Clinical features and outcomes of cystic fibrosis patients with advanced lung disease. Experience of 10 years at the Instituto Nacional del Tórax
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Abstract
Advanced cystic fibrosis lung disease (ACFLD) is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in patients with Cystic Fibrosis (CF). Objective: to describe clinical characteristics of patients with CF with ACFLD and mortality during follow-up. Method: Descriptive, retrospective study of patients with CF and ACFLD: FEVi < 40%, oxygen dependent, and/or referred to a lung transplantprogram. Clinical, microbiological, functional, genetic and mortality characteristics were collected. Results: Of 111 controlled patients, 39% met criteria for ACFLD. 52% were men and the mean age was 29,8 years-old. The average BMI was 19.9 kg/m2, 72% had pancreatic insufficiency and 87% had a genetic study, being the DF508 mutation the most frequent (67%). The average age of diagnosis was 11.2 years (SD ± 13 years), being in 54,5% over the age of 4 years. 75% had chronic Pseudomonas infection. 68% were oxygen dependent and 18% on noninvasive mechanical ventilation. In the last year of follow-up 70% had 2 or more hospitalizations. Of 27 patients who have been referred for transplantation, 7 underwent lung transplantation, 3 died waiting on the transplant list, 9 had contraindications: 4 due to malnutrition and 5 to poor adherence and poor support network. 32% (n = 14) of the ACFLD patients died, 93% due to respiratory causes. Conclusion: 39% of the patients had ACFLD. The average age for CF diagnosis was 11.2 years (SD ± 13 years) Barriers to entering the transplant list are: malnutrition, poor adherence, and lack of a support network. This is a population with a high mortality.
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Cystic Fibrosis, Humans, Retrospective studies, Follow-up studies, Morbidities, Malnutrition, Pseudomonas infection

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