학술논문

Blood eosinophil percentage as a predictor of response to inhaled corticosteroid in bronchiectasis
Document Type
article
Source
The Clinical Respiratory Journal, Vol 17, Iss 6, Pp 548-555 (2023)
Subject
bronchiectasis
bronchiectasis exacerbation
eosinophil
inhaled corticosteroid
phenotype
Diseases of the respiratory system
RC705-779
Language
English
ISSN
1752-699X
1752-6981
Abstract
Abstract Introduction The role of inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) among patients with bronchiectasis remains controversial. There is limited evidence of using baseline eosinophil count (absolute and percentage) as a marker to predict the role of ICS among patients with bronchiectasis. Methods A retrospective case–control study was conducted in a major regional hospital and tertiary respiratory referral centre in Hong Kong, including 140 Chinese patients with noncystic fibrosis (CF) bronchiectasis, to investigate the exacerbation risks of bronchiectasis among ICS users and nonusers with different baseline eosinophil counts. Results ICS user had significantly lower risk to develop bronchiectasis exacerbation with adjusted odds ratio (OR) of 0.461 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.225–0.945, p‐value 0.035). Univariate logistic regression was performed for different cut‐offs of blood eosinophil count (by percentage) from 2% to 4% (with a 0.5% grid each time). Baseline eosinophil 3.5% was found to be the best cut‐off among all with adjusted OR of 0.138 (95% CI = 0.023–0.822, p‐value = 0.030). Conclusion Baseline eosinophil count of 3.5% might serve as a marker to predict the benefits of ICS on exacerbation risk among patients with non‐CF bronchiectasis.