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  • Clinical features of childhood primary ciliary dyskinesia by genotype and ultrastructural phenotype.

Clinical features of childhood primary ciliary dyskinesia by genotype and ultrastructural phenotype.

American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine (2014-12-11)
Stephanie D Davis, Thomas W Ferkol, Margaret Rosenfeld, Hye-Seung Lee, Sharon D Dell, Scott D Sagel, Carlos Milla, Maimoona A Zariwala, Jessica E Pittman, Adam J Shapiro, Johnny L Carson, Jeffrey P Krischer, Milan J Hazucha, Matthew L Cooper, Michael R Knowles, Margaret W Leigh
ABSTRACT

The relationship between clinical phenotype of childhood primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) and ultrastructural defects and genotype is poorly defined. To delineate clinical features of childhood PCD and their associations with ultrastructural defects and genotype. A total of 118 participants younger than 19 years old with PCD were evaluated prospectively at six centers in North America using standardized procedures for diagnostic testing, spirometry, chest computed tomography, respiratory cultures, and clinical phenotyping. Clinical features included neonatal respiratory distress (82%), chronic cough (99%), and chronic nasal congestion (97%). There were no differences in clinical features or respiratory pathogens in subjects with outer dynein arm (ODA) defects (ODA alone; n = 54) and ODA plus inner dynein arm (IDA) defects (ODA + IDA; n = 18) versus subjects with IDA and central apparatus defects with microtubular disorganization (IDA/CA/MTD; n = 40). Median FEV1 was worse in the IDA/CA/MTD group (72% predicted) versus the combined ODA groups (92% predicted; P = 0.003). Median body mass index was lower in the IDA/CA/MTD group (46th percentile) versus the ODA groups (70th percentile; P = 0.003). For all 118 subjects, median number of lobes with bronchiectasis was three and alveolar consolidation was two. However, the 5- to 11-year-old IDA/CA/MTD group had more lobes of bronchiectasis (median, 5; P = 0.0008) and consolidation (median, 3; P = 0.0001) compared with the ODA groups (median, 3 and 2, respectively). Similar findings were observed when limited to participants with biallelic mutations. Lung disease was heterogeneous across all ultrastructural and genotype groups, but worse in those with IDA/CA/MTD ultrastructural defects, most of whom had biallelic mutations in CCDC39 or CCDC40.