• Title of article

    Exhaled Nitric Oxide in Systemic Sclerosis Lung Disease

  • Author/Authors

    Kozij, Natalie K. Department of Medicine - Toronto General Hospital - University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada , Granton, John T. Department of Medicine - Toronto General Hospital - University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada , Silkoff, Philip E. Department of Medicine - Temple University, Philadelphia, USA , Thenganatt, John Department of Medicine - Toronto General Hospital - University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada , Chakravorty, Shobha University Health Network Pulmonary Hypertension Programme - Toronto General Hospital, Toronto, Canada , Johnson, Sindhu R. Department of Medicine - Institute of Health Policy Management and Evaluation - University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada

  • Pages
    9
  • From page
    1
  • To page
    9
  • Abstract
    Background. Exhaled nitric oxide (eNO) is a potential biomarker to distinguish systemic sclerosis (SSc) associated pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) and interstitial lung disease (ILD). We evaluated the discriminative validity, feasibility, methods of eNO measurement, and magnitude of differences across lung diseases, disease-subsets (SSc, systemic lupus erythematosus), and healthy-controls. Methods. Consecutive subjects in the UHN Pulmonary Hypertension Programme were recruited. Exhaled nitric oxide was measured at 50 mL/s intervals using chemiluminescent detection. Alveolar and conducting airway NO were partitioned using a two-compartment model of axial diffusion (CMAD) and the trumpet model of axial diffusion (TMAD). Results. Sixty subjects were evaluated. Using the CMAD model, control subjects had lower median (IQR) alveolar NO than all PAH subjects (2.0 (1.5, 2.5) versus 3.14 ppb (2.3, 4.0), 𝑝 = 0.008). SSc-ILD had significantly lower median conducting airway NO compared to controls (1009.5 versus 1342.1 ml∗ppb/s, 𝑝 = 0.04). SSc-PAH had increased median (IQR) alveolar NO compared to controls (3.3 (3.0, 5.7) versus 2.0 ppb (1.5, 2.5), 𝑝 = 0.01). SSc-PAH conducting airway NO inversely correlated with DLCO (r −0.88 (95% CI −0.99, −0.26)). Conclusion. We have demonstrated feasibility, identified that CMAD modeling is preferred in SSc, and reported the magnitude of differences across cases and controls. Our data supports discriminative validity of eNO in SSc lung disease.
  • Keywords
    Exhaled Nitric Oxide , Lung Disease , Systemic Sclerosis
  • Journal title
    Canadian Respiratory Journal
  • Serial Year
    2017
  • Record number

    2605201