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Aim: to investigate the influence of alpha1-antitrypsin (A1-AT) nebulization on levels of A1-AT in BAL and plasma in patients with stable bronchiectasis.
Method: single-blind placebo-controlled randomised clinical trial. 19 stable bronchiectasis patients with chronic bronchial infection and 10 control patients (without bronchiectasis) underwent a bronchoscopy in order to assess levels and inhibitory capacity of A1AT and neutrophilic elastase. Afterwards, the 19 bronchiectasis patients were randomly allocated to receive inhaled A1AT 250mg diluted in 10ml 0.9% saline solution once a day for a month (Group A, n: 10) or placebo (10ml 0.9% saline solution; group B, n: 9). A new BAL was performed in both groups (A and B) 24 hours after the end of treatment (1month) to re-analyze A1AT and NE.
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Effects of inhaled alpha-1-anti-trypsin in bronchiectasis patients with chronic bronchial infection.
Introduction: one of the main features of bronchiectasis is chronic and deregulated neutrophilic bronchial inflammation. Excessive neutrophilic elastase (NE) activity has been widely described as part of the characteristic imbalance between proteases and anti-proteolytic enzymes that characterizes airways inflammation and progressive lung damage in bronchiectasis.
Alpha-1-antitrypsin (A1AT) is a protease inhibitor involved in protecting lung tissue from enzymes of inflammatory cells, including neutrophilic elastase, and its concentration rises in case of acute and chronic inflammation. Its reduction or absence is associated with the development of a specific kind of emphysema in case of exposure to tobacco smoking.
Moreover it is likely that its levels could be reduced in bronchiectasis as a consequence of chronic bronchial infection and inflammatory deregulation.
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Methods:
19 patients with stable non cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis and chronic bronchial infection and 10 patients without bronchiectasis (control group) underwent a bronchoscopy to perform BAL analysis.
The 19 bronchiectasis patients were randomly allocated to receive inhaled A1AT 250mg diluted in 10ml 0.9% saline solution once a day for a month (Group A, n: 10) or placebo (10ml 0.9% saline solution; group B, n: 9). A new BAL was performed in both groups (A and B) 24 hours after the end of treatment (1month) to re-analyze A1AT and NE.
Clinical, microbiological, biochemical, functional and radiological characteristics of bronchiectasis and potential side effects of treatment on both arms were also recorded before (baseline), at 7, 15, 30 days of treatment and at 1 and 2 months follow-up visits after the end of treatment. The trial was approved by Spanish Ministry of Health (Trial nº 95/256) and local Ethics Committee (AC(HG) 44/95) and all patients signed written consent.
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20 participants in 3 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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