AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates whether high blood eosinophil counts have the same clinical significance in COPD (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease) as they do in asthma, revealing ongoing debates in the medical community.
  • - Researchers analyzed data from two cohorts (COPD and asthma) to study gene expression and the relationship between eosinophil counts and clinical characteristics, finding distinct genetic responses between the two conditions.
  • - The findings indicate that while asthma and COPD may share some clinical features, their underlying molecular mechanisms differ significantly, emphasizing the complexity of treating these respiratory diseases.

Article Abstract

Background: Whether the clinical or pathophysiologic significance of the "treatable trait" high blood eosinophil count in COPD is the same as for asthma remains controversial. We sought to determine the relationship between the blood eosinophil count, clinical characteristics and gene expression from bronchial brushings in COPD and asthma.

Methods: Subjects were recruited into a COPD (emphysema versus airway disease [EvA]) or asthma cohort (Unbiased BIOmarkers in PREDiction of respiratory disease outcomes, U-BIOPRED). We determined gene expression using RNAseq in EvA (n = 283) and Affymetrix microarrays in U-BIOPRED (n = 85). We ran linear regression analysis of the bronchial brushings transcriptional signal versus blood eosinophil counts as well as differential expression using a blood eosinophil > 200 cells/μL as a cut-off. The false discovery rate was controlled at 1% (with continuous values) and 5% (with dichotomized values).

Results: There were no differences in age, gender, lung function, exercise capacity and quantitative computed tomography between eosinophilic versus noneosinophilic COPD cases. Total serum IgE was increased in eosinophilic asthma and COPD. In EvA, there were 12 genes with a statistically significant positive association with the linear blood eosinophil count, whereas in U-BIOPRED, 1197 genes showed significant associations (266 positive and 931 negative). The transcriptome showed little overlap between genes and pathways associated with blood eosinophil counts in asthma versus COPD. Only CST1 was common to eosinophilic asthma and COPD and was replicated in independent cohorts.

Conclusion: Despite shared "treatable traits" between asthma and COPD, the molecular mechanisms underlying these clinical entities are predominately different.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7064968PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/all.14016DOI Listing

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