Bafadhel Mona, Haldar Koirobi, Barker Bethan, Patel Hemu, Mistry Vijay, Barer Michael R, Pavord Ian D, Brightling Christopher E
Respiratory Medicine Unit, Nuffield Department of Clinical Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Department of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK.
Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis. 2015 Jun 9;10:1075-83. doi: 10.2147/COPD.S80091. eCollection 2015.
Potentially pathogenic microorganisms can be detected by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) in sputum from patients with COPD, although how this technique relates to culture and clinical measures of disease is unclear. We used cross-sectional and longitudinal data to test the hypotheses that qPCR is a more sensitive measure of bacterial presence and is associated with neutrophilic airway inflammation and adverse clinical outcomes.
Sputum was collected from 174 stable COPD subjects longitudinally over 12 months. Microbial sampling using culture and qPCR was performed. Spirometry and sputum measures of airway inflammation were assessed.
Sputum was qPCR-positive (>10(6) copies/mL) in 77/152 samples (Haemophilus influenzae [n=52], Moraxella catarrhalis [n=24], Streptococcus pneumoniae [n=19], and Staphylococcus aureus [n=7]). Sputum was culture-positive in 50/174 samples, with 49 out of 50 culture-positive samples having pathogen-specific qPCR bacterial loads >10(6) copies/mL. Samples that had qPCR copy numbers >10(6)/mL, whether culture-positive or not, had increased sputum neutrophil counts. H. influenzae qPCR copy numbers correlated with sputum neutrophil counts (r=0.37, P<0.001), were repeatable within subjects, and were >10(6)/mL three or more times in 19 patients, eight of whom were repeatedly sputum culture-positive. Persistence, whether defined by culture, qPCR, or both, was associated with a higher sputum neutrophil count, lower forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1), and worsened quality of life.
qPCR identifies a significant number of patients with potentially bacteria-associated neutrophilic airway inflammation and disease that are not identified by traditional culture-based methods.
通过定量实时聚合酶链反应(qPCR)可在慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD)患者的痰液中检测到潜在致病微生物,不过该技术与疾病的培养及临床指标之间的关系尚不清楚。我们运用横断面和纵向数据来检验以下假设:qPCR是检测细菌存在的更敏感方法,且与嗜中性气道炎症及不良临床结局相关。
在12个月内纵向收集了174例稳定期COPD受试者的痰液。采用培养和qPCR进行微生物采样。评估了肺活量测定和气道炎症的痰液指标。
152份样本中有77份痰液qPCR呈阳性(>10⁶拷贝/毫升)(流感嗜血杆菌[n = 52]、卡他莫拉菌[n = 24]、肺炎链球菌[n = 19]和金黄色葡萄球菌[n = 7])。174份样本中有50份痰液培养呈阳性,50份培养阳性样本中有49份病原体特异性qPCR细菌载量>10⁶拷贝/毫升。qPCR拷贝数>10⁶/毫升的样本,无论培养是否阳性,其痰液中性粒细胞计数均增加。流感嗜血杆菌qPCR拷贝数与痰液中性粒细胞计数相关(r = 0.37,P<0.001),在受试者体内可重复,19例患者中有3次或更多次>10⁶/毫升,其中8例患者痰液培养反复呈阳性。无论是通过培养、qPCR还是两者定义的持续性,均与较高的痰液中性粒细胞计数、较低的第1秒用力呼气量(FEV1)及恶化的生活质量相关。
qPCR可识别出大量存在潜在细菌相关嗜中性气道炎症和疾病的患者,而传统基于培养的方法无法识别这些患者。