AI Article Synopsis

  • Tracheostomies in children lead to serious health issues, including high healthcare costs, low quality of life, and increased mortality rates, but the reasons behind these respiratory outcomes are not well understood.
  • Researchers studied airway defense in tracheostomised children by analyzing tracheal samples and comparing them to controls without tracheostomies.
  • The findings revealed that long-term tracheostomy causes ongoing airway inflammation and lower diversity in airway microbes, suggesting that targeting neutrophil recruitment could help reduce respiratory complications in affected children.*

Article Abstract

Background: Tracheostomies in children are associated with significant morbidity, poor quality of life, excess healthcare costs and excess mortality. The underlying mechanisms facilitating adverse respiratory outcomes in tracheostomised children are poorly understood. We aimed to characterise airway host defence in tracheostomised children using serial molecular analyses.

Methods: Tracheal aspirates, tracheal cytology brushings and nasal swabs were prospectively collected from children with a tracheostomy and controls. Transcriptomic, proteomic and metabolomic methods were applied to characterise the impact of tracheostomy on host immune response and the airway microbiome.

Results: Children followed up serially from the time of tracheostomy up to 3 months postprocedure (n=9) were studied. A further cohort of children with a long-term tracheostomy were also enrolled (n=24). Controls (n=13) comprised children without a tracheostomy undergoing bronchoscopy. Long-term tracheostomy was associated with airway neutrophilic inflammation, superoxide production and evidence of proteolysis when compared with controls. Reduced airway microbial diversity was established pre-tracheostomy and sustained thereafter.

Conclusions: Long-term childhood tracheostomy is associated with a inflammatory tracheal phenotype characterised by neutrophilic inflammation and the ongoing presence of potential respiratory pathogens. These findings suggest neutrophil recruitment and activation as potential exploratory targets in seeking to prevent recurrent airway complications in this vulnerable group of patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10511973PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/thorax-2022-219557DOI Listing

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