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Airway Elastin is increased in severe asthma and relates to proximal wall area: histological and computed tomography findings from the U-BIOPRED severe asthma study

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posted on 2021-06-18, 11:02 authored by Susan J Wilson, Jonathan A Ward, Helen M Pickett, Simonetta Baldi, Ana R Sousa, Peter J Sterk, Kian Fan Chung, Ratko Djukanovic, Barbro Dahlen, Bo Billing, Dominick Shaw, Norbert Krug, Thomas Sandstrom, Christopher Brightling, Peter H Howarth
Background: Airway remodelling, which may include goblet cell hyperplasia / hypertrophy, changes in epithelial integrity, accumulation of extracellular matrix components, smooth muscle hypertrophy and thickening of the lamina reticularis, is a feature of severe asthma and contributes to the clinical phenotype. Objective: Within the U-BIOPRED severe asthma study, we have assessed histological elements of airway remodelling and their relationship to computed tomography (CT) measures of proximal airway dimensions. Methods: Bronchial biopsies were collected from two severe asthma groups, one non-smoker (SAn, n = 28) and one current/ex-smoker (SAs/ex, n = 13), and a mild-moderate asthma group (MMA, n = 28) classified and treated according to GINA guidelines, plus a healthy control group (HC, n = 33). Movat's pentachrome technique was used to identify mucin, elastin and total collagen in these biopsies. The number of goblet cells (mucin+) was counted as a percentage of the total number of epithelial cells and the percentage mucin epithelial area measured. The percentage area of elastic fibres and total collagen within the submucosa was also measured, and the morphology of the elastic fibres classified. Participants in the asthma groups also had a CT scan to assess large airway morphometry. Results: The submucosal tissue elastin percentage was higher in both severe asthma groups (16.1% SAn, 18.9% SAs/ex) compared with the HC (9.7%) but did not differ between asthma groups. There was a positive relationship between elastin and airway wall area measured by CT (n = 18–20, rho=0.544, p = 0.024), which also related to an increase in elastic fibres with a thickened lamellar morphological appearance. Mucin epithelial area and total collagen were not different between the four groups. Due to small numbers of suitable CT scans, it was not feasible to compare airway morphometry between the asthma groups. Conclusion: These findings identify a link between extent of elastin deposition and airway wall thickening in severe asthma.

Funding

The U-BIOPRED study would have not been possible without the Innovative Medicines Initiative (IMI) funding provided by the European Union (EU) and the European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries and Associations (EFPIA). This research presented in this paper was co-funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Leicester Biomedical Research Centre, Airway Disease Predicting Outcomes through Patient Specific Computational Modelling (AirPROM) project (funded through 7th EU framework grant, 270194). This paper presents independent research funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR).

History

Citation

Clin Exp Allergy. 2021;51:296–304

Author affiliation

Department of Respiratory Science

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Clinical and Experimental Allergy

Volume

51

Issue

2

Pagination

296 - 304

Publisher

Wiley

issn

0954-7894

eissn

1365-2222

Acceptance date

2020-12-15

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2021-06-18

Spatial coverage

England

Language

English

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