Publications by authors named "Monique Henket"

Background: COVID-19 has put a huge strain on the healthcare systems worldwide, requiring unprecedented intensive care resources. There is still an unmet clinical need for easily available biomarkers capable of predicting the risk for severe disease. The main goal of this prospective multicenter study was to identify biomarkers that could predict ICU admission and in-hospital mortality.

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Background: Interstitial lung diseases (ILDs) are an heterogeneous group of infiltrating lung pathologies, for which prompt diagnosis and continuous assessment are of paramount importance. While chest CT is an established diagnostic tool for ILDs, there are no formal guidelines on the follow-up regimen, leaving the frequency and modality of follow-up largely at the clinician's discretion.

Methods: The study retrospectively evaluated the indication of chest CT in a cohort of 129 ILD patients selected from the ambulatory care polyclinic at University Hospital of Liège.

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The use of biotherapies has revolutionized the management of severe asthma. Following a review of asthma pathophysiology, which underpins the development of these new molecules, this article discusses the different types of remission in childhood and adult asthma. The possibilities of achieving remission with each biotherapy and the factors that predict remission will then be developed.

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Background: Although asthma is often seen as an eosinophilic disease associated with atopy, patients with noneosinophilic asthma represent a substantial part of the population with asthma.

Objective: To apply an unsupervised clustering method in a cohort of 588 patients with noneosinophilic asthma (sputum eosinophils < 3%) recruited from an asthma clinic of a secondary care center.

Methods: Our cluster analysis of the whole cohort identified 2 subgroups as cluster 1 (n = 417) and cluster 2 (n = 171).

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Diagnosing COVID-19 and treating its complications remains a challenge. This review reflects the perspective of some of the Dragon (IMI 2-call 21, #101005122) research consortium collaborators on the utility of bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) in COVID-19. BAL has been proposed as a potentially useful diagnostic tool to increase COVID-19 diagnosis sensitivity.

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Background: Randomised controlled trials have shown that benralizumab, an anti-interleukin-5 receptor monoclonal antibody, reduces exacerbations and oral corticosteroid dose and improves asthma control and lung function in severe eosinophilic asthma. The aim of this study was to confirm results of randomised controlled trials in real life in a population of 73 patients with severe eosinophilic asthma treated with benralizumab for at least 12 months.

Methods: Patients underwent careful monitoring of asthma exacerbations, exhaled nitric oxide fraction, lung function, asthma control and quality of life questionnaire responses and sputum induction, and gave a blood sample at baseline, after 6 months and then every year.

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Several clinical trials have demonstrated that anti-IL-5(R) biologics were able to improve lung function, asthma control and chronic oral corticosteroid exposure and reduce exacerbations among eosinophilic asthmatic patients. However, a certain variability in clinical responses to anti-IL-5(R) biologics was brought to light. Our study aimed at evaluating the role of baseline sputum eosinophils in identifying super-responders to mepolizumab and benralizumab.

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Background: Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxins (SE) may act as superantigens and induce an intense T-cell activation, causing local production of polyclonal IgE and resultant eosinophil activation.

Objective: To assess whether asthma with sensitization to SE but not to common aeroallergens (AAs) displays different inflammatory characteristics.

Methods: We conducted a prospective study on a series of 110 consecutive patients with asthma recruited from the University Asthma Clinic of Liège.

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Article Synopsis
  • Pulmonary fibrosis is a serious complication resulting from SARS-CoV-2 infection, and this study examines whether patients with COVID-19 and idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) share similar microRNA (miRNA) expressions linked to lung fibrosis.
  • The research involved a systematic review of literature from 2010 to January 2022, identifying 34 overlapping miRNAs between COVID-19 and IPF, with some exhibiting upregulation and others downregulation.
  • Findings indicate that elevated levels of profibrotic miRNAs and an imbalance in antifibrotic miRNAs contribute to the development of lung fibrosis in patients recovering from COVID-19.
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Objectives: In our study, we explored the specific subgroup of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) suffering from obstructive lung disease (OLD) and its impact on morbi-mortality.

Methods: Our retrospective study included 309 patients suffering from RA with either obstructive (O-RA) or non-obstructive patterns (non-O-RA). OLD was defined based on the Tiffeneau index at the first available pulmonary functional test (PFT).

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Introduction: Although asthma is a common disease, its diagnosis remains a challenge in clinical practice with both over- and underdiagnosis. Here, we performed a prospective observational study investigating the value of symptom intensity scales alone or combined with spirometry and exhaled nitric oxide fraction ( ) to aid in asthma diagnosis.

Methods: Over a 38-month period we recruited 303 untreated patients complaining of symptoms suggestive of asthma (wheezing, dyspnoea, cough, sputum production and chest tightness).

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Background: Biotherapies targeting IL-5 allow a tangible improvement of asthma. However, all patients do not respond the same way to these treatments. Even if high blood eosinophil counts seem to be associated with a reduction in exacerbations with treatment targeting IL-5, we lack biomarkers for the prediction of remission after these very expensive treatments.

