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Impact of guideline-recommended dietitian assessments on weight gain in infants with cystic fibrosis.
Ong, T, Onchiri, FM, Britto, MT, Heltshe, SL, Kessler, LG, Seid, M, Ramsey, BW
Journal of cystic fibrosis : official journal of the European Cystic Fibrosis Society. 2022;(1):115-122
Abstract
BACKGROUND Cystic fibrosis (CF)-specialized nutrition care strives to meet normal infant growth, but the relationship of dietitian assessments to weight outcomes is unknown. We characterize nutrition management for inadequate weight gain and assess association of dietitian assessments and center-level weight-for-age Z-scores (WAZ). METHODS We used encounter data from 226 infants across 28 US CF Centers from the Baby Observational Nutritional study between January 2012 through December 2017. We identified dietitian assessments and consensus guideline-recommended responses to inadequate weight gain: calorie increases, pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy (PERT) increases, or shortened time to next visit. We compared center assessments by funnel plot and summarize median WAZ by center. RESULTS Of 2,527 visits, 808 (32%) visits had identified inadequate weight gain, distributed in 216 infants. Assessments occurred in 1953 visits (77%), but varied widely between centers (range 17% - 98%). For inadequate weight gain, most and least common responses were calorie increase (64%) and PERT increase (21%). Funnel plot analysis identified 4 high-performers for frequent dietitian assessments (range 92% - 98%) and 4 under-performers (range 17% - 56%). High-performers treated inadequate weight gain more often with adequate calories (24/30, 80% v. 12/23, 52%) and closer follow up (104/164, 63% v. 60/120, 49%) compared to under-performers. Three of 4 high-performing sites met center nutrition goals for positive median WAZ at 2 years old unlike 3 under-performers (WAZHigh 0.33 v. WAZLow -0.15), despite similar patient characteristics. CONCLUSION We characterized multicenter variation in dietitian assessments, identifying opportunities to improve care delivery to target early nutrition outcomes.
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Overweight and obesity in adults with cystic fibrosis: An Italian multicenter cohort study.
Gramegna, A, Aliberti, S, Contarini, M, Savi, D, Sotgiu, G, Majo, F, Saderi, L, Lucidi, V, Amati, F, Pappalettera, M, et al
Journal of cystic fibrosis : official journal of the European Cystic Fibrosis Society. 2022;(1):111-114
Abstract
BACKGROUND Over the last decades aggressive interventions have been successful to improve nutritional outcomes in people with cystic fibrosis (CF). As a result, with improvement of life expectancy and new CFTR modulators, overweight and obesity are progressively becoming a source of concern for adult population and in developed countries. METHODS This was a multicenter, observational, cross-sectional study of 321 adults with CF at three large CF centers in Italy. Patients were divided into three groups according to BMI classes, overweight and obesity (OW) group including patients with BMI ≥25 kg/m2, normal weight (NW) group with BMI 18.6-24.9 kg/m2 and underweight (UW) group with BMI ≤18.5 kg/m2. RESULTS We demonstrated that prevalence of OW in adults with CF in Italy is 22%. OW status is independently associated with male sex (OR 3.520, P = 0.001), pancreatic sufficiency (OR 2.873, P = 0.014) and older age at diagnosis (1.015, P = 0.042). BMI correlated with ppFEV1 (r = 0.337; P<0.0001) with median ppFEV1 significantly higher in patients with OW than comparisons. We also reported preliminary data on unfavorable cardiovascular risk factors in a subgroup of patients, where median blood levels [IQR] of cholesterol and systemic hypertension [%] were significantly higher in the OW group than in the NW and UW. CONCLUSIONS People with CF and OW is a relevant patient group that might deserve better definition and proper clinical management.
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Measuring the impact of CFTR modulation on sweat chloride in cystic fibrosis: Rationale and design of the CHEC-SC study.
