Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9385741 | Respiratory Medicine | 2005 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Bronchiectasis is a chronic inflammatory and infective airway disease characterized by irreversible dilatation of the bronchi and persistent purulent sputum. Transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1) has been found to be increased in the lungs or bronchoalveolar lavage fluid of patients with inflammatory lung diseases. However, little is known on the serum TGF-β1 levels in patients with bronchiectasis. We aimed to determine the serum TGF-β1 concentrations in 95 patients with stable bronchiectasis (63 women; mean±sd age, 58.9±14.1 years) and 68 control subjects (23 women; 48.9±12.8 years) by ELISA, and to correlate with clinical parameters. The serum TGF-β1 levels were significantly higher in bronchiectatic patients compared with control subjects (median [range], 1812.5 pg/ml [1226.4-4114.5 pg/ml] vs. 1342.4 pg/ml [940.3-2371.7 pg/ml]; P<0.001). There was, however, no correlation between serum TGF-β1 levels with FEV1 (% predicted), FVC (% predicted), 24 h sputum volume, the number of bronchiectatic lung lobes or total white blood cell count (P>0.05). Our findings support previous indications that TGF-β1 may contribute to bronchiectatic airway inflammation. Further studies on the potential mechanisms and pathogenesis implications of this elevation should also be pursued in future.
Related Topics
Health Sciences
Medicine and Dentistry
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine
Authors
Judith C.W. Mak, Siu P. Ho, Raymond Y.H. Leung, Pak L. Ho, Clara Ooi, George L. Tipoe, Christina Yan, Mary S.M. Ip, Wah K. Lam, Kenneth W.T. Tsang,