33 research outputs found

    paediatric respiratory disease past present and future

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    Paediatric respiratory disease has changed in the past 20 yrs; we could fill a whole issue of the journal paying tribute to our famous forebears. We are posing new challenges to our colleagues in the field of adult respiratory disease. They have to learn to deal with conditions that 20 yrs ago were rare in the adult chest clinic, such as cystic fibrosis (CF) and the long-term consequences of premature birth and congenital malformations of the respiratory tract. Furthermore, studies in childhood are challenging pathophysiological concepts throughout life. The many great prospective birth cohort studies have shed light on the different patterns of wheezing, their risk factors and their evolution through childhood. Who would have thought it was good to be born in a barn! It is becoming increasingly clear that even for "adult" diseases, such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), antenatal and early life events are at least as important as smoking in adulthood 1. CF has become a disease also of adults 2. Although many factors have contributed, the main reason has been the development of expert special CF centres, a model increasingly adopted by adult teams. This can serve as a model for other diseases; how a well-structured multidisciplinary approach to treatment can translate into benefits for patients. Perhaps numerically the most important achievement is in the field of public health. The benefit of the decrease in invasive bacterial infections, due to vaccination programmes for infants, is among the most important achievements of the past. Other areas of change include the survival of ever smaller preterm neonates. These children are reaching adult life with impaired lung function and abnormal computed tomography scans. What will happen to their ageing lungs? Interstitial lung disease (ILD) is becoming increasingly well understood, with new genetic entities, such as

    Long term prognosis of patients with cystic fibrosis in relation to early detection by neonatal screening and treatment in a cystic fibrosis centre.

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    BACKGROUND--A study was undertaken to evaluate whether an early diagnosis by neonatal screening may improve the long term prognosis of patients with cystic fibrosis and to assess the influence of expert management started immediately after the diagnosis. METHODS--Comparative clinical follow up in three birth cohorts of patients with cystic fibrosis was performed at the Cystic Fibrosis centre in Groningen in close collaboration with paediatricians in general hospitals in the north-eastern part of the Netherlands. The first birth cohort (n = 19) was detected by screening and the two other cohorts were detected clinically, one (n = 30) consisting of patients born during the screening programme and the other (n = 32) of patients born during the six years immediately after the screening programme ended. The total number of patients in the three birth cohorts included all patients with cystic fibrosis born in this area during a 12 year period. Cumulative survival rates and the variation with time of lung function, the levels of immunoglobulins, and growth patterns were used as main outcome measures. RESULTS--Patients born during the screening programme but detected clinically appeared to have a reduced life expectancy compared with patients detected by screening. The patients detected by screening showed less deterioration in lung function (annual decrease 1.2% of FEV1 % pred), a smaller increase in immunoglobulin levels, and minimal catch-up growth compared with an annual decrease of 3.25% of FEV1 % pred in the non-screened birth cohort of the same age, a higher rise in immunoglobulins leading to increased levels at the end of the observation period, and catch-up growth for weight as well as height. Differences between patients treated in a cystic fibrosis centre and those not referred to a specialist centre were smaller but similar, in favour of treatment at a cystic fibrosis clinic. CONCLUSIONS--Expert management started immediately after an early diagnosis of cystic fibrosis by neonatal screening results in important beneficial effects on the outcome and clinical course of the condition. The institution of very early treatment may be critical for the outcome and long term prognosis for most patients with cystic fibrosis. Neonatal screening programmes for cystic fibrosis should be introduced more widely

    Long term prognosis of patients with cystic fibrosis in relation to early detection by neonatal screening and treatment in a cystic fibrosis centre

    No full text
    BACKGROUND: A study was undertaken to evaluate whether an early diagnosis by neonatal screening may improve the long term prognosis of patients with cystic fibrosis and to assess the influence of expert management started immediately after the diagnosis. METHODS: Comparative clinical follow up in three birth cohorts of patients with cystic fibrosis was performed at the Cystic Fibrosis centre in Groningen in close collaboration with paediatricians in general hospitals in the north-eastern part of the Netherlands. The first birth cohort (n = 19) was detected by screening and the two other cohorts were detected clinically, one (n = 30) consisting of patients born during the screening programme and the other (n = 32) of patients born during the six years immediately after the screening programme ended. The total number of patients in the three birth cohorts included all patients with cystic fibrosis born in this area during a 12 year period. Cumulative survival rates and the variation with time of lung function, the levels of immunoglobulins, and growth patterns were used as main outcome measures. RESULTS: Patients born during the screening programme but detected clinically appeared to have a reduced life expectancy compared with patients detected by screening. The patients detected by screening showed less deterioration in lung function (annual decrease 1.2% of FEV1 % pred), a smaller increase in immunoglobulin levels, and minimal catch-up growth compared with an annual decrease of 3.25% of FEV1 % pred in the non-screened birth cohort of the same age, a higher rise in immunoglobulins leading to increased levels at the end of the observation period, and catch-up growth for weight as well as height. Differences between patients treated in a cystic fibrosis centre and those not referred to a specialist centre were smaller but similar, in favour of treatment at a cystic fibrosis clinic. CONCLUSIONS: Expert management started immediately after an early diagnosis of cystic fibrosis by neonatal screening results in important beneficial effects on the outcome and clinical course of the condition. The institution of very early treatment may be critical for the outcome and long term prognosis for most patients with cystic fibrosis. Neonatal screening programmes for cystic fibrosis should be introduced more widely

    Effect of screening for cystic-fibrosis on the influence of genetic-counseling

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    We studied the influence of genetic counseling for cystic fibrosis on family planning, using neonatal screening, family size at time of diagnosis, and maternal age as possible determinants for reproductive behaviour. The expected number of children born to mothers of equal age and parity in the same period was approximated on the basis of population statistics. These numbers were compared to the numbers of children born in the study group after a CF diagnosis and information on the 25% recurrence risk were given. A 50.8% reduction in childbirth was found in the study group, although 77% of families had decided against further high-risk pregnancies. No statistically significant influence of neonatal screening could be demonstrated, but this may be due to the small number of families involved
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