Effects of bronchodilation on biomarkers of peripheral airway inflammation in COPD

Publication date: July 2018 Source:Pharmacological Research, Volume 133 Author(s): Pierachille Santus, Dejan Radovanovic, Susanna Mascetti, Alessia Pauletti, Vincenzo Valenti, Marco Mantero, Alberto Papi, Marco Contoli Peripheral airway inflammation and dysfunction are key elements in the pathogenesis of COPD. The exhaled alveolar fraction of nitric oxide (CANO) is an indirect biomarker of lung peripheral inflammation. We tested whether inhaled long-acting bronchodilators (LABA) can affect CANO and we evaluated correlations with lung mechanics in patients with COPD. Two-centre, randomised, double blind, crossover study including COPD patients with moderate-to-severe airflow obstruction. Following a pharmacological washout, multi-flow exhaled fraction of NO (FENO), plethysmography, lung diffusion (DLCO), single breath nitrogen washout test and dyspnoea were measured in a crossover manner at baseline and 30, 60 and 180 min following administration of salmeterol (Sal) or formoterol fumarate (FF). (ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01853787). Fort-five patients were enrolled (median age: 71.8 years; 84.4% males). At baseline, CANO correlated with airway resistances (r = 0.422), residual volume/total lung capacity (RV/TLC; r = 0.375), transfer factor (r= -0.463) and forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1; r= -0.375, all P < 0.01). After LABA administration, we found a significant reduction of FENO that reached statistical significance at 180’; no diff...
Source: Pharmacological Research - Category: Drugs & Pharmacology Source Type: research