2018
DOI: 10.1183/13993003.00766-2018
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Immunological corollary of the pulmonary mycobiome in bronchiectasis: the CAMEB study

Abstract: Understanding the composition and clinical importance of the fungal mycobiome was recently identified as a key topic in a “research priorities” consensus statement for bronchiectasis.Patients were recruited as part of the CAMEB study: an international multicentre cross-sectional Cohort of Asian and Matched European Bronchiectasis patients. The mycobiome was determined in 238 patients by targeted amplicon shotgun sequencing of the 18S–28S rRNA internally transcribed spacer regions ITS1 and ITS2. Specific quanti… Show more

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Cited by 107 publications
(145 citation statements)
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References 46 publications
(63 reference statements)
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“…The importance of microbes in bronchiectasis is further substantiated through culture-independent analysis of the lung microbiome illustrating the influence of macrolide therapy on microbiome composition and the association of microbial consortia with important clinical outcomes including exacerbation [33,34]. Work from our group and others has extensively characterised the fungal component of the bronchiectasis microbiome (the Mycobiome) and highlights a high frequency of fungal sensitisation associated with worsening disease severity, lung function and exacerbations [35]. In chronic cough, microbiome analysis has been applied to paediatric patients which has illustrated an increased abundance of commensal taxa in the lower airway and the potential association of specific microbiome signatures with particular patients including asthma, bacterial bronchitis or neurologically impaired orally fed subjects [36].…”
Section: The Inter-relationship Between Cough and Bronchiectasismentioning
confidence: 85%
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“…The importance of microbes in bronchiectasis is further substantiated through culture-independent analysis of the lung microbiome illustrating the influence of macrolide therapy on microbiome composition and the association of microbial consortia with important clinical outcomes including exacerbation [33,34]. Work from our group and others has extensively characterised the fungal component of the bronchiectasis microbiome (the Mycobiome) and highlights a high frequency of fungal sensitisation associated with worsening disease severity, lung function and exacerbations [35]. In chronic cough, microbiome analysis has been applied to paediatric patients which has illustrated an increased abundance of commensal taxa in the lower airway and the potential association of specific microbiome signatures with particular patients including asthma, bacterial bronchitis or neurologically impaired orally fed subjects [36].…”
Section: The Inter-relationship Between Cough and Bronchiectasismentioning
confidence: 85%
“…Therapies such as use of antitussives, inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) or chest physiotherapy may therefore alleviate symptoms in individuals with problematic cough if appropriately targeted [10,22]. While bronchiectasis mandates multifaceted management with consideration of heterogeneous clinical features, co-morbidities, microbiology, inflammation and therapeutic responses, cough remains an important common phenotypic trait but also a key symptom in the definition of a bronchiectasis exacerbationa major endpoint applied in almost all clinical trials and an important prognostic indicator of disease progression [23,24].…”
Section: Cough In Bronchiectasismentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Additional measures of severity including composite scales such as the bronchiectasis severity index and symptom questionnaires would be valuable for comprehensive disease evaluation . Ideally, future studies should evaluate the impact of antibiotic treatment as well as moving beyond the bacteriome to include fungi, viruses and mycobacteria …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%