Zemanick, ET, Konstan, MW, VanDevanter, DR, Rowe, SM, Clancy, JP, Odem-Davis, K, Skalland, M, Mayer-Hamblett, N
Journal of cystic fibrosis : official journal of the European Cystic Fibrosis Society. 2021;(6):965-971
Abstract
BACKGROUND The Characterizing CFTR Modulated Changes in Sweat Chloride and their Association with Clinical Outcomes (CHEC-SC) study is a large epidemiologic study designed to determine the relationship between sweat chloride response and clinical outcomes in people with cystic fibrosis (CF) on commercially approved CFTR modulators. A challenge to study feasibility was capturing sweat chloride measurements before modulator initiation. We tested the hypothesis that historic sweat chloride approximated contemporary pre-modulator values to estimate CFTR modulator-induced changes, allowing a single-visit study design. METHODS GOAL and PROSPECT were multi-center prospective studies of individuals initiating ivacaftor or lumacaftor-ivacaftor. At enrollment, pre-modulator sweat chloride was measured and historic results recorded. Post-modulator sweat chloride was measured at 1, 3 and 6 months. For this analysis, differences between historic and pre-modulator sweat chloride were estimated. CFTR modulator-induced sweat chloride mean changes were compared using historic and pre-modulator sweat chloride. RESULTS Paired historic and pre-modulator sweat chloride (n=406 participants) revealed a non-significant mean change of -1.0 mmol/L (95% CI: -2.71, 0.66) over an average of 17.2 years. Calculating sweat response to ivacaftor or lumacaftor-ivacaftor using historic or pre-modulator values resulted in similar estimates of modulator response. Based on these results, the CHEC-SC study was designed with a single, post-modulator sweat chloride measurement. CONCLUSIONS Historic sweat chloride values provide a reliable estimate of pre-modulator sweat chloride for people starting on modulator therapy. The CHEC-SC study anticipates capturing approximately 5,000 sweat chloride values, providing an unprecedented understanding of sweat chloride across the CF population in the era of CFTR modulators.
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Role of Tris-CaEDTA as an adjuvant with nebulised tobramycin in cystic fibrosis patients with Pseudomonas aeruginosa lung infections: A randomised controlled trial.
Puvvadi, R, Mikkelsen, H, McCahon, L, Grogan, S, Ditcham, W, Reid, DW, Lamont, I, Stick, SM, Clements, B
Journal of cystic fibrosis : official journal of the European Cystic Fibrosis Society. 2021;(2):316-323
Abstract
BACKGROUND We tested if disrupting iron utilisation by P. aeruginosa by adding the Tris-buffered chelating agent CaEDTA to nebulised tobramycin would enhance bacterial clearance and improve lung function in CF patients. METHODS In this double-blind, randomised controlled trial, 26 episodes (25 patients) with P. aeruginosa infection admitted to two CF centres for treatment of an acute pulmonary exacerbation were randomly assigned to receive either 75 mg CaEDTA in Tris-buffered saline or placebo (Tris-buffered saline) nebulised in combination with 250 mg tobramycin twice daily for six weeks followed with four week safety follow-up. Primary endpoints were safety, tolerability, and bacterial density of P. aeruginosa. A secondary endpoint was lung function. RESULTS The study drug was well tolerated with adverse events comparable in both groups. The mean (SD) reduction in sputum P. aeruginosa count (log10 CFU/g) in the CaEDTA vs placebo group was 2·05 (2·57) vs 0·82 (2·71) at two weeks relative to admission (p = 0·39). The mean improvement in ppFEV1 was 16 vs 5 (p = 0·16); 11 vs 2 (p = 0·28); and 6 vs 2 percentage points (p = 0·47) at two, six, and ten weeks in CaEDTA and placebo groups, respectively. CONCLUSIONS In this pilot study in CF patients, an increase in the reduction of sputum density of P. aeruginosa and an increase in ppFEV1 was observed in the group of patients who received Tris-CaEDTA added to inhaled tobramycin compared to the group who received inhaled tobramycin alone, although these differences were not statistically significant. The treatment was also shown to be safe.
