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Cystic Fibrosis

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Title: Cystic Fibrosis Author: Wayne State University Last modified by: Wayne State University Created Date: 12/2/2004 3:26:29 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cystic Fibrosis


1
Cystic Fibrosis
  • Paolo Aquino
  • Internal Medicine-Pediatrics
  • January 13, 2005

2
Outline
  • What is cystic fibrosis (CF)?
  • What causes CF?
  • What are the manifestations?
  • How do you diagnose CF?
  • How do you treat CF?

3
Cystic Fibrosis
  • Inherited monogenic disorder presenting as a
    multisystem disease.
  • Typically presents in childhood
  • 7 of CF patients diagnosed as adults
  • Most common life limiting recessive trait among
    whites

4
Cystic Fibrosis
  • Prognosis improving
  • gt38 of CF patients are older than 18
  • 13 of CF patients are older than 30
  • Median survival
  • Males 32 years
  • Females 29 years

5
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6
Genetics of CF
  • Autosomal recessive
  • Gene located on chromosome 7
  • Prevalence- varies with ethnic origin
  • 1 in 3000 live births in Caucasians in North
    America and Northern Europe
  • 1 in 17,000 live births of African Americans
  • 1 in 90,000 live births in Hawaiian Asians

7
Genetics of CF
  • Most common mutation
  • Occurs in 70 of CF chromosomes
  • 3 base pair deletion leading to absence of
    phenylalanine at position 508 (DF508) of the CF
    transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR)
  • Large number (gt1000) of relatively uncommon
    muations (2)

8
Genetics of CF
  • Difficult to use DNA diagnosis to screen for
    heterozygotes
  • No simple physiologic measurements yet available
    for heterozygote detection

9
Genetics of CF
  • The CFTR protein
  • Single polypeptide chain, 1480 amino acids
  • Cyclic AMP regulated chloride channel
  • Regulator of other ion channels
  • Found in the plasma membrane of normal epithelial
    cells

10
Genetics of CF
  • DF508 mutation leads to improper processing and
    intracellular degradation of the CFTR protein
  • Other mutations in the CF gene produce fully
    processed CFTR proteins that are either
    non-functional or partially functional

11
Mutation of CFTR
12
Genetics of CF
  • Epithelial dysfunction
  • Epithelia containing CFTR protein exhibit array
    of normal functions
  • Volume absorbing (airway, distal intestine)
  • Salt absorbing without volume (sweat ducts)
  • Volume secretory (proximal intestine, pancreas)
  • Dysfunction in CFTR gene leads to different
    effects on patterns of electrolyte and water
    transport

13
Persistence of CF
  • Is there a reason why CF mutations are so
    prevalent?
  • Hypothetical resistance to morbidity and
    mortality associated with cholera
  • Evidence shows intestinal epithelial cells
    homozygous for the DF508 mutation are
    unresponsive to the secretory effects of cholera
    toxin

14
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15
Pathophysiology
  • Lung
  • Raised trans-epithelial electric potential
    difference
  • Absence of cAMP-dependent kinase and
    PKC-regulated chloride transport
  • Raised sodium transport and decreased chloride
    transport
  • Alternative calcium-regulated chloride channel in
    airway epithelia which is a potential therapeutic
    target

16
  • Normal airway epithelia
  • CF altered airway epithelia

17
Pathophysiology
  • Lung
  • High rate of sodium absorption and low rate of
    chloride secretion reduces salt and water content
    in mucus, depletes peri-ciliary liquid
  • Mucus adheres to airway surface, leads to
    decreased mucus clearing
  • Predisposition to Staph and Pseudomonas infections

18
Pathophysiology
  • Gastrointestinal
  • Pancreas
  • Absence of CFTR limits function of
    chloride-bicarbonate exchanger to secrete
    bicarbonate
  • Leads to retention of enzymes in the pancreas,
    destruction of pancreatic tissue.
  • Intestine
  • Decrease in water secretion leads to thickened
    mucus and dessicated intraluminal contents
  • Obstruction of small and large intestines

19
Pathophysiology
  • Gastrointestinal
  • Biliary tree
  • Retention of biliary secretion
  • Focal biliary cirrhosis
  • Bile duct proliferation
  • Chronic cholecystitis, cholelithiasis
  • Sweat
  • Normal volume of sweat
  • Inability to reabsorb NaCl from sweat as it
    passes through sweat duct

20
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21
Manifestations
  • Common presentations
  • Chronic cough
  • Recurrent pulmonary infiltrates
  • Failure to thrive
  • Meconium ileus

22
Manifestations
  • Respiratory tract
  • Chronic sinusitis
  • Nasal obstruction
  • Rhinorrhea
  • Nasal polyps in 25 often requires surgery
  • Chronic cough
  • Persistent
  • Viscous, purulent, green sputum

23
Manifestations
  • Respiratory tract
  • Chronic cough
  • Exacerbations require aggressive therapy
  • Postural drainage
  • Antibiotics
  • Become more frequent with age
  • Progressive loss of lung function
  • Infection
  • Intially with H. influenzae and S. aureus
  • Subsequently P. aeruginosa
  • Occassionally, Xanthomonas xylosoxidans,
    Burkholderia gladioli, Proteus, E. coli,
    Klebsiella

