Jacinto Tiago, Malinovschi Andrei, Janson Christer, Fonseca João, Alving Kjell
Department of Allergy: Instituto & Hospital CUF, Porto, Portugal. CINTESIS- Center for Health Technology and Services Research, Faculty of Medicine, University of Porto, Portugal. Department of Cardiovascular and Respiratory Sciences, Porto Health School, Porto, Portugal.
J Breath Res. 2017 Aug 21;11(3):036006. doi: 10.1088/1752-7163/aa746b.
Tobacco smoking affects both the fraction of exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) and blood eosinophil (B-Eos) count, two clinically useful biomarkers in respiratory disease that represent local and systemic type-2 inflammation, respectively.
We aimed to study the influence of objectively measured smoke exposure on FeNO and B-Eos in a large population of subjects with and without asthma.
We utilized the US National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys 2007-2012 and included 10 669 subjects aged 6-80 years: 9869 controls and 800 asthmatics. Controls were defined as having no respiratory disease, no hay fever in the past year, and B-Eos count ≤0.3 × 10 l. Asthma was defined as self-reported current asthma and at least one episode of wheezing or an asthma attack in the past year, but no emphysema or chronic bronchitis. Tobacco use was collected via questionnaires and serum cotinine was measured with mass spectrometry.
Increasing cotinine levels were associated with a progressive reduction in FeNO in both controls and asthmatics. FeNO remained significantly higher in asthmatics than controls except in the highest cotinine decile, equivalent to an average reported consumption of 13 cigarettes/day. B-Eos count increased with cotinine in controls, but was unchanging in asthmatics. Interestingly, B-Eos count was significantly higher in presently non-exposed (cotinine below detection limit) former smokers than never smokers.
Smoke exposure decreases FeNO and increases B-Eos count. These effects should be considered in the development of normalized values and their interpretation in clinical practice. The persistence of elevated B-Eos in former smokers warrants further studies.
吸烟会影响呼出一氧化氮分数(FeNO)和血液嗜酸性粒细胞(B-Eos)计数,这是呼吸系统疾病中两个临床上有用的生物标志物,分别代表局部和全身2型炎症。
我们旨在研究客观测量的烟雾暴露对大量有或无哮喘受试者的FeNO和B-Eos的影响。
我们利用了2007 - 2012年美国国家健康与营养检查调查,纳入了10669名6 - 80岁的受试者:9869名对照者和800名哮喘患者。对照者被定义为无呼吸系统疾病、过去一年无花粉热且B-Eos计数≤0.3×10⁹/L。哮喘被定义为自我报告的当前哮喘以及过去一年至少有一次喘息或哮喘发作,但无肺气肿或慢性支气管炎。通过问卷调查收集烟草使用情况,并采用质谱法测量血清可替宁。
在对照者和哮喘患者中,可替宁水平升高均与FeNO的逐渐降低相关。除了在最高可替宁十分位数组(相当于平均每日报告吸烟量为13支)中,哮喘患者的FeNO仍显著高于对照者。在对照者中,B-Eos计数随可替宁升高而增加,但在哮喘患者中无变化。有趣的是,目前未暴露(可替宁低于检测限)的既往吸烟者的B-Eos计数显著高于从不吸烟者。
烟雾暴露会降低FeNO并增加B-Eos计数。在制定正常值及其在临床实践中的解释时应考虑这些影响。既往吸烟者中B-Eos持续升高值得进一步研究。