TY - JOUR
T1 - Antibody response to Pseudomonas aeruginosa in cystic fibrosis patients
T2 - a marker of therapeutic success?--A 30-year cohort study of survival in Danish CF patients after onset of chronic P. aeruginosa lung infection
AU - Johansen, Helle Krogh
AU - Nørregaard, Lena
AU - Gøtzsche, Peter C
AU - Pressler, Tacjana
AU - Koch, Christian
AU - Høiby, Niels
N1 - Copyright 2004 Wiely-Liss, Inc.
PY - 2004/5
Y1 - 2004/5
N2 - We studied the effects of increasingly intensive treatment regimens on anti-pseudomonal antibody response and survival in five successive cohorts of a total of 157 Danish cystic fibrosis patients after they had acquired chronic P. aeruginosa lung infection. The time periods were 1971-1975 (N = 21), 1976-1980 (N = 64), 1981-1986 (N = 27), 1987-1993 (N = 26), and 1994-2000 (N = 19). During this 30-year period, we introduced elective 2-week courses of chemotherapy every third month in all chronically infected patients, early aggressive treatment with inhalation of colistin and oral ciprofloxacin for 3 months whenever P. aeruginosa was cultured in sputum from noncolonized patients, and inhalation of recombinant human dornase alfa. There was a significant correlation between the calendar year when chronic P. aeruginosa infection was acquired and the subsequent increase in the level of precipitins (P < 0.00001). The median number of precipitins increased by 5 per year in the oldest calendar year cohort, and 1 per year in the youngest. The median age of onset of chronic P. aeruginosa increased from 9.3 years from 1981-1986 to 13.8 years from 1987-2000. Survival after acquisition of chronic P. aeruginosa lung infection improved with time (P = 0.008). Our study shows that CF patients who are treated intensively have lower antibody responses and longer survival after acquisition of chronic P. aeruginosa lung infection.
AB - We studied the effects of increasingly intensive treatment regimens on anti-pseudomonal antibody response and survival in five successive cohorts of a total of 157 Danish cystic fibrosis patients after they had acquired chronic P. aeruginosa lung infection. The time periods were 1971-1975 (N = 21), 1976-1980 (N = 64), 1981-1986 (N = 27), 1987-1993 (N = 26), and 1994-2000 (N = 19). During this 30-year period, we introduced elective 2-week courses of chemotherapy every third month in all chronically infected patients, early aggressive treatment with inhalation of colistin and oral ciprofloxacin for 3 months whenever P. aeruginosa was cultured in sputum from noncolonized patients, and inhalation of recombinant human dornase alfa. There was a significant correlation between the calendar year when chronic P. aeruginosa infection was acquired and the subsequent increase in the level of precipitins (P < 0.00001). The median number of precipitins increased by 5 per year in the oldest calendar year cohort, and 1 per year in the youngest. The median age of onset of chronic P. aeruginosa increased from 9.3 years from 1981-1986 to 13.8 years from 1987-2000. Survival after acquisition of chronic P. aeruginosa lung infection improved with time (P = 0.008). Our study shows that CF patients who are treated intensively have lower antibody responses and longer survival after acquisition of chronic P. aeruginosa lung infection.
KW - Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use
KW - Anti-Infective Agents/therapeutic use
KW - Antibodies, Bacterial/analysis
KW - Child
KW - Ciprofloxacin/therapeutic use
KW - Cohort Studies
KW - Colistin/therapeutic use
KW - Cystic Fibrosis/complications
KW - Deoxyribonuclease I/therapeutic use
KW - Humans
KW - Immunoelectrophoresis, Two-Dimensional
KW - Linear Models
KW - Pseudomonas Infections/complications
KW - Survival Analysis
KW - Time Factors
U2 - 10.1002/ppul.10457
DO - 10.1002/ppul.10457
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 15095326
SN - 8755-6863
VL - 37
SP - 427
EP - 432
JO - Pediatric Pulmonology
JF - Pediatric Pulmonology
IS - 5
ER -