ERJ Open Research (Mar 2019)

Personalised anti-inflammatory therapy for bronchiectasis and cystic fibrosis: selecting patients for controlled trials of neutrophil elastase inhibition

  • Holly R. Keir,
  • Christopher J. Fong,
  • Megan L. Crichton,
  • Philip Barth,
  • Eric Chevalier,
  • Gill Brady,
  • Gwen Kennedy,
  • Johann Zimmermann,
  • Piet L.B. Bruijnzeel,
  • Alison J. Dicker,
  • James D. Chalmers

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00252-2018
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1

Abstract

Read online

Background Neutrophil elastase (NE) has been linked to lung neutrophil dysfunction in bronchiectasis and cystic fibrosis (CF), making NE inhibition a potential therapeutic target. NE inhibitor trials have given mixed result perhaps because not all patients have elevated airway NE activity. Methods We tested whether a single baseline sputum NE measurement or a combination of clinical parameters could enrich patient populations with elevated NE activity for “personalised medicine”. Intra- and interindividual variations of total and active NE levels in induced sputum from patients with CF or bronchiectasis were monitored over 14 days. Patients with established CF and bronchiectasis (n=5 per group) were recruited. NE was measured using three different methods: one total and two active NE assays. Subsequently, we analysed the association between clinical parameters and NE from a large bronchiectasis cohort study (n=381). Results All three assays showed a high degree of day-to-day variability (0–233% over 14 days). There were strong correlations found between all assays (p<0.0001). Despite high day-to-day variability, patients could be stratified into “high” or “low” groups based on moderate cut-off levels. In the bronchiectasis cohort study, factors most associated with high sputum NE levels were: Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection (β-estimate 11.5, 95% CI −6.0–29.0), sputum colour (β-estimate 10.4, 95% CI 4.3–16.6), Medical Research Council dyspnoea score (β-estimate 6.4, 95% CI 1.4–11.4) and exacerbation history (β-estimate 3.4, 95% CI 1.4–5.3). Collectively, P. aeruginosa infection, sputum colour and exacerbation frequency provided the greatest specificity for “high” NE (98.7%, 95% CI 7.0–99.6%). Conclusion These results show that patients with bronchiectasis and CF can be effectively divided into “high” or “low” groups, based on sputum NE assays or clinical inclusion criteria.