| Literature DB >> 25631307 |
Clare L Ross1, Neil Galloway-Phillipps2, Paul C Armstrong3, Jane A Mitchell2, Timothy D Warner3, Christopher Brearley4, Mari Ito5, Tanushree Tunstall1, Sarah Elkin1, Onn Min Kon1, Trevor T Hansel1, Mark J Paul-Clark2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Cigarette smoke contributes to a diverse range of diseases including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), cardiovascular disorders and many cancers. There currently is a need for human challenge models, to assess the acute effects of a controlled cigarette smoke stimulus, followed by serial sampling of blood and respiratory tissue for advanced molecular profiling. We employ precision sampling of nasal mucosal lining fluid by absorption to permit soluble mediators measurement in eluates. Serial nasal curettage was used for transcriptomic analysis of mucosal tissue. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Three groups of strictly defined patients will be studied: 12 smokers with COPD (GOLD Stage 2) with emphysema, 12 matched smokers with normal lung function and no evidence of emphysema, and 12 matched never smokers with normal spirometry. Patients in the smoking groups are current smokers, and will be given full support to stop smoking immediately after this study. In giving a controlled cigarette smoke stimulus, all patients will have abstained from smoking for 12 h, and will smoke two cigarettes with expiration through the nose in a ventilated chamber. Before and after inhalation of cigarette smoke, a series of samples will be taken from the blood, nasal mucosal lining fluid and nasal tissue by curettage. Analysis of plasma nicotine and metabolites in relation to levels of soluble inflammatory mediators in nasal lining fluid and blood, as well as assessing nasal transcriptomics, ex vivo blood platelet aggregation and leucocyte responses to toll-like receptor agonists will be undertaken. IMPLICATIONS: Development of acute cigarette smoke challenge models has promise for the study of molecular effects of smoking in a range of pathological processes. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This study was approved by the West London National Research Ethics Committee (12/LO/1101). The study findings will be presented at conferences and will be reported in peer-reviewed journals. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25631307 PMCID: PMC4316420 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005750
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Summary of inclusion criteria and assessments in the acute cigarette smoke challenge
| Inclusion criteria | Sample and assessment parameters | References |
|---|---|---|
| General criteria for 3 groups of patients, each of 12 individuals
45–75 years old Good general health, with no chronic illnesses No prescribed anti-inflammatory medications (including statins) Females of childbearing potential have a negative pregnancy test | Nicotine Cotinine 3-Hydroxycotinine Prostanoids Metabolites Cytokines and chemokines Transcriptomics TLR-agonist stimulation of leukocytes Platelet aggregation | Nicotine |
| Smokers
Current: ≥5 cigarettes/day History: ≥10 pack years Have never smoked | Nasosorption (SAM)
Prostanoids: LTB4, LTC4, PGD2 Metabolites Cytokines and chemokines | |
| Group 1: Smokers with GOLD Stage 2 COPD
Post-bronchodilator FEV1 50–79%; Forced expiratory ratio <70% TLCO of <80% of normal Emphysema on 5 slice HRCT of the chest | Nasal curette
Immunohistology Transcriptomics Flow cytometry Epithelial culture | |
| Group 2: Healthy smokers
▸ Post-bronchodilator FEV1 ≥80%; Forced expiratory ratio ≥70%
TLCO ≥80% of normal Normal 5 slice HRCT of the chest | EBC | EBC |
| Group 3: Healthy non-smokers
Post-bronchodilator FEV1 ≥80%; Forced expiratory ratio ≥70% TLCO and HRCT not done | Sputum | Sputum |
COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; EBC, exhaled breath condensate; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in one second; HRCT, high-resolution CT; SAM, synthetic absorptive matrix; TLR, toll-like receptor.
Figure 1Cigarette smoke challenge model (HEPA, high-efficiency particulate air).
Figure 2Schedule of assessments (SAM, synthetic absorptive matrix, TLR, toll-like receptor).
Figure 3Nasal sampling methods (SAM, synthetic absorptive matrix).
Features and ethical issues with the acute cigarette smoke challenge
| Features of the model | Ethical issues |
|---|---|
| Advantages
Human model Acute-on-chronic inflammation Serial non-invasive sampling Combined direct measurement of biomarkers and ex vivo stimulation Limited numbers of strictly defined patients Compare with in vivo animal models | All patients must be advised to stop smoking, and offered full clinical, psychological and pharmacological support to carry this out |
| Disadvantages
Difficulty recruiting a small number of highly defined patients Need to validate upper versus lower airway inflammation, including tissue biopsies Signal parameters must reliably change after acute cigarette smoke exposure Lung function and CT changes may occur after acute smoke exposure | Some frail patients with COPD will have difficulty fasting and refraining from cigarettes for the morning |
COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Figure 4Human integrated iterative inflammometry (CVS, cardiovascular system; TLR, toll-like receptor; PAMPs, pathogen-associated molecular patterns).