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antiquity
08-14-2002, 10:44 PM
New Bacteria Triggers Lung Ailments

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS


Filed at 5:46 p.m. ET

Life-threatening flare-ups of emphysema and chronic bronchitis are often triggered by infections from newly encountered strains of common germs, a study found.

Such flare-ups are blamed for many deaths from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, which is marked by irreversible damage that restricts the flow of air in the lungs.

The disease, called COPD, is the nation's fourth-deadliest killer. It caused 119,000 deaths and hospitalized 729,000 people in 2000, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

For the study, doctors at the Veterans Administration hospital in Buffalo, N.Y., had 81 patients check in once a month over 56 months to give a sputum sample. There were 1,975 visits in all.

Flare-ups were diagnosed in 33 percent of the visits when the phlegm carried a new strain of bacteria, senior author Timothy F. Murphy reported in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine.

That compared to 15.4 percent of the visits at which the lab did not find any new strains, said Murphy, chief of infectious diseases at the VA Western New York Health Care System.

Other studies have found that people can get infected over and over by the same bacteria, but DNA analysis now allows scientists to determine one strain from another.

Dr. Norman Edelman, the American Lung Association's consultant for scientific affairs, said the study suggests COPD flare-ups are more likely to be caused by bacteria than had been thought. But he said it doesn't indicate that antibiotic treatment should be increased.

Current standards already call for doctors to use antibiotics for patients who have particular difficulty breathing, more phlegm than usual or green phlegm, a sign of infection.

``At the moment it doesn't change medical practice. But it opens a number of doors in terms of potential research approaches,'' said Dr. Alan Fein, chief of pulmonary and critical care medicine at Northshore-Long Island Jewish Health System.

The bacteria with new strains most often found during COPD flare-ups were Haemophilus influenzae, Moraxella catarrhalis and Streptococcus pneumoniae.

Researchers said all three may hit the same inflammation trigger in humans. That could allow treatment which targets a particular molecule on the bacteria, the way some newer painkillers target the enzyme which causes arthritis.

H. influenzae, which once was thought to cause the flu and one form of which caused childhood meningitis before vaccinations became common, is found in the throat of 75 percent of healthy adults and children.

Although there is a vaccine against the strain which causes meningitis in children under 2, there is a huge number and wide variety of strains, Murphy said.

``H. influenzae as a species is incredibly genetically diverse,'' Murphy said.
The immune system ``recognizes'' a protein which makes up about half of the bacterium's surface. The protein varies from strain to strain, so a person immune to one strain can get sick from another, Murphy said.

Other, smaller molecules are the same on all or most of the strains, and Murphy and other researchers are trying to use them to create a vaccine.

^------
On the Net:
Disease: http://www.lungusa.org/diseases/copd--factsheet.html
CDC: http://www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/index.htm

antiquity
08-15-2002, 11:15 PM
Author
Topic: Â* Bacterial Alterations Source of Persistent COPD Lung Infections

Max

Member posted Aug 15, 2002 02:08 PM Â*
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Bacterial Alterations Source of Persistent COPD Lung Infections
Library: MED
Keywords: BACTERIA CHRONIC BRONCHITIS EMPHYSEMA LUNGS VETERANS AFFAIRS
Description: Clever bacteria populations may be changing just enough to keep ahead of patients' immune systems, causing a mysterious intensification of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) -- the fourth leading cause of death in the United States. (NEJM, 15-Aug-2002)



For Information Contact:
Arlene Kelly
(716) 862-8751
arlene.kelly@med.va.gov

EMBARGOED BY New England Journal of Medicine
For Release at 5:00 P.M. ET, Wednesday, August 14, 2002

BACTERIAL ALTERATIONS SOURCE OF PERSISTENT COPD LUNG INFECTIONS

Study Solves Mystery About the Role of Changing Bacteria in Deadly Lung Disease

BUFFALO, N.Y. -- Clever bacteria populations may be changing just enough to keep ahead of patients' immune systems, causing a mysterious intensification of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) -- the fourth leading cause of death in the United States. More commonly know as chronic bronchitis and emphysema, COPD affects nearly 15 million people in this country.

Researchers at the Veterans Affairs (VA) Medical Center in Buffalo, NY have ended decades of controversy by proving populations of infectious bacteria are changing constantly in the lungs of COPD patients, allowing the bacteria to strike again and again -- sometimes with deadly results. Their findings, appearing in the August 15th issue of The New England Journal of Medicine, may explain why healthy immune systems cannot prevent these recurring infections.

Intensified COPD symptoms deprive patients of oxygen through severe shortness of breath and coughing that produces thick, sticky sputum (phlegm). Researchers studied samples of sputum from 81 patients over a period of 56 months. Findings show patients were fighting populations of bacteria that repeatedly changed over time, possibly keeping one step ahead of immune defenses.

Many of the COPD patients' immune systems seemed to be working normally, yet bacterial infections rebounded after apparently being eliminated. This prompted researchers to look more closely at the nature of the bacteria. Instead of simply measuring the size and intensity of a bacterial infection, Drs. Sanjay Sethi, and Tim Murphy led a VA investigation of the bacteria's molecular identity.

