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Recovery from pneumonia requires efferocytosis which is impaired in smokers and those with low body mass index and enhanced by statins

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Recovery from pneumonia requires efferocytosis which is impaired in smokers and those with low body mass index and enhanced by statins. / Wootton, Daniel G.; Diggle, Peter John; Court, Joanne et al.
In: Thorax, Vol. 71, No. 11, 28.07.2016, p. 1052-1054.

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Wootton, DG, Diggle, PJ, Court, J, Eneje, O, Keogan, L, Macfarlane, L, Wilks, S, Woodhead, M & Gordon, SB 2016, 'Recovery from pneumonia requires efferocytosis which is impaired in smokers and those with low body mass index and enhanced by statins', Thorax, vol. 71, no. 11, pp. 1052-1054. https://doi.org/10.1136/thoraxjnl-2016-208505

APA

Wootton, D. G., Diggle, P. J., Court, J., Eneje, O., Keogan, L., Macfarlane, L., Wilks, S., Woodhead, M., & Gordon, S. B. (2016). Recovery from pneumonia requires efferocytosis which is impaired in smokers and those with low body mass index and enhanced by statins. Thorax, 71(11), 1052-1054. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1136/thoraxjnl-2016-208505

Vancouver

Wootton DG, Diggle PJ, Court J, Eneje O, Keogan L, Macfarlane L et al. Recovery from pneumonia requires efferocytosis which is impaired in smokers and those with low body mass index and enhanced by statins. Thorax. 2016 Jul 28;71(11):1052-1054. Epub 2016 Jul 28. doi: 10.1136/thoraxjnl-2016-208505

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Bibtex

@article{3bf18c8a7b8f48e38d5f4bbd72685a44,
title = "Recovery from pneumonia requires efferocytosis which is impaired in smokers and those with low body mass index and enhanced by statins",
abstract = "Background Efferocytosis (the phagocytosis of apoptotic self cells) is a key mechanism in the resolution of inflammatory processes such as community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). Efferocytosis therefore represents a modifiable target for therapy aimed at enhancing intrinsic recovery mechanisms. It is currently not known which patients recovering from CAP would mostly benefit from a strategy aimed at enhancing efferocytosis.Methods We recruited a cohort of patients with CAP admitted to a hospital in Liverpool. One month into recovery, subjects were invited for research bronchoscopy and bronchoalveolar lavage. An ex vivo efferocytosis assay was performed by challenging alveolar macrophages with autologous, apoptotic neutrophils. The percentage of alveolar macrophages that had undergone efferocytosis was determined by flow cytometry. We conducted a multivariable regression using a linear mixed effects model to determine which clinical parameters were most closely associated with efferocytosis.Results We observed high rates of comorbidity among this CAP cohort. Efferocytosis was measured in 22 subjects. We assessed multiple combinations of clinical parameters for association with efferocytosis and found the best-fitting model included an interaction between smoking status and prior statin use—smoking being associated with decreased efferocytosis and statin use with increased efferocytosis. These effects were modified by an association between efferocytosis and body mass index (BMI), such that as BMI increased so did efferocytosis.Conclusions This is the first study to measure efferocytosis in patients recovering from CAP. The results suggest that smokers with low BMI have impaired efferocytosis and may benefit from a statin to boost recovery.",
author = "Wootton, {Daniel G.} and Diggle, {Peter John} and Joanne Court and Odiri Eneje and Lynne Keogan and Laura Macfarlane and Sarah Wilks and Mark Woodhead and Gordon, {Stephen B.}",
year = "2016",
month = jul,
day = "28",
doi = "10.1136/thoraxjnl-2016-208505",
language = "English",
volume = "71",
pages = "1052--1054",
journal = "Thorax",
issn = "0040-6376",
publisher = "B M J PUBLISHING GROUP",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Recovery from pneumonia requires efferocytosis which is impaired in smokers and those with low body mass index and enhanced by statins

AU - Wootton, Daniel G.

AU - Diggle, Peter John

AU - Court, Joanne

AU - Eneje, Odiri

AU - Keogan, Lynne

AU - Macfarlane, Laura

AU - Wilks, Sarah

AU - Woodhead, Mark

AU - Gordon, Stephen B.

PY - 2016/7/28

Y1 - 2016/7/28

N2 - Background Efferocytosis (the phagocytosis of apoptotic self cells) is a key mechanism in the resolution of inflammatory processes such as community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). Efferocytosis therefore represents a modifiable target for therapy aimed at enhancing intrinsic recovery mechanisms. It is currently not known which patients recovering from CAP would mostly benefit from a strategy aimed at enhancing efferocytosis.Methods We recruited a cohort of patients with CAP admitted to a hospital in Liverpool. One month into recovery, subjects were invited for research bronchoscopy and bronchoalveolar lavage. An ex vivo efferocytosis assay was performed by challenging alveolar macrophages with autologous, apoptotic neutrophils. The percentage of alveolar macrophages that had undergone efferocytosis was determined by flow cytometry. We conducted a multivariable regression using a linear mixed effects model to determine which clinical parameters were most closely associated with efferocytosis.Results We observed high rates of comorbidity among this CAP cohort. Efferocytosis was measured in 22 subjects. We assessed multiple combinations of clinical parameters for association with efferocytosis and found the best-fitting model included an interaction between smoking status and prior statin use—smoking being associated with decreased efferocytosis and statin use with increased efferocytosis. These effects were modified by an association between efferocytosis and body mass index (BMI), such that as BMI increased so did efferocytosis.Conclusions This is the first study to measure efferocytosis in patients recovering from CAP. The results suggest that smokers with low BMI have impaired efferocytosis and may benefit from a statin to boost recovery.

AB - Background Efferocytosis (the phagocytosis of apoptotic self cells) is a key mechanism in the resolution of inflammatory processes such as community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). Efferocytosis therefore represents a modifiable target for therapy aimed at enhancing intrinsic recovery mechanisms. It is currently not known which patients recovering from CAP would mostly benefit from a strategy aimed at enhancing efferocytosis.Methods We recruited a cohort of patients with CAP admitted to a hospital in Liverpool. One month into recovery, subjects were invited for research bronchoscopy and bronchoalveolar lavage. An ex vivo efferocytosis assay was performed by challenging alveolar macrophages with autologous, apoptotic neutrophils. The percentage of alveolar macrophages that had undergone efferocytosis was determined by flow cytometry. We conducted a multivariable regression using a linear mixed effects model to determine which clinical parameters were most closely associated with efferocytosis.Results We observed high rates of comorbidity among this CAP cohort. Efferocytosis was measured in 22 subjects. We assessed multiple combinations of clinical parameters for association with efferocytosis and found the best-fitting model included an interaction between smoking status and prior statin use—smoking being associated with decreased efferocytosis and statin use with increased efferocytosis. These effects were modified by an association between efferocytosis and body mass index (BMI), such that as BMI increased so did efferocytosis.Conclusions This is the first study to measure efferocytosis in patients recovering from CAP. The results suggest that smokers with low BMI have impaired efferocytosis and may benefit from a statin to boost recovery.

U2 - 10.1136/thoraxjnl-2016-208505

DO - 10.1136/thoraxjnl-2016-208505

M3 - Letter

VL - 71

SP - 1052

EP - 1054

JO - Thorax

JF - Thorax

SN - 0040-6376

IS - 11

ER -