Affiliation:
1. Department of Pulmonology and Respiratory Medicine, Faculty of MedicineAirlangga University, RSUD, Dr. Soetomo, Surabaya, Indonesia
Abstract
Introduction:
Acute exacerbations of COPD are responsible for 60% of health costs, reduce patients' quality of life, and accelerate disease progression. COPD endotypes are expected to
provide new insights about clinical phenotypic variability and therapeutic response between individuals through certain biomarker approaches.
Objective:
Our study aims to identify the relationship between COPD endotypes and exacerbation
events.
Result:
The lower limit normal of AAT levels obtained was 12.85ng/ml; 47.5% of subjects have
low AAT levels. The average IL-17A levels and blood neutrophil counts were 0.478 ± 0.426
pg/ml and 5,916.95 ± 3,581.08 cells/µl, respectively. The average blood eosinophil count was
298.35 ± 280.44 cells/µl, 16 of 40 (40%) subjects with blood eosinophil count > 300 cells/µl. No
significant association was observed between AAT levels (p = 1.000), IL-17A levels (p = 0.944),
and blood eosinophil count (p = 0.739) with exacerbation events-only blood neutrophil count (p =
0.033) found to have a significant association with exacerbation events in COPD.
Conclusion:
AAT levels, IL-17A levels, and blood eosinophil count were not significantly related
to exacerbation events in COPD patients. In comparison, blood neutrophil count was the only one
associated considerably with exacerbation events. Further research about COPD endotypes is
needed to identify exacerbation susceptibility as a precision treatment strategy.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine