment.
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