AI Article Synopsis

  • Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency (AATD) is a hereditary condition that affects lung function and is often found in patients with asthma; however, there's limited research on how AATD specifically impacts respiratory function in these individuals.
  • The study aimed to compare lung function between asthmatic patients with a mutation in the SERPINA1 gene (which codes for the AAT protein) and those without the mutation by analyzing data from 600 asthma patients and conducting detailed genetic and spirometric tests on a subset.
  • Results showed that asthmatic patients with the AAT mutation had reduced lung capacity and greater air trapping compared to those without the mutation, indicating a tendency towards small airway dysfunction in the former group.

Article Abstract

Background: Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency (AATD) is a hereditary disorder involving lungs, characterized by low serum concentration of the protein alpha-1 antitrypsin (AAT) also called proteinase inhibitor (PI). Asthma is common in AATD patients, but there are only few data on respiratory function in asthmatic patients with AATD.

Objectives: The aim of the study was to evaluate lung function in asthmatic outpatients with mutation in the SERPINA1 gene coding for AAT versus asthmatic subjects without mutation.

Methods: We performed the quantitative analysis of the serum concentration of AAT in 600 outpatients affected by mild to moderate asthma from the University Hospital of Parma, Italy. Fifty-seven of them underwent the genetic analysis subsequently; they were subdivided into mutated and non-mutated subjects. All the mutated patients had a heterozygous genotype, except 1 (PI*SS). We assessed the lung function through a flow-sensing spirometer and the small airway parameters through an impulse oscillometry system.

Results: The values of forced vital capacity (% predicted) and those of the residual volume to total lung capacity ratio (%) were, respectively, lower and higher in patients mutated versus patients without mutation, showing a significantly greater air trapping (p = 0.014 and p = 0.017, respectively). Moreover, patients with mutation in comparison to patients without mutation showed lower forced expiratory volume in 3 s (% predicted) and forced expiratory volume in 6 s (L) spirometric values, reflecting a smaller airways contribution.

Conclusions: In asthmatic patients, heterozygosity for AAT with PI*MZ and PI*MS genotypes was associated with small airway dysfunction and with lung air trapping.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000513072DOI Listing

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