Cystic Fibrosis More than just mucus
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Transcript Cystic Fibrosis More than just mucus
Cystic Fibrosis
Esmeralda E. Morales, MD
August 28, 2006
Objectives
Know the clinical features of cystic fibrosis.
Know how CF is inherited.
Be familiar with criteria to diagnose CF.
Become aware of the myriad of treatments used
in CF.
What is cystic fibrosis (CF)?
A multisystem disease
Autosomal recessive inheritance
Cause: mutations in the cystic fibrosis
transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR)
chromosome 7
codes for a c-AMP regulated chloride channel
Rosenstein, BJ and Zeitlin, PL. Cystic fibrosis. The Lancet. 351: 277-82.
Diagnosis of cystic fibrosis
One or more clinical features of CF
PLUS
Two CF mutations
OR
Two positive quantative pilocarpine iontophoresis
sweat chloride values
OR
An abnormal nasal transepithelial potential difference
value
Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. Clinical Practice Guidelines for Cystic fibrosis.1997.
Clinical features of Cystic Fibrosis
Chronic Sino-Pulmonary Disease
Nutritional deficiency/GI abnormality
Obstructive Azoospermia
Electrolyte abnormality
CF in a first degree relative
Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. Clinical Practice Guidelines for Cystic fibrosis.1997.
Welsh, MJ and Smith, AE. Cystic
Fibrosis. Scientific American. 273 (6): 52,
1995.
Burden of CF
Most common “life-shortening” recessive
genetic disease in Caucasians
1:3,500
newborns in the US
1 in 10,500 Native Americans
1 in 11,500 Hispanics
1 in 14,000 to 17,000 African Americans
1 in 25,500 Asians
http://www.cff.org
Burden of CF (continued)
About
30,000 people affected in
United States
>10,000,000 people carriers of mutant
CFTR
80% cases diagnosed by age 3
Almost 10% diagnosed ≥18 years
http://www.cff.org
CF Survival
Overall trend is improved survival
Female survival worse than male between 2-20
years of age1
35% of patients are older than 18 years of age2
Median survival 36.8 years3 compared to 1930s
when life expectancy was about 6 months2
1.Goss, CH and Rosenfeld, M. Update on cystic fibrosis epidemiology. Current Opinion in
Pulmonary Medicine. 10:510-514; 2004.
2. Davis, P. Cystic Fibrosis Since 1938. AJRCCM Articles in Press. Doi:
10.1164/rccm.200505-840OE; 2005.
3.www.cff.org/news/general_news
Autosomal recessive inheritance in
CF
Let C= normal CFTR
Let c= mutant CFTR
If mom and dad are both
carriers then:
C
c
C
CC
Cc
c
Cc
cc
With mom and dad
carriers, then:
50% chance of having
child who is a carrier
25% chance of child
being affected
25% of child with no
mutant copies of CFTR
Cystic fibrosis transmembrane
conductance regulator (CFTR) gene
http://www.ornl.gov/sci/techresources/
Human_Genome/posters/chromosome/cftr.shtml
The CFTR gene is located on
the long arm of
chromosome 7.
There are 1522 mutations in
CFTR listed on the CFTR
mutation database
(http://www.genet.sickkids.o
n.ca/cftr/)
The most common mutation
is Δ F508---70% CF alleles in
caucasians.1
1. Gibson, RL, Burns, JL, and Ramsey, BW.
Pathophysiology and Management of Pulmonary
Infections in Cystic Fibrosis. AJRCCM 168 (918-951);
2003.
Cell membrane diagram
From: http://library.thinkquest.org/C004535/cell_membranes.html
CFTR
Gibson, RL, Burns, JL, and Ramsey, BW. Pathophysiology and Management of Pulmonary
Infections in Cystic Fibrosis. AJRCCM 168 (918-951); 2003.
Types of mutations in CFTR
Class I
Defective protein production
Class II
Defects in processing
Class III
http://www.cysticfibrosismedicine.com/
htmldocs/CFText/genetics.htm
CFTR reaches cell surface but
regulation is defective (channel
not activated)
Class IV
ΔF508
CFTR in membrane with
defective conduction
Class V
Decreased synthesis of CFTR
CFTR and Airway Surface Liquid
Donaldson,SH and Boucher,RC. Update on the pathogenesis of cystic fibrosis lung
disease.