24
Manifestations
  • Respiratory tract
  • Lung function
  • Small airway disease is first functional lung
    abnormality
  • Progresses to reversible as well as irreversible
    changes in FEV1
  • Chest x-ray may show hyperinflation, mucus
    impaction, bronchial cuffing, bronchiectasis

25
Manifestations
  • Respiratory tract
  • Complications
  • Pneumothorax 10 of CF patients
  • Hemoptysis
  • Digital clubbing
  • Cor pulmonale
  • Respiratory failure

26
Manifestations
  • Gastrointestinal
  • Meconium ileus
  • Abdominal distention
  • Failure to pass stool
  • Emesis
  • Abdominal flat plate
  • Air-fluid levels
  • Granular appearance?meconium
  • Small colon

27
Manifestations
  • Gastrointestinal
  • Meconium ileus equivalent or distal intestinal
    obstruction syndrome
  • RLQ pain
  • Loss of appetite
  • Emesis
  • Palpable mass
  • May be confused with appendicitis

28
Manifestations
  • Gastrointestinal
  • Exocrine pancreatic insufficiency
  • Found in gt90 of CF patients
  • Protein and fat malabsorption
  • Frequent bulky, foul-smelling stools
  • Vitamin A, D, E, K malabsorption
  • Sparing of pancreatic beta cells
  • Beta cell function decreases with age
  • Increased incidence of GI malignancy

29
Manifestations
  • Genitourinary
  • Late onset puberty
  • Due to chronic lung disease and inadequate
    nutrition
  • gt95 of male patients with CF have azospermia due
    to obliteration of the vas deferens
  • 20 of female patients with CF are infertile
  • gt90 of completed pregnancies produce viable
    infants

30
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31
Diagnosis
  • DNA analysis not useful due to large variety of
    CF mutations
  • Sweat chloride test gt70 mEq/L
  • 1-2 of patients with clinical manifestations of
    CF have a normal sweat chloride test
  • Nasal transepithelial potential difference

32
Diagnosis
  • Criteria
  • One of the following
  • Presence of typical clinical features
  • History of CF in a sibling
  • Positive newborn screening test
  • Plus laboratory evidence for CFTR dysfunction
  • Two elevated sweat chloride concentrations on two
    separate days
  • Identification of two CF mutations
  • Abnormal nasal potential difference measurement

33
Treatment
  • Major objectives
  • Promote clearance of secretions
  • Control lung infection
  • Provide adequate nutrition
  • Prevent intestinal obstruction
  • Investigation into therapies to restore the
    processing of misfolded CFTR protein

34
Treatment
  • Lung
  • gt95 of CF patients die from complications of
    lung infection
  • Breathing exercises
  • Flutter valves
  • Chest percussion
  • ? Hypertonic saline aerosols

35
Treatment
  • Lung
  • Antibiotics
  • Early intervention, long course, high dose
  • Staphylococcus- Penicillin or cephalosporin
  • Oral cipro for pseudomonas
  • Rapid emergence of resistance
  • Intermittent treatment (2-3 weeks), not chronic
  • IV antibiotics for severe infections or
    infections resistant to orals

36
Treatment
  • Lung
  • Antibiotics
  • Pseudomonas treated with two drugs with different
    mechanisms to prevent resistance
  • e.g. cephalosporin aminoglycoside
  • Use of aerosolized antibiotics
  • Increasing mucus clearance
  • N-acetylcysteine not clinically helpful
  • Long-term DNAse treatment increases time between
    pulmonary exacerbations

37
Treatment
  • Lung
  • Inhaled b-adrenergic agonists to control airway
    constriction
  • No evidence of long-term benefit
  • Oral glucocoticoids for allergic bronchopulmonary
    aspergillosis
  • Studying benefits of high dose NSAID therapy for
    chronic inflammatory changes

38
Treatment
  • Lung
  • Atelectasis
  • Chest PT antibiotics
  • Respiratory failure and cor pulmonale
  • Vigorous medical management
  • Oxygen supplementation
  • Only effective treatment for respiratory failure
    is lung transplantation
  • 2 year survival gt60 with lung transplatation

39
Treatment
  • Gastrointestinal
  • Pancreatic enzyme replacement
  • Replacement of fat-soluble vitamins- especially
    vitamin E K
  • Insulin for hyperglycemia
  • Intestinal obstruction
  • Pancreatic enzymes osmotically active agents
  • Distal- hypertonic radiocontrast material via
    enema

40
Treatment
  • Gastrointestinal
  • End-stage liver disease- transplantation
  • 2 year survival rate gt50
  • Hepatic and gallbladder complications treated as
    in patient without CF

41
Summary
  • CF is an inherited monogenic disorder presenting
    as a multisystem disease
  • Pathophysiology is related to abnormal ion
    transportation across epithelia
  • Respiratory, GI and GU manifestations
  • Treatment is currently preventative and supportive

42
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