Literature DB >> 29056600

International management platform for children's interstitial lung disease (chILD-EU).

Steve Cunningham1, Nicolaus Schwerk2, Andy Bush3,4, Matthias Griese5, Elias Seidl5, Meike Hengst5, Simone Reu6, Hans Rock7, Gisela Anthony7, Nural Kiper8, Nagehan Emiralioğlu8, Deborah Snijders9, Lutz Goldbeck10, Reiner Leidl11, Julia Ley-Zaporozhan12, Ingrid Krüger-Stollfuss12, Birgit Kammer12, Traudl Wesselak5, Claudia Eismann5, Andrea Schams5, Doerthe Neuner5, Morag MacLean1, Andrew G Nicholson3, McCann Lauren4, Annick Clement13, Ralph Epaud13, Jacques de Blic13, Michael Ashworth14, Paul Aurora14, Alistair Calder14, Martin Wetzke2, Matthias Kappler5.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Children's interstitial lung diseases (chILD) cover many rare entities, frequently not diagnosed or studied in detail. There is a great need for specialised advice and for internationally agreed subclassification of entities collected in a register.Our objective was to implement an international management platform with independent multidisciplinary review of cases at presentation for long-term follow-up and to test if this would allow for more accurate diagnosis. Also, quality and reproducibility of a diagnostic subclassification system were assessed using a collection of 25 complex chILD cases.
METHODS: A web-based chILD management platform with a registry and biobank was successfully designed and implemented.
RESULTS: Over a 3-year period, 575 patients were included for observation spanning a wide spectrum of chILD. In 346 patients, multidisciplinary reviews were completed by teams at five international sites (Munich 51%, London 12%, Hannover 31%, Ankara 1% and Paris 5%). In 13%, the diagnosis reached by the referring team was not confirmed by peer review. Among these, the diagnosis initially given was wrong (27%), imprecise (50%) or significant information was added (23%).The ability of nine expert clinicians to subcategorise the final diagnosis into the chILD-EU register classification had an overall exact inter-rater agreement of 59% on first assessment and after training, 64%. Only 10% of the 'wrong' answers resulted in allocation to an incorrect category. Subcategorisation proved useful but training is needed for optimal implementation.
CONCLUSIONS: We have shown that chILD-EU has generated a platform to help the clinical assessment of chILD. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: Results, NCT02852928. © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2018. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.

Entities:  

Keywords:  paediatric interstitial lung disease; paediatric lung disaese; rare lung diseases

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29056600     DOI: 10.1136/thoraxjnl-2017-210519

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Thorax        ISSN: 0040-6376            Impact factor:   9.139


  11 in total

1.  Exogenous lipoid pneumonia: an important cause of interstitial lung disease in infants.

Authors:  Diana Marangu; Komala Pillay; Ebrahim Banderker; Diane Gray; Aneesa Vanker; Marco Zampoli
Journal:  Respirol Case Rep       Date:  2018-08-07

2.  Bi-allelic Mutations in Phe-tRNA Synthetase Associated with a Multi-system Pulmonary Disease Support Non-translational Function.

Authors:  Zhiwen Xu; Wing-Sze Lo; David B Beck; Luise A Schuch; Monika Oláhová; Robert Kopajtich; Yeeting E Chong; Charlotte L Alston; Elias Seidl; Liting Zhai; Ching-Fun Lau; Donna Timchak; Charles A LeDuc; Alain C Borczuk; Andrew F Teich; Jane Juusola; Christina Sofeso; Christoph Müller; Germaine Pierre; Tom Hilliard; Peter D Turnpenny; Matias Wagner; Matthias Kappler; Frank Brasch; John Paul Bouffard; Leslie A Nangle; Xiang-Lei Yang; Mingjie Zhang; Robert W Taylor; Holger Prokisch; Matthias Griese; Wendy K Chung; Paul Schimmel
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2018-07-05       Impact factor: 11.025

3.  Exogenous lipoid pneumonia in children: A systematic review.

Authors:  Diana Marangu; Diane Gray; Aneesa Vanker; Marco Zampoli
Journal:  Paediatr Respir Rev       Date:  2019-01-20       Impact factor: 2.726

