Rare Lung Disease Cells Indicate Higher Death Risk
According to a new study, increased numbers of neutrophil (pronounced new-tro-fil) cellsa type of white blood cellin patients lungs were associated with a 30 percent increased risk of mortality in the first year following diagnosis with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF).
A measure of cell types in the lungs of IPF patients at the time of diagnosis may allow us to determine their risk of death in the following year, says Brent Kinder, MD, assistant professor of medicine at the UC College of Medicine and pulmonologist with UC Physicians.
This even takes into account other well-known measures of disease severity like age, whether or not the patient smokes and how well his or her lung functions during breathing tests, he adds.
Kinder co-authored the study, which is featured in the January issue of the journal Chest, with colleagues from the
IPF is one of about 200 disorders called interstitial lung diseases (ILDs), which affect the thick tissue of the lung as opposed to more common lung ailmentssuch as asthma or emphysemathat affect the airways.
It is the most common form of ILD and affects about 128,000 people in the
Researchers discovered the link between neutrophils and IPF outcome using bronchoalveolar lavage. The technique involves passing a bronchoscope through the mouth of the patient and into the lungs. Saline is squirted into a small part of the affected lung and then recollected for examination.
The team evaluated the cell count of 156 people with IPF at the time the disease began to make its appearance.
With this information, we can now work to identify neutrophil cells in patients lungs and provide detailed information for more accurate diagnosis, says Kinder, who is also director of the newly established Interstitial Lung Disease Center at UC.
It is our hope that this accurate prognostic information will become even more useful as effective treatments become available.
Kinders research team included Talmadge King, Jr., MD, chair of the department of medicine at UCSF and senior author of the study; Kevin Brown, MD, Marvin Schwarz, MD, and Alma Kervitsky from National Jewish Medical Center; and Joachim Ix, MD, from the University of California, San Diego.
The study was funded by grants from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute.
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