Litcius/Paper detail

Evaluation of clinically relevant changes in the lung clearance index in children with cystic fibrosis and healthy controls

Lucy Perrem, Sanja Stanojevic, Melinda Solomon, Hartmut Grasemann, Neil Sweezey, Valerie Waters, Don B. Sanders, Stephanie D. Davis, Félix Ratjen

2022Thorax19 citationsDOI

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The limits of reproducibility of the lung clearance index (LCI) are higher in children with cystic fibrosis (CF) compared with healthy children, and it is currently unclear what defines a clinically meaningful change. METHODS: % predicted and symptom scores at quarterly visits over 2 years. Two reviewers performed a detailed review of visits to evaluate the frequency that between visit LCI changes outside ±10%, ±15%, ±20% represented a clinically relevant signal. In the setting of acute respiratory symptoms, we used a generalised estimating equation model, with a logit link function to determine the ability of LCI worsening at different thresholds to predict failure of lung function recovery at follow-up. RESULTS: Clinically relevant LCI changes outside ±10%, ±15% and ±20% were observed at 25.7%, 15.0% and 8.3% of CF visits (n=744), respectively. The proportions of LCI changes categorised as noise, reflecting biological variability, were comparable between CF and HC at the 10% (CF 9.9% vs HC 13.0%), 15% (CF 4.3% vs HC 3.1%) and 20% (CF 2.4% vs HC 1.0%) thresholds. Compared with symptomatic CF visits without a worsening in LCI, events with ≥10% LCI increase were more likely to fail to recover baseline LCI at follow-up. CONCLUSION: The limits of reproducibility of the LCI in healthy children can be used to detect clinically relevant changes and thus inform clinical care in children with CF.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCystic fibrosisLung functionObservational studyReproducibilityInternal medicinePediatricsLogistic regressionConfidence intervalProspective cohort studyLungMathematicsStatisticsCystic Fibrosis Research AdvancesChronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) ResearchDelphi Technique in Research