Incidence and predictors of self-reported pulmonary exacerbations in primary ciliary dyskinesia: an international prospective cohort study
Leonie D. Schreck, Myrofora Goutaki, Eva S.L. Pedersen, Fiona Copeland, Trini López Fernández, Jane S. Lucas, Claudia E. Kuehni

TL;DR
This study finds that people with primary ciliary dyskinesia experience frequent lung flare-ups, especially adult women and those infected with Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
Contribution
The study identifies specific risk factors for pulmonary exacerbations in PCD patients using an international prospective cohort.
Findings
Pulmonary exacerbations occurred at a rate of 3.1 per person per year in PCD patients.
Adult females and those with Pseudomonas aeruginosa had significantly higher exacerbation rates.
Health professionals were consulted in only 13% of exacerbation weeks.
Abstract
Pulmonary exacerbations contribute to disease progression in chronic lung diseases. In a large prospective cohort study, we studied the incidence and predictors of pulmonary exacerbations among persons with primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD), which can inform follow-up care. We also assessed healthcare use, changes in management and pathogens during exacerbations. Participants in the Living with PCD study reported increased respiratory symptoms in the past 7 days, indicating a pulmonary exacerbation, from June 2020 through May 2022 via online questionnaires. We derived incidence rates and studied predictors of pulmonary exacerbation incidence by fitting multivariable negative binomial regression models. We obtained data from 660 persons (408 adults, 57 adolescents, 195 children) who completed 17 853 follow-up questionnaires (median 17, range 1–84). The 1026 reported exacerbations…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCystic Fibrosis Research Advances · Respiratory viral infections research · Sinusitis and nasal conditions
