Volume 107, Issue 3 , Pages 449-454, March 2001
Persistent airflow limitation in adult-onset nonatopic asthma is associated with serologic evidence of Chlamydia pneumoniae infection☆☆☆
Abstract
Background: Persistent airflow limitation may develop in patients with asthma, particularly in adults with nonatopic (intrinsic) disease. Although the underlying mechanisms are still unknown, respiratory infections might be involved. Objective: We investigated the annual loss of lung function in relation to seropositivity to Chlamydia pneumoniae in different subgroups of patients with severe asthma according to age at onset of asthma and atopic status. Methods: One hundred one nonsmoking outpatients with a pulmonologist’s diagnosis of severe asthma (32 men and 69 women; mean age, 46.0 years; range, 18-75 years) were included in a cross-sectional study. C pneumoniae –specific serum IgG and IgA were measured by means of ELISA. The estimated decline in lung function was calculated from the relationship between postbronchodilator FEV1/vital capacity (percent predicted) and the duration of asthma and expressed as the slope of the regression line. Results: Patients with adult-onset nonatopic asthma and positive IgG antibodies to C pneumoniae had a significantly steeper slope of the regression line compared with the other subgroups of asthmatic patients (P = .001), being indicative of a 4-fold greater estimated decline in postbronchodilator FEV1/vital capacity (2.3% vs 0.5% predicted per year of asthma duration). Conclusion: These results suggest that C pneumoniae infection might promote the development of persistent airflow limitation in patients with nonatopic adult-onset asthma. It remains to be established whether viable pathogens that are accessible for therapeutic intervention are still present in the lower airways. (J Allergy Clin Immunol 2001;107:449-54.)
Keywords: Asthma, severity of illness index, airway obstruction, prognosis, chronic disease, phenotype, Chlamydia pneumoniae, infection, immunology, human
Abbreviations: VC: , Vital capacity
☆ Supported by the Netherlands Asthma Foundation (grant 97.24).
☆☆ Reprint requests: Anneke ten Brinke, MD, Department of Pulmonary Diseases, C3-P, Leiden University Medical Center, PO Box 9600, NL-2300 RC Leiden, The Netherlands.
PII: S0091-6749(01)02547-7
doi:10.1067/mai.2001.113047
© 2001 Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.
Volume 107, Issue 3 , Pages 449-454, March 2001
