Objectives: The objective of this study was to study the performance of two available home spirometers used by people with Cystic Fibrosis (PwCF) over a shortterm period and to assess user experience. Study design: This was a prospective observational study. Participants age 6 years and older were recruited to participate if they could complete acceptable spirometry in the clinic setting. Methods: Participants used either the NuvoAir Air Next or the ZEPHYRx MIR Spirobank Smart spirometer. They underwent a one-time virtual training session, then completed 2 weeks of daily spirometry followed by 2 months of weekly spirometry. Participants responded to surveys and completed a debrief interview to understand user experience. Statistical analyses examined feasibility, reliability, and accuracy of each spirometer in an unsupervised, real-world setting.Results: We report high adherence (80% [95% CI 61%-92%]) to our study protocol in all session attempts, but lower rates of adherence after discarding sessions performed with inadequate technique (47% [95% CI 28%-66%] to 63% [95% CI 44%-80%]). We found high reliability of each device by analyzing day-to-day variability and good concordance to recent in-clinic testing (NuvoAir r = 0.91 [0.82-0.93]; ZEPHYRx r = 0.70 [0.45-0.84]). Patient experience in this cohort was favorable with most reporting ease of use and reassurance knowing lung function was being tracked over time. Conclusions: This real-world study showed good performance of two different available home spirometers used by children and adults with CF. While overall adherence was high, suboptimal technique reduced the total interpretable data, possibly limiting feasibility. Future work should focus on developing sustainable training and coaching programs to support the success of home spirometry in a CF chronic care model.
Objective: Small vessel primary angiitis of the central nervous system is a rare and often severe disease characterized by central nervous system-restricted inflammatory vasculitis on histopathology. Diagnosis requires brain biopsy for confirmation and is suggested prior to starting immunotherapy when feasible. However, emerging evidence suggests that other neuroinflammatory conditions may have a clinical and radiographic phenotype that mimics small vessel primary angiitis, at times with overlapping pathologic features as well. Such diagnoses, including myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody-associated disease and central nervous system-restricted hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis, can be non-invasively diagnosed with serum antibody or genetic testing that would prompt different monitoring and treatment paradigms. To determine the ultimate diagnosis of patients who were suspected prior to biopsy to have small vessel primary angiitis, we reviewed the clinical, radiographic, and pathological features of a cohort of patients at a single center undergoing brain biopsy for non-oncologic indications. Methods: Clinical data were retrospectively extracted from the medical record. Pathology and neuroimaging review was conducted. Results: We identified 21 patients over a 19-year time-period, of whom 14 (66.7%) were ultimately diagnosed with entities other than small vessel primary angiitis that would have obviated the need for brain biopsy. Diagnoses included anti-myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody associated disease (n = 9), central nervous system-restricted hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (n = 3), anti-GABA A receptor encephalitis (n = 1), and Aicardi-Goutières syndrome (n = 1). Interpretation: This study highlights the importance of pursuing now readily available non-invasive testing for mimicking diagnoses before performing a brain biopsy for suspected small vessel primary angiitis of the central nervous system.
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