Airway surface liquid low volume
hypothesis
Mucus---helps clear airway of bacteria
Clearance of mucus depends on
Ciliary function
Mucin secretion
Volume of airway surface liquid (ASL)
Forms periciliary liquid layer
Dilutes mucus---facilates entrapment of bacteria and
clearance
Optimal volume of ASL regulated by Na+ absorption
and Cl- secretion
Donaldson,SH and Boucher,RC. Update on the pathogenesis of cystic fibrosis lung disease.
Current Opinion in Pulmonary Medicine. 9: 486-491; 2003.
Airway surface liquid low volume
hypothesis and CFTR
Normal CFTR inhibits a sodium channel
(ENaC)
Mutant CFTR----ENaC not inhibited
Sodium absorption is increased
Water follows sodium
ASL volume decreases
Normal CFTR will cause Cl- ions to be secreted
if the ASL fluid is low
Mutant CFTR Cl- ions not secreted
Donaldson,SH and Boucher,RC. Update on the pathogenesis of cystic fibrosis lung disease.
Current Opinion in Pulmonary Medicine. 9: 486-491; 2003.
Airway surface liquid low volume
hypothesis and consequences
Cilia do not beat well when PCL volume is
depleted
Mucins are not diluted and cannot be easily
swept up the airway
Mucus becomes concentrated
Results in increased adhesion to airway surface
Promotes chronic infection
Donaldson,SH and Boucher,RC. Update on the pathogenesis of cystic fibrosis lung disease.
Current Opinion in Pulmonary Medicine. 9: 486-491; 2003.
CF Clinical Signs
Chronic Sino-Pulmonary Disease
Chronic infection with CF pathogens
Endobronchial disease
Cough/sputum production
Air obstruction---wheezing; evidence of obstruction on PFTs
Chest x-ray anomalies
Digital Clubbing
Sinus disease
Nasal Polyps
CT or x-ray findings of sinus disease
Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. Clinical Practice Guidelines for Cystic fibrosis.1997.
Infection
Gibson, RL, Burns, JL, and Ramsey, BW. Pathophysiology and Management of Pulmonary
Infections in Cystic Fibrosis. AJRCCM 168 (918-951); 2003.
CF Infections---Pseudomonas
aeruginosa
80% CF patients eventually infected with pseudomonas
Association between acquiring pseudomonas and
clinical status deterioration
Form biofilms
Relatively large genome
Pseudomonae collected from sputa of CF patients have been
noted to have larger genomes than lab strains
Gibson, RL, Burns, JL, and Ramsey, BW. AJRCCM
168 (918-951); 2003.
Pseudomonas genome
http://www.pseudomonas.com/
Burkholderia cepacia complex
Holmes, A, Govan, J, and
Goldstein, R. Agricultural
Use of Burkholderia
(Pseudomonas) cepacia:
A Threat to Human
Health?
Emerging Infectious
Diseases. 4(2):221-227;
1998
B. cepacia syndrome: fevers,
rapidly progressive
necrotizing pneumonia, death
Chronic cepacia infection—
decreased lung function and
increased mortality
Several closely related species
termed genomovars1
III has been associated with
more severe disease
1. Gibson, RL, Burns, JL, and Ramsey, BW.
AJRCCM 168 (918-951); 2003.
Endobronchial disease
From:
http://www.meddean.luc.edu/lumen/med
ed/elective/pulmonary/cf/cf_f.htm
Hyperinflation
Peribronchial cuffing
Bronchiectasis
Diffuse fibrosis
Atelectasis
Nasal Polyps
From: http://www.emedicine.com/
ped/topic1550.htm
Benign lesions in nasal airway
If large enough, can be
associated with significant
nasal obstruction, drainage,
headaches, snoring
Likely associated with
chronic inflammation
May need surgical
intervention
High recurrence rate
Digital Clubbing
From: Fawcett et al., 2004
Bulbous swelling at end
of fingers
Normal angle between
nail and nail bed lost--Schamroth sign
Can be associated with
pulmonary disease,
cardiac disease, ulcerative
colitis, and malignancies
Nutritional deficiency
Pancreatic insufficiency
Autopsy of malnourished infants--1938--- “cystic fibrosis of
the pancreas”---mucus plugging of glandular ducts1
Chloride impermeability affects HCO3- secretion and fluid
secretion in pancreatic ducts2
Pancreatic enzymes stay in ducts and are activated intraductally
Autolysis of pancreas
Inflammation, calcification, plugging of ducts, fibrosis
Malabsorption
Failure to thrive
Fat soluble vitamin deficiency
1. Davis, P. Cystic Fibrosis Since 1938. AJRCCM Articles in Press.
Doi: 10.1164/rccm.200505-840OE; 2005.