4.  The Human Phenotype Ontology in 2021.

Authors:  Sebastian Köhler; Michael Gargano; Nicolas Matentzoglu; Leigh C Carmody; David Lewis-Smith; Nicole A Vasilevsky; Daniel Danis; Ganna Balagura; Gareth Baynam; Amy M Brower; Tiffany J Callahan; Christopher G Chute; Johanna L Est; Peter D Galer; Shiva Ganesan; Matthias Griese; Matthias Haimel; Julia Pazmandi; Marc Hanauer; Nomi L Harris; Michael J Hartnett; Maximilian Hastreiter; Fabian Hauck; Yongqun He; Tim Jeske; Hugh Kearney; Gerhard Kindle; Christoph Klein; Katrin Knoflach; Roland Krause; David Lagorce; Julie A McMurry; Jillian A Miller; Monica C Munoz-Torres; Rebecca L Peters; Christina K Rapp; Ana M Rath; Shahmir A Rind; Avi Z Rosenberg; Michael M Segal; Markus G Seidel; Damian Smedley; Tomer Talmy; Yarlalu Thomas; Samuel A Wiafe; Julie Xian; Zafer Yüksel; Ingo Helbig; Christopher J Mungall; Melissa A Haendel; Peter N Robinson
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2021-01-08       Impact factor: 16.971

5.  Genomic testing for children with interstitial and diffuse lung disease (chILD): parent satisfaction, understanding and health-related quality of life.

Authors:  Lauren Kelada; Claire Wakefield; Nada Vidic; David S Armstrong; Bruce Bennetts; Kirsten Boggs; John Christodoulou; Joanne Harrison; Gladys Ho; Nitin Kapur; Suzanna Lindsey-Temple; Tim McDonald; David Mowat; André Schultz; Hiran Selvadurai; Andrew Tai; Adam Jaffe
Journal:  BMJ Open Respir Res       Date:  2022-02

6.  Randomized controlled phase 2 trial of hydroxychloroquine in childhood interstitial lung disease.

Authors:  Martin Wetzke; Elias Seidl; Nicolaus Schwerk; Matthias Griese; Matthias Kappler; Florian Stehling; Johannes Schulze; Winfried Baden; Cordula Koerner-Rettberg; Julia Carlens; Freerk Prenzel; Lutz Nährlich; Andreas Thalmeier; Daniela Sebah; Kai Kronfeld; Hans Rock; Christian Ruckes
Journal:  Orphanet J Rare Dis       Date:  2022-07-23       Impact factor: 4.303

7.  Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome type 2 manifests with fibrosing lung disease early in childhood.

Authors:  Meike Hengst; Lutz Naehrlich; Poornima Mahavadi; Joerg Grosse-Onnebrink; Suzanne Terheggen-Lagro; Lars Høsøien Skanke; Luise A Schuch; Frank Brasch; Andreas Guenther; Simone Reu; Julia Ley-Zaporozhan; Matthias Griese
Journal:  Orphanet J Rare Dis       Date:  2018-03-27       Impact factor: 4.123

8.  Prospective evaluation of hydroxychloroquine in pediatric interstitial lung diseases: Study protocol for an investigator-initiated, randomized controlled, parallel-group clinical trial.

Authors:  Matthias Griese; Meike Köhler; Sabine Witt; Daniela Sebah; Matthias Kappler; Martin Wetzke; Nicolaus Schwerk; Nagehan Emiralioglu; Nural Kiper; Kai Kronfeld; Christian Ruckes; Hans Rock; Gisela Anthony; Elias Seidl
Journal:  Trials       Date:  2020-04-03       Impact factor: 2.279

9.  Unusual Prominent Pulmonary Involvement in a Homozygous PRF1 Gene Variant in a Female Patient.

Authors:  Fahad Alsohime; Talal Almaghamsi; Talal A Basha; Hosam Alardati; Malak Alghamdi; Yousef Mohammed Hawsawi
Journal:  J Clin Immunol       Date:  2020-09-28       Impact factor: 8.317

10.  Etiologic Classification of Diffuse Parenchymal (Interstitial) Lung Diseases.

Authors:  Matthias Griese
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2022-03-21       Impact factor: 4.241

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