A Quantitative Lung Mucin Score to Identify Chronic Bronchitis.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
BACKGROUND: We previously demonstrated that sputum total mucin concentration is an objective marker for chronic bronchitis (CB). This current study introduces a novel Mucin Quantitative Score (MUCQ) that combines total mucin concentration and mucin composition to improve the assessment of risk, onset of clinically diagnosed disease, and progression of muco-obstructive lung diseases. METHODS: Patients from the SPIROMICS (SubPopulations and InteRmediate Outcome Measures in COPD Study) cohort were classified as having CB, or not, based on clinical questionnaires. Using the measured total mucin, MUC5AC, and MUC5B concentrations in sputum samples, we calculated MUCQ as [Total mucin]×([MUC5AC]÷[MUC5B])÷100 μg/ml, which is a unitless, weighted concentration score. Our primary outcome was the net reclassification of patients with a diagnosis of CB, or not, based on total mucin concentrations in their sputum compared with using the MUCQ score. Participants were first classified as CB- positive or -negative using a total mucin concentration threshold of 2306 μg/ml, then reclassified using the MUCQ threshold of 4.30. Associated z statistics and a P value for the primary outcome are reported. RESULTS: Among 164 patients in the SPIROMICS cohort with clinically defined CB, using the MUCQ score up-classified 18 patients who were currently smoking to a diagnosis of CB and down-classified 5 patients who were currently smoking and 3 control participants who had never smoked, compared with the classification of CB was based on total mucin concentrations alone (P=0.001). In addition, MUCQ correlated with other clinical and pathological indices of chronic airway disease and airway obstruction. CONCLUSIONS: The MUCQ metric was superior in distinguishing patients with CB compared to a total mucin concentration. Trials are needed to ascertain the prospective use of MUCQ metrics in research and clinical settings for assessment, management, and tracking therapeutic responses in CB and potentially other muco-obstructive conditions. (Funded by the National Institutes of Health and others.).