2. Quinton, P. Physiologic Basis of Cystic Fibrosis. Physiol Rev 79:3-22, 1999.
GI disease
Intestinal abnormality
Hepatobiliary disease
Meconium ileus
Distal intestinal obstruction syndrome (DIOS)
Rectal prolapse
Focal biliary cirrhosis
Multilobular cirrhosis
Pancreatic endocrine dysfunction
Cystic fibrosis related diabetes
Cystic fibrosis related liver disease
Focal inspissation of bile
Obstructs biliary ductules
Second leading cause of death in CF1
Prevalence 9-37%1
Spectrum of disease
increased liver enzymes
biliary cirrhosis
portal hypertension
1. Efrati, O et al., Liver Cirrhosis and portal hypertension in CF.
European Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology. 15(10): 1073-1078; 2003.
Cystic fibrosis related diabetes
mellitus
Screening
Oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT)
Fasting>=140 mg/dl
initiate insulin treatment
Fasting<140 and OGTT at 2 hrs>200 mg/dl
Home glucose monitoring; consider insulin
Fasting <140 and 2 hour 140-200
Impaired glucose tolerance
Every two years in patients 10-16 years
Any patient with random plasma glucose >180
OGTT annually
Fasting and 2 hour <140
Normal glucose tolerance
Infertility
Men
Abnormal embryologic development of the
epididymal duct and vas deferens---may be
incomplete of absent1
Congential bilateral absence of the vas deferens—
97-98% of men with CF 1
1. Lewis-Jones et al, Cystic fibrosis in infertility: screening before assisted reproduction: Opinion. Human Reproduction
15(11): 2415-2417.
Infertility
Women
Lower fertility rate than non-CF women
Viscid mucoid cervical secretions of low volume in
women with CF 1
Pregnancy and CF:
Goss et al, 2003---no significant difference in
survival in women who became pregnant with CF
compared to women who did not become pregnant
(after adjusting for disease severity)2
1.Quinton, P. Physiologic Basis of Cystic Fibrosis. Physiol Rev 79:3-22, 1999
2.Goss, CH, Rubenfeld, GD, Otto, K and Aitken, ML. The effect of pregnancy on survival in women with cystic fibrosis.
Chest 124(4):1460-68; 2003.
Electrolyte abnormality---history
Dr. Paul di Sant’ Agnese
1949 NYC heat wave----noted CF infants to have a
higher rate of heat prostration than non-CF
Showed that sodium and chloride concentration in CF
patients’ sweat was 5 times higher than in non-CF1
Became basis for sweat chloride test
1. Davis, P. Cystic Fibrosis Since 1938. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical
Care Medicine Vol 173. pp. 475-482, (2006)
Electrolyte abnormality
Clinically---hypochloremic metabolic alkalosis
CFTR on luminal side of sweat duct
Chloride goes in from lumen via CFTR and out to
blood by other transporters
Sodium goes in via ENaC
Defective CFTR---Na and Cl- movement and
reabsoprtion into lumen impeded
Goodman, B and Percy, WH..CFTR in Teaching Membrane Transport.
Adv Physiol Educ. 29 (79-82); 2005
CF: Diagnostic Methods
Diagnosis---Sweat chloride
Technique first described
by Gibson and Cooke in
1950s
Chemical that stimulates
sweating placed under
electrode pad; saline
under other electrode pad
on arm
Mild electric current is
passed between electrodes
Sweat collected
http://www.nucleusinc.com
Illustration copyright 2003 Nucleus Communications, Inc.
Sweat chloride
Positive Sweat chloride: 60-165
meq/L
Borderine sweat chloride: 4060 meq/L
Normal sweat chloride: 0-40
False positives:
Hypothyroidism
Addison disease
Ectodermal dysplasia
Glycogen storage disease
Edema
Malnutrition
Lab error (evaporation or
contamination of sample)
False negatives:
Edema
Malnutrition
Some CF mutations
Sample diluted
Davis, P. Cystic Fibrosis Since 1938. AJRCCM Articles in Press.
Doi: 10.1164/rccm.200505-840OE; 2005.
