Cardiopulmonary exercise testing provides prognostic information in advanced cystic fibrosis lung disease
Radtke, T; Urquhart, DS; Braun, J; et al.Barry, PJ; Waller, I; Petch, N; Mei-Zahav, M; Kramer, MR; Hua-Huy, T; Dinh-Xuan, AT; Innes, JA; McArthur, S; Sovtic, A; Gojsina, B; Verges, S; de Maat, T; Morrison, L; Wood, J; Crute, S; Williams, CA; Tomlinson, OW; Bar-Yoseph, R; Hebestreit, A; Quon, BS; Kwong, E; Saynor, ZL; Causer, AJ; Stephenson, AL; Schneiderman, JE; Shaw, M; Dwyer, T; Stevens, D; Remus, N; Douvry, B; Foster, K; Benden, C; Ratjen, F; Hebestreit, H
Date: 25 October 2023
Article
Journal
Annals of the American Thoracic Society
Publisher
American Thoracic Society
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Rationale: Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) provides prognostic information in
cystic fibrosis (CF); however, its prognostic value for patients with advanced CF lung disease
(ACFLD) is unknown.
Objectives: To determine the prognostic value of CPET on the risk of death or lung
transplant (LTX) within 2-years.
Methods: We ...
Rationale: Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) provides prognostic information in
cystic fibrosis (CF); however, its prognostic value for patients with advanced CF lung disease
(ACFLD) is unknown.
Objectives: To determine the prognostic value of CPET on the risk of death or lung
transplant (LTX) within 2-years.
Methods: We retrospectively collected data from 20 CF centers in Asia, Australia, Europe,
and North America on patients with a forced expiratory volume in 1s (FEV1) 40% predicted
who performed a cycle ergometer CPET between January 2008 and December 2017. Time to
death/LTX was analyzed using mixed Cox proportional hazards regression. Conditional
inference trees were modelled to identify subgroups with increased risk of death/LTX.
Results: In total, 174 patients (FEV1 30.9±5.8% predicted) were included. Forty-four patients
(25.5%) died or underwent LTX. Cox regression analysis adjusted for age, sex and FEV1,
revealed percent predicted peak oxygen uptake ( OV 2peak) and peak work rate (Wpeak) as
significant predictors of death/LTX: adjusted hazard ratios per each additional ten percent
predicted were 0.60 (95% confidence interval, 0.43–0.90, P=0.008) and 0.60 (0.48–0.82,
P<0.001). Tree-structured regression models, including a set of twelve prognostic factors for
survival, identified Wpeak to be most strongly associated with 2-year risk of death/LTX.
Probability of death/LTX was 45.2% for those with a Wpeak 49.2% predicted versus 10.9%
for those with a Wpeak >49.2% predicted, P<0.001.
Conclusions: CPET provides prognostic information in ACFLD and Wpeak appears to be a
promising marker for LTX referral and candidate selection.
Clinical and Biomedical Sciences
Faculty of Health and Life Sciences
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