CHU Sainte-Justine, 3175 Chemin de la Cote-Ste-Catherine, Montreal, Quebec, H3T1C5, Canada.
Montreal Children's Hospital, McGill University Health Center, 1001 Boulevard Décarie, Montreal, Quebec, H4A 3J1, Canada.
J Clin Immunol. 2019 Feb;39(2):216-224. doi: 10.1007/s10875-019-00613-8. Epub 2019 Mar 26.
Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a rare disorder of the mucociliary clearance leading to recurrent upper and lower respiratory tract infections. PCD is difficult to clinically distinguish from other entities leading to recurrent oto-sino-pulmonary infections, including primary immunodeficiency (PID). Nasal nitric oxide (nNO) is a sensitive and specific diagnostic test for PCD, but it has not been thoroughly examined in PID. Past publications have suggested an overlap in nNO levels among subjects with PCD and PID. We sought to determine if nNO measurements among patients diagnosed with PID would fall significantly above the established PCD diagnostic cutoff value of 77 nL/min.
Children > 5 years old and adults with definitive PID or PCD diagnoses were recruited from outpatient subspecialty clinics. Participants underwent nNO testing by standardized protocol using a chemiluminescence analyzer and completed a questionnaire concerning their chronic oto-sino-pulmonary symptoms, including key clinical criteria specific to diagnosed PCD (neonatal respiratory distress at term birth, year-round cough or nasal congestion starting before 6 months of age, any organ laterality defect).
Participants included 32 patients with PID, 27 patients with PCD, and 19 healthy controls. Median nNO was 228.9.1 nL/min in the PID group, 19.7 nL/min in the PCD group, and 269.4 in the healthy controls (p < 0.0001). Subjects with PCD were significantly more likely to report key clinical criteria specific to PCD, but approximately 25% of PID subjects also reported at least 1 of these key clinical criteria (mainly year-round cough or nasal congestion).
While key clinical criteria associated with PCD often overlap with the symptoms reported in PID, nNO measurement by chemiluminescence technology allows for effective discrimination between PID and PCD.
原发性纤毛运动障碍(PCD)是一种罕见的黏液纤毛清除障碍,导致复发性上呼吸道和下呼吸道感染。PCD 临床上难以与其他导致复发性耳-鼻-肺感染的疾病区分,包括原发性免疫缺陷(PID)。鼻一氧化氮(nNO)是一种用于诊断 PCD 的敏感且特异的诊断测试,但尚未在 PID 中进行彻底检查。既往文献提示 PCD 和 PID 患者的 nNO 水平存在重叠。我们旨在确定诊断为 PID 的患者的 nNO 测量值是否显著高于已建立的 PCD 诊断截断值 77 nL/min。
从门诊专科诊所招募了年龄大于 5 岁的明确诊断为 PID 或 PCD 的儿童和成人患者。患者通过标准化方案使用化学发光分析仪进行 nNO 测试,并完成一份关于其慢性耳-鼻-肺症状的问卷,包括针对诊断为 PCD 的特定关键临床标准(足月出生时的新生儿呼吸窘迫、6 个月前开始的全年咳嗽或鼻充血、任何器官侧位缺陷)。
参与者包括 32 名 PID 患者、27 名 PCD 患者和 19 名健康对照者。PID 组 nNO 的中位数为 228.9 nL/min,PCD 组为 19.7 nL/min,健康对照组为 269.4 nL/min(p < 0.0001)。PCD 患者更有可能报告与 PCD 相关的特定关键临床标准,但大约 25%的 PID 患者也报告了至少 1 项这些关键临床标准(主要是全年咳嗽或鼻充血)。
虽然与 PCD 相关的关键临床标准通常与 PID 患者报告的症状重叠,但化学发光技术的 nNO 测量可有效区分 PID 和 PCD。