National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia; European Union's Horizon 2020; The University of Melbourne; Clifford Craig Medical Research Trust of Tasmania; The Victorian, Queensland & Tasmanian Asthma Foundations; The Royal Hobart Hospital; Helen MacPherson Smith Trust; and GlaxoSmithKline.
Background: There are few data in asthma relating airway physiology, inflammation and remodelling and the relative effects of inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) treatment on these parameters. A study of the relationships between spirometric indices, airway inflammation, airway remodelling, and bronchial hyperreactivity (BHR) before and after treatment with high dose inhaled fluticasone propionate (FP 750 µg bd) was performed in a group of patients with relatively mild but symptomatic asthma. Methods: A double blind, randomised, placebo controlled, parallel group study of inhaled FP was performed in 35 asthmatic patients. Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) and airway biopsy studies were carried out at baseline and after 3 and 12 months of treatment. Twenty two normal healthy non-asthmatic subjects acted as controls. Results: BAL fluid eosinophils, mast cells, and epithelial cells were significantly higher in asthmatic patients than in controls at baseline (p<0.01). Subepithelial reticular basement membrane (rbm) thickness was variable, but overall was increased in asthmatic patients compared with controls (p<0.01). Multiple regression analysis explained 40% of the variability in BHR, 21% related to rbm thickness, 11% to BAL epithelial cells, and 8% to BAL eosinophils. The longitudinal data corroborated the cross sectional model. Forced expiratory volume in 1 second improved after 3 months of treatment with FP with no further improvement at 12 months. PD 20 improved throughout the study. BAL inflammatory cells decreased following 3 months of treatment with no further improvement at 12 months (p<0.05 v placebo). Rbm thickness decreased in the FP group, but only after 12 months of treatment (mean change -1.9, 95% CI -3 to -0.7 µm; p<0.01 v baseline, p<0.05 v placebo). A third of the improvement in BHR with FP was associated with early changes in inflammation, but the more progressive and larger improvement was associated with the later improvement in airway remodelling. Conclusion: Physiology, airway inflammation and remodelling in asthma are interrelated and improve with ICS. Changes are not temporally concordant, with prolonged treatment necessary for maximal benefit in remodelling and PD 20 . Determining the appropriate dose of inhaled steroids only by reference to symptoms and lung function, as specified in current international guidelines, and even against indices of inflammation may be over simplistic. The results of this study support the need for early and long term intervention with ICS, even in patients with relatively mild asthma.
Given that the apnea-ventilation cycle length during central sleep apnea (CSA) with congestive heart failure (CHF) is approximately 70 s, we hypothesized that rapidly responsive peripheral CO(2) ventilatory responses would be raised in CHF-CSA and would correlate with the severity of CSA. Sleep studies and single breath and rebreathe hypercapnic ventilatory responses (HCVR) were measured as markers of peripheral and central CO(2) ventilatory responses, respectively, in 51 subjects: 12 CHF with no apnea (CHF-N), 8 CHF with obstructive sleep apnea (CHF-OSA), 12 CHF-CSA, 11 CSA without CHF ("idiopathic" CSA; ICSA), and 8 normal subjects. Single breath HCVR was equally elevated in CHF-CSA and ICSA groups compared with CHF-N, CHF-OSA, and normal groups (0.58 +/- 0.09 [mean +/- SE] and 0. 58 +/- 0.07 versus 0.23 +/- 0.06, 0.25 +/- 0.04, and 0.27 +/- 0.02 L/min/PET(CO(2)) mm Hg, respectively, p < 0.001). Similarly, rebreathe HCVR was elevated in both CHF-CSA and ICSA groups compared with CHF-N, CHF-OSA, and normal groups (5.80 +/- 1.12 and 3.53 +/- 0. 29 versus 2.00 +/- 0.25, 1.44 +/- 0.16, and 2.14 +/- 0.22 L/min/PET(CO(2)) mm Hg, respectively, p < 0.001). Furthermore, in the entire CHF group, single breath HCVR correlated with central apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) (r = 0.63, p < 0.001) and percentage central/total apneas (r = 0.52, p = 0.022). Rebreathe HCVR correlated with awake Pa(CO(2)) (r = -0.61, p < 0.001), but not with central AHI or percentage central/total apneas independent of its relationship with single breath HCVR. In conclusion, in subjects with CHF, raised central CO(2) ventilatory response predisposes to CSA promoting background hypocapnia and exposing the apnea threshold to fluctuations in ventilation, whereas raised and faster-acting peripheral CO(2) ventilatory response determines the periodicity and severity of CSA.
Symptoms and spirometric evidence of COPD are common among people aged 40 years or older and increase with age. Further research is needed to better understand the diagnosis and management of COPD in Australia, along with continuing efforts to prevent the disease.
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