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Fat-Soluble Vitamin Supplementation Using Liposomes, Cyclodextrins, or Medium-Chain Triglycerides in Cystic Fibrosis: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
Nowak, JK, Sobkowiak, P, Drzymała-Czyż, S, Krzyżanowska-Jankowska, P, Sapiejka, E, Skorupa, W, Pogorzelski, A, Nowicka, A, Wojsyk-Banaszak, I, Kurek, S, et al
Nutrients. 2021;(12)
Abstract
Fat-soluble vitamin deficiency remains a challenge in cystic fibrosis (CF), chronic pancreatitis, and biliary atresia. Liposomes and cyclodextrins can enhance their bioavailability, thus this multi-center randomized placebo-controlled trial compared three-month supplementation of fat-soluble vitamins in the form of liposomes or cyclodextrins to medium-chain triglycerides (MCT) in pancreatic-insufficient CF patients. The daily doses were as follows: 2000 IU of retinyl palmitate, 4000 IU of vitamin D3, 200 IU of RRR-α-tocopherol, and 200 µg of vitamin K2 as menaquinone-7, with vitamin E given in soybean oil instead of liposomes. All participants received 4 mg of β-carotene and 1.07 mg of vitamin K1 to ensure compliance with the guidelines. The primary outcome was the change from the baseline of all-trans-retinol and 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 concentrations and the percentage of undercarboxylated osteocalcin. Out of 75 randomized patients (n = 28 liposomes, n = 22 cyclodextrins, and n = 25 MCT), 67 completed the trial (89%; n = 26 liposomes, n = 18 cyclodextrins, and n = 23 MCT) and had a median age of 22 years (IQR 19-28), body mass index of 20.6 kg/m2 [18.4-22.0], and forced expiratory volume in 1 s of 65% (44-84%). The liposomal formulation of vitamin A was associated with the improved evolution of serum all-trans-retinol compared to the control (median +1.7 ng/mL (IQR -44.3-86.1) vs. -38.8 ng/mL (-71.2-6.8), p = 0.028). Cyclodextrins enhanced the bioavailability of vitamin D3 (+9.0 ng/mL (1.0-17.0) vs. +3.0 ng/mL (-4.0-7.0), p = 0.012) and vitamin E (+4.34 µg/mL (0.33-6.52) vs. -0.34 µg/mL (-1.71-2.15), p = 0.010). Liposomes may augment the bioavailability of vitamin A and cyclodextrins may strengthen the supplementation of vitamins D3 and E relative to MCT in pancreatic-insufficient CF but further studies are required to assess liposomal vitamin E (German Clinical Trial Register number DRKS00014295, funded from EU and Norsa Pharma).
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Fecal dysbiosis in infants with cystic fibrosis is associated with early linear growth failure.
Hayden, HS, Eng, A, Pope, CE, Brittnacher, MJ, Vo, AT, Weiss, EJ, Hager, KR, Martin, BD, Leung, DH, Heltshe, SL, et al
Nature medicine. 2020;(2):215-221
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Abstract
Most infants with cystic fibrosis (CF) have pancreatic exocrine insufficiency that results in nutrient malabsorption and requires oral pancreatic enzyme replacement. Newborn screening for CF has enabled earlier diagnosis, nutritional intervention and enzyme replacement for these infants, allowing most infants with CF to achieve their weight goals by 12 months of age1. Nevertheless, most infants with CF continue to have poor linear growth during their first year of life1. Although this early linear growth failure is associated with worse long-term respiratory function and survival2,3, the determinants of body length in infants with CF have not been defined. Several characteristics of the CF gastrointestinal (GI) tract, including inflammation, maldigestion and malabsorption, may promote intestinal dysbiosis4,5. As GI microbiome activities are known to affect endocrine functions6,7, the intestinal microbiome of infants with CF may also impact growth. We identified an early, progressive fecal dysbiosis that distinguished infants with CF and low length from infants with CF and normal length. This dysbiosis included altered abundances of taxa that perform functions that are important for GI health, nutrient harvest and growth hormone signaling, including decreased abundance of Bacteroidetes and increased abundance of Proteobacteria. Thus, the GI microbiota represent a potential therapeutic target for the correction of low linear growth in infants with CF.
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Heterogeneous Liver on Research Ultrasound Identifies Children with Cystic Fibrosis at High Risk of Advanced Liver Disease: Interim Results of a Prospective Observational Case-Controlled Study.
