Airway mast cells and eosinophils correlate with clinical severity and airway hyperresponsiveness in corticosteroid-treated asthma

被引:98
|
作者
Gibson, PG [1 ]
Saltos, N [1 ]
Borgas, T [1 ]
机构
[1] John Hunter Hosp, Dept Resp Med, Airways Res Ctr, Newcastle, NSW 2310, Australia
基金
英国医学研究理事会;
关键词
asthma; sputum; eosinophil; mast cell; airway responsiveness; inflammation; corticosteroid;
D O I
10.1067/mai.2000.105319
中图分类号
R392 [医学免疫学];
学科分类号
100102 ;
摘要
Background: The relationship between airway inflammation and asthma severity in corticosteroid-treated asthma is unclear. Objectives: Our purpose was to characterize the inflammatory cell profile of the airway lumen and epithelium in corticosteroid-treated asthma and to relate these findings to clinical and physiologic markers of asthma severity. Methods: Adults (n = 20) with asthma received standardized high-dose inhaled corticosteroid therapy with beclomethasone 2000 mu g per day For 8 weeks, Airway responsiveness to methacholine and hypertonic (4.5%) saline solution was then assessed, followed by sputum induction and, 1 week later, bronchoscopy with bronchoalveolar lavage and bronchial brush biopsy to assess inflammatory cells. Results: Clinical asthma severity was associated with airway hyperresponsiveness. Metachromatic cells were the main granulocyte present in bronchial blush biopsy specimens and correlated with airway responsiveness to saline solution (r = -0.75), methacholine (r = -0.74), peak flow variability (r = 0.59), and clinical asthma severity (r = 0.57). Eosinophils were the main granulocyte present in sputum and correlated with airway responsiveness to saline solution (r = -0.63) but not with other clinical markers of asthma severity. Bronchoalveolar lavage cell counts were not related to clinical asthma severity. Conclusions: In asthmatic patients treated with corticosteroids, the dominant inflammatory effector cell in the epithelium is the metachromatic cell, and in sputum it is the eosinophil. These cells correlate with the degree of airway hyperresponsiveness. Clinical asthma severity correlates with airway responsiveness and epithelial metachromatic cells. Induced sputum eosinophils and airway responsiveness to hypertonic saline solution may be useful markers of airway inflammation for clinical practice.
引用
收藏
页码:752 / 759
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Corticosteroid insensitivity in severe asthma: Impaired nuclear translocation of glucocorticoid receptor in airway smooth muscle cells
    Chang, Po-Jui
    Baker, Josephine
    Chung, Kian Fan
    Bhavsar, Pankaj K.
    EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY JOURNAL, 2012, 40
  • [42] The influence of smoking on the formation of airway hyperresponsiveness to cold and the course of destructive-cytological processes in the goblet cells of the bronchial epithelium in patients with asthma
    Pirogov, A. B.
    Prikhodko, A. G.
    Kolosov, V. P.
    Perelman, Ju M.
    BYULLETEN SIBIRSKOY MEDITSINY, 2019, 18 (03): : 90 - 100
  • [43] Natural killer T cells are dispensable in the development of allergen-induced airway hyperresponsiveness, inflammation and remodelling in a mouse model of chronic asthma
    Koh, Y-I.
    Shim, J-U.
    Lee, J-H.
    Chung, I-J.
    Min, J-J.
    Rhee, J. H.
    Lee, H. C.
    Chung, D. H.
    Wi, J-O.
    CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL IMMUNOLOGY, 2010, 161 (01) : 159 - 170
  • [44] Correlation between CCL26 production by human bronchial epithelial cells and airway eosinophils: Involvement in patients with severe eosinophilic asthma
    Larose, Marie-Chantal
    Chakir, Jamila
    Archambault, Anne-Sophie
    Joubert, Philippe
    Provost, Veronique
    Laviolette, Michel
    Flamand, Nicolas
    JOURNAL OF ALLERGY AND CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY, 2015, 136 (04) : 904 - 913
  • [45] LONG-TERM EFFECTS OF BUDESONIDE ON AIRWAY RESPONSIVENESS AND CLINICAL ASTHMA SEVERITY IN INHALED STEROID-DEPENDENT ASTHMATICS
    JUNIPER, EF
    KLINE, PA
    VANZIELEGHEM, MA
    RAMSDALE, EH
    OBYRNE, PM
    HARGREAVE, FE
    EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY JOURNAL, 1990, 3 (10) : 1122 - 1127
  • [46] Mast cell-derived serotonin enhances methacholine-induced airway hyperresponsiveness in house dust mite-induced experimental asthma
    Mendez, Erika Haide
    Vazquez, Perla Abigail Alvarado
    Abma, Willem
    Simonson, Oscar
    Rodin, Sergey
    Feyerabend, Thorsten B.
    Malinovschi, Andrei
    Janson, Christer
    Adner, Mikael
    Hallgren, Jenny
    EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY JOURNAL, 2021, 58
  • [47] Clinical and pathogenetic aspects of neutrophilic bronchial inflammation in asthma patients with cold-induced airway hyperresponsiveness (literature review)
    Pirogov, A. B.
    Prikhodko, A. G.
    Pirogova, N. A.
    Perelman, J. M.
    BYULLETEN SIBIRSKOY MEDITSINY, 2023, 22 (01): : 143 - 152
  • [48] Dissociation of FK506-Binding Protein 12.6 kD from Ryanodine Receptor in Bronchial Smooth Muscle Cells in Airway Hyperresponsiveness in Asthma
    Du, Ying
    Zhao, Jianhong
    Li, Xi
    Jin, Si
    Ma, Wan-Li
    Mu, Qing
    Xu, Shuxiang
    Yang, Jie
    Rao, Shanshan
    Zhu, Liping
    Xin, Jianbao
    Cai, Peng-Cheng
    Su, Yunchao
    Ye, Hong
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY CELL AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 2014, 50 (02) : 398 - 408
  • [49] Expression of Smad7 in bronchial epithelial cells is inversely correlated to basement membrane thickness and airway hyperresponsiveness in patients with asthma
    Nakao, A
    Sagara, H
    Setoguchi, Y
    Okada, T
    Okumura, K
    Ogawa, H
    Fukuda, T
    JOURNAL OF ALLERGY AND CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY, 2002, 110 (06) : 873 - 878
  • [50] Mast cells contribute to double-stranded RNA-induced augmentation of airway eosinophilia in a murine model of asthma
    Kan-o, Keiko
    Matsunaga, Yuko
    Fukuyama, Satoru
    Moriwaki, Atsushi
    Hirai-Kitajima, Hiroko
    Yokomizo, Takehiko
    Aritake, Kosuke
    Urade, Yoshihiro
    Nakanishi, Yoichi
    Inoue, Hiromasa
    Matsumoto, Koichiro
    RESPIRATORY RESEARCH, 2013, 14