Abstract

BackgroundEffective detection of early lung disease in cystic fibrosis (CF) is critical to understanding early pathogenesis and evaluating early intervention strategies. We aimed to compare ability of several proposed sensitive functional tools to detect early CF lung disease as defined by CT structural disease in school aged children. Methods50 CF subjects (mean±SD 11.2 ± 3.5y, range 5–18y) with early lung disease (FEV1≥70 % predicted: 95.7 ± 11.8 %) performed spirometry, Multiple breath washout (MBW, including trapped gas assessment), oscillometry, cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) and simultaneous spirometer-directed low-dose CT imaging. CT data were analysed using well-evaluated fully quantitative software for bronchiectasis and air trapping (AT). ResultsCT bronchiectasis and AT occurred in 24 % and 58 % of patients, respectively. Of the functional tools, MBW detected the highest rates of abnormality: Scond 82 %, MBWTG RV 78 %, LCI 74 %, MBWTG IC 68 % and Sacin 51 %. CPET VO2peak detected slightly higher rates of abnormality (9 %) than spirometry-based FEV1 (2 %). For oscillometry AX (14 %) performed better than Rrs (2 %) whereas Xrs and R5-19 failed to detect any abnormality. LCI and Scond correlated with bronchiectasis (r = 0.55–0.64, p < 0.001) and AT (r = 0.73–0.74, p < 0.001). MBW-assessed trapped gas was detectable in 92 % of subjects and concordant with CT-assessed AT in 74 %. ConclusionsSignificant structural and functional deficits occur in early CF lung disease, as detected by CT and MBW. For MBW, additional utility, beyond that offered by LCI, was suggested for Scond and MBW-assessed gas trapping. Our study reinforces the complementary nature of these tools and the limited utility of conventional oscillometry and CPET in this setting.

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