Siegel, MJ, Freeman, AJ, Ye, W, Palermo, JJ, Molleston, JP, Paranjape, SM, Stoll, J, Leung, DH, Masand, P, Karmazyn, B, et al
The Journal of pediatrics. 2020;:62-69.e4
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE To assess if a heterogeneous pattern on research liver ultrasound examination can identify children at risk for advanced cystic fibrosis (CF) liver disease. STUDY DESIGN Planned 4-year interim analysis of a 9-year multicenter, case-controlled cohort study (Prospective Study of Ultrasound to Predict Hepatic Cirrhosis in CF). Children with pancreatic insufficient CF aged 3-12 years without known cirrhosis, Burkholderia species infection, or short bowel syndrome underwent a screening research ultrasound examination. Participants with a heterogeneous liver ultrasound pattern were matched (by age, Pseudomonas infection status, and center) 1:2 with participants with a normal pattern. Clinical status and laboratory data were obtained annually and research ultrasound examinations biannually. The primary end point was the development of a nodular research ultrasound pattern, a surrogate for advanced CF liver disease. RESULTS There were 722 participants who underwent screening research ultrasound examination, of which 65 were heterogeneous liver ultrasound pattern and 592 normal liver ultrasound pattern. The final cohort included 55 participants with a heterogeneous liver ultrasound pattern and 116 participants with a normal liver ultrasound pattern. All participants with at least 1 follow-up research ultrasound were included. There were no differences in age or sex between groups at entry. Alanine aminotransferase (42 ± 22 U/L vs 32 ± 19 U/L; P = .0033), gamma glutamyl transpeptidase (36 ± 34 U/L vs 15 ± 8 U/L; P < .001), and aspartate aminotransferase to platelet ratio index (0.7 ± 0.5 vs 0.4 ± 0.2; P < .0001) were higher in participants with a heterogeneous liver ultrasound pattern compared with participants with a normal liver ultrasound pattern. Participants with a heterogeneous liver ultrasound pattern had a 9.1-fold increased incidence (95% CI, 2.7-30.8; P = .0004) of nodular pattern vs a normal liver ultrasound pattern (23% in heterogeneous liver ultrasound pattern vs 2.6% in normal liver ultrasound pattern). CONCLUSIONS Research liver ultrasound examinations can identify children with CF at increased risk for developing advanced CF liver disease.
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Failure to conceive in women with CF is associated with pancreatic insufficiency and advancing age.
Shteinberg, M, Lulu, AB, Downey, DG, Blumenfeld, Z, Rousset-Jablonski, C, Perceval, M, Colombo, A, Stein, N, Livnat, G, Gur, M, et al
Journal of cystic fibrosis : official journal of the European Cystic Fibrosis Society. 2019;(4):525-529
Abstract
OBJECTIVE The causes of subfertility in women with CF though multifactorial are not well described. Our aim in this study was to determine the prevalence and factors associated with female subfertility among women with CF. METHODS A retrospective multinational study from 11 CF centers in 5 countries (Israel, France, Spain, Italy, UK) including women with CF was undertaken. Sub/infertility was defined as not achieving a spontaneous pregnancy after one year of unprotected sexual intercourse. Data including genetics, pancreatic insufficiency (PI), prevalence of diabetes (CFRD), lung function, nutritional status measured by body mass index (BMI), sputum bacterial colonization, and rate of pulmonary exacerbations were collected from patients' files. RESULTS Out of 605 women, 241 attempted pregnancy. Of these, 84 (35%) had subfertility, and 67 of them eventually became pregnant. Females attempting conception were older but had better pulmonary function and nutrition compared to those who did not. In a multivariate analysis, PI (OR 1.9 [1.03-3.5], p = .04) and older age (OR 3.9 [2.1-7.3] p < .0001) were associated with subfertility. Lung function, BMI, CFRD, Presence of two class I-III mutations and number of exacerbations in the year prior to fertility attempts were not associated with subfertility. CONCLUSIONS The prevalence of subfertility among women with CF (35%) is higher than the expected 5-15% subfertility in the general population. Older age and pancreatic insufficiency are associated with subfertility in women with CF.