They suspected acquiring a new strain of bacteria brought on the dangerous infections, causing the already sick patients to cough, choke and experience severe shortness of breath. Proving this would require a new way to identify one strain of bacteria from another.

"This study applied state of the art technology to tell whether the bacterial infections that kept cropping up were just one strain of bacteria lingering in the body for months or years, or whether different strains of the same bacteria would come and go," said Murphy.

The study successfully recovered about 4000 separate strains of bacteria. New technology involving DNA testing enabled investigators to study the molecular signature of the bacteria, resulting in extremely accurate identification.

"People with COPD may have nothing wrong with their immune systems but they keep getting these recurrent infections -- our findings may explain why this happens. It appears that when a person gets an infection and makes a good immune response, that response is only good for that particular bacteria strain," said Sethi.

Investigators believe their findings may lead to novel ways to treat bacterial infection. "We can use these observations to understand the immune response to bacteria and possibly develop vaccines that keep pace with the changing strains," said Murphy.

There are 50 patients actively involved in this ongoing study, and enrollment continues. VA's Medical Research Service, will support the project through 2004.

VA research provides improved medical care for veterans, as well as the general population. Through its unique affiliation with medical schools, VA plays a crucial role in educating future physicians in research and clinically oriented areas.

- 30-

NOTE FOR REPORTERS: The senior author for this research is Timothy Murphy, M.D., of the Buffalo VA Medical Center. He is available to discuss the findings from this study. For interviews, please contact Arlene Kelly of the Buffalo VA Medical Center, at (716) 862-8751 or arlene.kelly@med.va.gov.
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Posts: 1752Â*|Â*From: Montreal,Province of Quebec, CANADAÂ*|Â*Registered: Jul 25, 2001

antiquity
08-15-2002, 11:17 PM
Author
Topic: Â* Study: New strains of bacteria cause dangerous flare-ups of chronic lung disorder

Max

Member posted Aug 15, 2002 02:38 PM Â*
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Study: New strains of bacteria cause dangerous flare-ups of chronic lung disorder
Wed Aug 14, 2:11 PM ET
By JANET McCONNAUGHEY, Associated Press Writer

NEW ORLEANS - Life-threatening flare-ups of emphysema and chronic bronchitis are often triggered by infections from newly encountered strains of common germs, a study found.



Such flare-ups are blamed for many deaths from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, which is marked by irreversible damage that restricts the flow of air in the lungs.

The disease, called COPD, is the nation's fourth-deadliest killer. It caused 119,000 deaths and hospitalized 729,000 people in 2000, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ( news - web sites).

For the study, doctors at the Veterans Administration hospital in Buffalo, New York, had 81 patients check in once a month over 56 months to give a sputum sample. There were 1,975 visits in all.

Flare-ups were diagnosed in 33 percent of the visits when the phlegm carried a new strain of bacteria, senior author Timothy F. Murphy reported in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine ( news - web sites).

That compared to 15.4 percent of the visits at which the lab did not find any new strains, said Murphy, chief of infectious diseases at the VA Western New York Health Care System.

Other studies have found that people can get infected over and over by the same bacteria, but DNA analysis now allows scientists to determine one strain from another.

Dr. Norman Edelman, the American Lung Association's consultant for scientific affairs, said the study suggests COPD flare-ups are more likely to be caused by bacteria than had been thought. But he said it doesn't indicate that antibiotic treatment should be increased.

Current standards already call for doctors to use antibiotics for patients who have particular difficulty breathing, more phlegm than usual or green phlegm, a sign of infection.

"At the moment it doesn't change medical practice. But it opens a number of doors in terms of potential research approaches," said Dr. Alan Fein, chief of pulmonary and critical care medicine at Northshore-Long Island Jewish Health System.

The bacteria with new strains most often found during COPD flare-ups were Haemophilus influenzae, Moraxella catarrhalis and Streptococcus pneumoniae.

Researchers said all three may hit the same inflammation trigger in humans. That could allow treatment which targets a particular molecule on the bacteria, the way some newer painkillers target the enzyme which causes arthritis.

H. influenzae, which once was thought to cause the flu and one form of which caused childhood meningitis before vaccinations became common, is found in the throat of 75 percent of healthy adults and children.

Although there is a vaccine against the strain which causes meningitis in children under 2, there is a huge number and wide variety of strains, Murphy said.

"H. influenzae as a species is incredibly genetically diverse," Murphy said.

The immune system "recognizes" a protein which makes up about half of the bacterium's surface. The protein varies from strain to strain, so a person immune to one strain can get sick from another, Murphy said.

Other, smaller molecules are the same on all or most of the strains, and Murphy and other researchers are trying to use them to create a vaccine.

___

On the Net:

Disease: http://www.lungusa.org/diseases/copd_factsheet.html

CDC: http://www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/index.htm
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posts: 1752Â*|Â*From: Montreal,Province of Quebec, CANADAÂ*|Â*Registered: Jul 25, 2001