Genetic testing
Mutation analysis available
Varies from screening for most common mutations
to sequencing entire CFTR gene
Prenatal screening
American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists recommended offering patients
option of prenatal screening for CF
Carrier testing of 23 most common mutations
Sensitivity of prenatal screening for CF among the
white population <78%1
lower than that for newborn screening
sensitivity of prenatal testing in racial and ethnic minority
populations is lower1
1. Grosse et al. Newborn Screening for Cystic Fibrosis. MMWR.53 (RR13):1-36; 2004.
Newborn Screening for CF
Goal: diagnose early---evidence that early
diagnosis may be associated with better
nutritional outcome and chest radiographic
scores1
Several different protocols in different states
Immunoreactive trypsinogen usually first followed
by either sweat or DNA testing
1. Mérelle ME, Nagelkerke AF, Lees CM, Dezateux C. Newborn screening for
cystic fibrosis. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. Issue3; 2005.
Cystic fibrosis---Treatment
Multidisciplinary
Airway Clearance
Infection
Nutrition
Gastrointestinal
Inflammation
Infertility
Social Issues
Treatment: Pulmonary toilet/Airway
clearance
Chest physiotherapy
Postural drainage and percussion
P.E.P valve, Acapella valve, Flutter valve
High frequency chest wall oscillation
Albuterol
Bronchodilation
Increase ciliary efficiency
Dornase alpha/recombinant DNase
Hypertonic Saline by nebulization
Treatment: Chronic infection
Inhaled antibiotics
Inhaled tobramycin in patients with pseudomonas
Sputum cultures
Treatment of pulmonary exacerbation
Pulmonary exacerbation---change in symptoms and signs
from baseline (cough, sputum production, lung function,
increased crackles on physical exam)
Requires hospitalization for antibiotics IV, as well as
increased airway clearance
Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. Clinical Practice Guidelines for
Cystic fibrosis.1997.
Treatment: Anti-inflammatory
agents
Ibuprofen
Konstan et al., 2003
85 patients 5-39 years of age with mild lung disease
randomized to placebo or high dose ibuprofen over
4 years
Ibuprofen group:
Slower decrease in FEV1 annually than placebo group; better
weight maintenance
No difference in frequency of hospitalization
Best effect seen in patients less than 13 years of age
Konstan et al., Effect of High Dose Ibuprofen in Patients with Cystic Fibrosis. NEJM.
332:848-54; 2003.
Treatment: Azithromycin
Saiman et al., 2003 double blind placebo
controlled trial of azithromycin
185 patients randomized to receive 3 times weekly
azithromycin or placebo
Improvements in lung function, weight, and number
of pulmonary exacerbations (decreased courses of
antibiotics and days in hospital)
Saiman et al., Azithromycin in Patinets with Cystic Fibrosis Chronically Infected with
Pseudomonas Aeruginosa. JAMA 290(13):1749; 2003.
Treatment: Nutrition
Follow nutrition parameters closely
Pancreatic enzymes
Vitamin supplementation
Other nutritional supplementation
Tube feedings
High calorie supplemental shakes, formulas
Nutrition parameters
Percent ideal body weight (IBW%)
90-110%: Normal
85-89%: Underweight
80-84%: Mild malnutrition
75-79%: Moderate malnutrition
<75%: Severe malnutrition
Height as a percentage of 50th percentile height for age
(height/50th percentile height for age )X100.
95-100% normal
90-94%: mildly stunted
85-89%: moderately stunted
<85%: severely stunted
Treatment: Pancreatic enzymes
Initiate if have malabsorption history
Fecal fat
Fecal elastase
May need H2 blocker or PPI to activate enteric
coated enzyme
Fibrosing colonopathy
Strictures in the colon associated with high dose
enzyme use (enzyme gets to colon and causes
damage leading to scarring/stricture)
Treatment: Cystic fibrosis related
liver disease
Ursodiol
Increased bile flow
Decrease toxicity of bile acids
Sclerotherapy, portosystemic shunts
Liver transplantation---only curative treatment
for portal hypertension
Treatment: Infertility
Microsurgical epididymal sperm aspiration
coupled plus in vitro technology
Percutaneous epididymal sperm aspiration
Testicular sperm extraction
Maternal genetic testing
McCallum, TJ et al., Fertility in men with cystic fibrosis. Chest 118:1059-1062; 2000.
Psychosocial issues
Quality of life
Frequent hospitalizations
Time spent on therapies
Morbidity from disease
Restrictions secondary to disease
Adherence to therapies
Family planning
End of life issues
“It is, in fact, nothing short of a miracle that the
modern methods of instruction have not entirely
strangled the holy curiosity of inquiry.”
----Albert Einstein