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Sino nasal inhalation of isotonic versus hypertonic saline (6.0%) in CF patients with chronic rhinosinusitis - Results of a multicenter, prospective, randomized, double-blind, controlled trial.
Mainz, JG, Schumacher, U, Schädlich, K, Hentschel, J, Koitschev, C, Koitschev, A, Riethmüller, J, Prenzel, F, Sommerburg, O, Wiedemann, B, et al
Journal of cystic fibrosis : official journal of the European Cystic Fibrosis Society. 2016;(6):e57-e66
Abstract
BACKGROUND Chronic rhinosinusitis is a hallmark of Cystic fibrosis (CF) impairing the patients' quality of life and overall health. However, therapeutic options have not been sufficiently evaluated. Bronchial inhalation of mucolytic substances is a gold standard in CF therapy. Previously, we found that sinonasal inhalation of dornase alfa as vibrating aerosol reduces symptoms of chronic rhinosinusitis more effectively than NaCl 0.9% (net treatment benefit: -5.87±2.3 points, p=0.017; SNOT-20 total score). This multicenter study compares the effect of NaCl 6.0% vs. NaCl 0.9% following the protocol from our preceding study with dornase alfa. METHODS Sixty nine CF patients with chronic rhinosinusitis in eleven German CF centers were randomized to receive sinonasal vibrating inhalation of either NaCl 6.0% or NaCl 0.9% for 28days. After 28days of wash-out, patients crossed over to the alternative treatment. The primary outcome parameter was symptom score in the disease-specific quality of life Sino-Nasal Outcome Test-20 (SNOT-20). Additionally, pulmonary function was assessed, as well as rhinomanometry and inflammatory markers in nasal lavage (neutrophil elastase, interleukin (IL)-1β, IL-6, and IL-8) in a subgroup. RESULTS Both therapeutic arms were well tolerated and showed slight improvements in SNOT-20 total scores (NaCl 6.0%: -3.1±6.5 points, NaCl 0.9%: -5.1±8.3 points, ns). In both treatment groups, changes of inflammatory parameters in nasal lavage from day 1 to day 29 were not significant. We suppose that the irritating properties of NaCl 6.0% reduced the suitability of the SNOT-20 scores as an outcome parameter. Alternative primary outcome parameters such as MR-imaging or the quantity of sinonasal secretions mobilized with both saline concentrations were, however, not feasible. CONCLUSION Sinonasal inhalation with NaCl 6.0% did not lead to superior results vs. NaCl 0.9%, whereas dornase alfa had been significantly more effective than NaCl 0.9%.
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Safety and efficacy of Creon® micro in children with exocrine pancreatic insufficiency due to cystic fibrosis.
Kashirskaya, NY, Kapranov, NI, Sander-Struckmeier, S, Kovalev, V
Journal of cystic fibrosis : official journal of the European Cystic Fibrosis Society. 2015;(2):275-81
Abstract
BACKGROUND Pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy is the foundation of nutritional management for exocrine pancreatic insufficiency (EPI). METHODS A 3-month, open-label, multicentre study in Russia assessing safety, efficacy, and ease-of-use of Creon(®) Micro (5000 lipase units/spoon) in children aged 1 month to <4 years with EPI due to cystic fibrosis. Efficacy assessments included growth parameters. RESULTS All 40 subjects (mean age 26.5 months) completed treatment. Adverse events occurred in 40% of the subjects (most commonly respiratory tract infection [15%], frequent bowel movements [8%], rhinitis, stomatitis, nasopharyngitis, and diarrhoea [all 5%]), none were serious or led to discontinuation. After 3 months, mean±SD increases from baseline z-scores were height/length-for-age 0.13±0.48, weight-for-age 0.20±0.39, and BMI-for-age 0.29±0.65. Treatment was rated 'easy' to administer by 95% caregivers and acceptance 'good'/'very good' by 90%. CONCLUSIONS Creon Micro was well tolerated. Growth development parameters increased over the 3-month treatment period. Treatment was considered easy to use and acceptance was good.