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Purpose: Asthma negatively impacts health-related quality of life (HRQL). The objective is to investigate the longitudinal relationship between HRQL in asthma and disease control, demographic and clinical objective parameters in an adult population in real-life settings.

Methods: We conducted a longitudinal study on adult asthmatics recruited from Liege University Hospital Asthma Clinic (Belgium) between 2011 and 2019.

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Background And Objective: Rheumatoid arthritis associated-interstitial lung disease (RA-ILD) is the most common pulmonary manifestation of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and an important cause of mortality. In patients suffering from interstitial lung diseases (ILD) from different etiologies (including RA-ILD), a significant proportion is exhibiting a fibrotic progression despite immunosuppressive therapies, defined as progressive fibrosing interstitial lung disease (PF-ILD). Here, we report the frequency of RA-ILD and PF-ILD in all RA patients' cohort at University Hospital of Liège and compare their characteristics and outcomes.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examines the potential of Krebs von den Lungen 6 (KL-6) as a non-invasive marker for monitoring COVID-19 and predicting post-infection complications like pulmonary fibrosis.
  • Researchers analyzed KL-6 levels in 222 COVID-19 patients compared to 70 healthy controls, finding significantly higher levels in infected individuals, which correlated with other disease severity indicators.
  • Although KL-6 showed promise as a marker for severity, its relationship with pulmonary function tests was weak, suggesting further research is needed to understand its role in mortality and long-term outcomes.
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Article Synopsis
  • The COVID-19 pandemic overwhelmed hospitals with patients suffering from respiratory issues, prompting the use of an AI-based tool called CACOVID-CT for analyzing chest CT scans.
  • A study with 476 patients at the University Hospital of Liege quantified the severity of COVID-19 using metrics like the percentage of lung area affected and CT severity scores.
  • The results showed strong correlations between these measurements and important patient outcomes, such as hospital length of stay and risks for ICU admission and mechanical ventilation, indicating that CACOVID-CT can significantly aid in patient management and reduce radiologist workload.
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Retrospective studies showed a relationship between vitamin D status and COVID-19 severity and mortality, with an inverse relation between SARS-CoV-2 positivity and circulating calcifediol levels. The objective of this pilot study was to investigate the effect of vitamin D supplementation on the length of hospital stay and clinical improvement in patients with vitamin D deficiency hospitalized with COVID-19. The study was randomized, double blind and placebo controlled.

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Early diagnosis of COVID-19 is required to provide the best treatment to our patients, to prevent the epidemic from spreading in the community, and to reduce costs associated with the aggravation of the disease. We developed a decision tree model to evaluate the impact of using an artificial intelligence-based chest computed tomography (CT) analysis software (icolung, icometrix) to analyze CT scans for the detection and prognosis of COVID-19 cases. The model compared routine practice where patients receiving a chest CT scan were not screened for COVID-19, with a scenario where icolung was introduced to enable COVID-19 diagnosis.

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During the COVID-19 pandemic induced by the SARS-CoV-2, numerous chest scans were carried out in order to establish the diagnosis, quantify the extension of lesions but also identify the occurrence of potential pulmonary embolisms. In this perspective, the performed chest scans provided a varied database for a retrospective analysis of non-COVID-19 chest pathologies discovered de novo. The fortuitous discovery of de novo non-COVID-19 lesions was generally not detected by the automated systems for COVID-19 pneumonia developed in parallel during the pandemic and was thus identified on chest CT by the radiologist.

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Background: Atopic asthma is one of the most common asthma phenotypes and is generally opposed to the non-atopic counterpart. There have been very few large-scale studies comparing atopic and non-atopic asthmatics in terms of systemic and airway inflammation across the age spectrum.

Methods: Here, we have undertaken a retrospective study investigating 1626 patients (924 atopic and 702 non-atopic asthmatics) recruited from our university asthma clinic who underwent extensive clinical investigations including induced sputum.

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Background: Patients suffering from combined obstructive and interstitial lung disease (O-ILD) represent a pathological entity which still has to be well clinically described. The aim of this descriptive and explorative study was to describe the phenotype and functional characteristics of a cohort of patients suffering from functional obstruction in a population of ILD patients in order to raise the need of dedicated prospective observational studies and the evaluation of the impact of anti-fibrotic therapies.

Methods: The current authors conducted a retrospective study including 557 ILD patients, with either obstructive (O-ILD, n = 82) or non-obstructive (non O-ILD, n = 475) pattern.

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Background: In recent decades, asthma-related quality of life questionnaires have joined objective clinical indicators as important outcome measures. In this study, we sought to investigate the predictors of asthma-related quality of life in a large cohort of patients recruited from a secondary care center.

Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional study on asthmatics ( = 1301) recruited from the Liège University Hospital asthma clinic (Belgium).

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