Bronchial Remodeling-based Latent Class Analysis Predicts Exacerbations in Severe Preschool Wheezers
Michaël Fayon, Fabien Beaufils, Pauline Estèves, Maryline Campagnac, Élise Maurat, Marine Michelet, Valerie Siao-Him-Fa, F. Lavrand, Guillaume Simon, Hugues Bégueret, Patrick Berger
Abstract
Abstract Rationale Children with preschool wheezing represent a very heterogeneous population with wide variability regarding their clinical, inflammatory, obstructive, and/or remodeling patterns. We hypothesized that assessing bronchial remodeling would help clinicians to better characterize severe preschool wheezers. Objectives The main objective was to identify bronchial remodeling-based latent classes of severe preschool wheezers. Secondary objectives were to compare cross-sectional and longitudinal clinical and biological data between classes and to assess the safety of bronchoscopy. Methods This double-center prospective study (NCT02806466) included severe preschool wheezers (1–5 yr old) requiring fiberoptic bronchoscopy. Bronchial remodeling parameters (i.e., epithelial integrity, reticular basement membrane [RBM] thickness, mucus gland, fibrosis and bronchial smooth muscle [BSM] areas, the density of blood vessels, and RBM–BSM distance) were assessed and evaluated by latent class analysis. An independent cohort of severe preschool wheezers (NCT04558671) was used to validate our results. Measurements and Main Results Fiberoptic bronchoscopy procedures were well tolerated. A two-class model was identified: Class BR1 was characterized by increased RBM thickness, normalized BSM area, the density of blood vessels, decreased mucus gland area, fibrosis, and RBM–BSM distance compared with Class BR2. No significant differences were found between classes in the year before fiberoptic bronchoscopy. By contrast, Class BR1 was associated with a shorter time to first exacerbation and an increased risk of both frequent (3 or more) and severe exacerbations during the year after bronchoscopy in the two cohorts. Conclusions Assessing bronchial remodeling identified severe preschool wheezers at risk of frequent and severe subsequent exacerbations with a favorable benefit to risk ratio.