Abstract

Mannose-binding lectin (MBL) is a key component of innate immunity. MBL deficiency is common (10-30% of the general population depending on the definition used) and has been associated with disease progression in cystic fibrosis. We aimed to assess the effect of MBL deficiency on disease severity in non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis. We recruited patients with non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis and age-matched and sex-matched controls at a specialist bronchiectasis clinic in Edinburgh, UK. We assessed MBL function with genotyping (low-expressing genotype [deficiency] defined as homozygosity for exon 1 mutations [YO/YO] or compound heterozygosity [XA/YO]; YA/YO and XA/XA genotypes were defined as intermediate-expressing with all other genotypes defined as high-expressing) and serum measurements (deficiency defined with two parameters: <500 ng/mL or <200 ng/mL). We assessed rates of exacerbation, chronic bacterial colonisation, and lung function during 4 years of follow-up. We included 470 patients with bronchiectasis and 414 controls. MBL genotype frequencies and MBL serum concentrations did not differ between patients and controls. 55 (12%) patients with bronchiectasis had low-expressing genotypes. These patients had a mean of 2·7 exacerbations per year (SD 1·8), compared with 1·9 per year (1·2) for 135 patients with intermediate-expressing genotypes and 1·9 per year (1·3) for 280 patients with high-expressing genotypes (p<0·0001). Chronic colonisation with bacteria was most frequent in patients with low-expressing genotypes (47 [85%] patients vs 82 [61%] patients with intermediate-expressing genotypes and 183 [65%] patients with high-expressing genotypes; p=0·0041); especially P aeruginosa colonisation (19 [35%] patients vs 13 [10%] patients and 36 [13%] patients; p<0·0001). Patients with low-expressing genotypes were more likely to be admitted to hospital for severe exacerbations during follow-up (27 [49%] patients vs 42 [31%] patients and 87 [31%] patients; p=0·032). Patients with low-expressing genotypes also had increased scores for radiological severity and worse quality of life compared with the other two groups. MBL serum deficiency (<200 ng/mL) was associated with increased exacerbations, hospital admissions, and radiological severity. When <500 ng/mL was used as the definition of deficiency, the associations with exacerbation frequency and radiological severity were no longer significant. MBL might be an important modifier of disease severity in non-CF bronchiectasis. UK Medical Research Council, UK Chief Scientists Office.

Highlights

  • Bronchiectasis is a chronic inflammatory lung disease characterised by permanent dilatation of the bronchi.[1]

  • Our study showed that these patients, with low serum Mannose-binding lectin (MBL) concentrations, have an increased frequency of chronic bacterial colonisation and an increased incidence of H influenzae and P aeruginosa compared with patients with higher serum MBL concentrations

  • Systematic review We searched Pubmed, Embase, and Google scholar for articles published in any language between Jan 1, 1980, and Nov 30, 2012, with the search terms: “bronchiectasis”, “cystic fibrosis”, or “CF” AND “mannose-binding lectin” OR “mannan-binding lectin” OR “MBL” OR “MBL2” OR “MBL-2”. This search updated a previous systematic review published in 2010.16 We identified two studies of mannose-binding lectin (MBL) in non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis: one study[25] that reported no difference in MBL serum concentrations between patients and controls and another UK-based study of 133 patients that reported no difference in disease severity between patients with serum concentrations of less than 600 ng/mL and those patients with serum concentrations of more than 600 ng/mL

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Summary

Introduction

Bronchiectasis is a chronic inflammatory lung disease characterised by permanent dilatation of the bronchi.[1]. MBL binds to glycoconjugates containing mannose, fucose or N-acetylglucosamine on the surface of a wide range of clinically important bacteria, viruses and fungi, activating the lectin pathway of complement.[6,7] Through complement activation, MBL promotes phagocytosis and leucocyte chemotaxis and activation.[8,9] MBL might have a role in the resolution of inflammation in the lung through the clearance of apoptotic cells and in suppression of proinflammatory cytokine secretion.[10,11]

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