TY - JOUR T1 - Clinical phenotypes in adult patients with bronchiectasis JF - European Respiratory Journal JO - Eur Respir J SP - 1113 LP - 1122 DO - 10.1183/13993003.01899-2015 VL - 47 IS - 4 AU - Stefano Aliberti AU - Sara Lonni AU - Simone Dore AU - Melissa J. McDonnell AU - Pieter C. Goeminne AU - Katerina Dimakou AU - Thomas C. Fardon AU - Robert Rutherford AU - Alberto Pesci AU - Marcos I. Restrepo AU - Giovanni Sotgiu AU - James D. Chalmers Y1 - 2016/04/01 UR - http://erj.ersjournals.com/content/47/4/1113.abstract N2 - Bronchiectasis is a heterogeneous disease. This study aimed at identifying discrete groups of patients with different clinical and biological characteristics and long-term outcomes.This was a secondary analysis of five European databases of prospectively enrolled adult outpatients with bronchiectasis. Principal component and cluster analyses were performed using demographics, comorbidities, and clinical, radiological, functional and microbiological variables collected during the stable state. Exacerbations, hospitalisations and mortality during a 3-year follow-up were recorded. Clusters were externally validated in an independent cohort of patients with bronchiectasis, also investigating inflammatory markers in sputum.Among 1145 patients (median age 66 years; 40% male), four clusters were identified driven by the presence of chronic infection with Pseudomonas aeruginosa or other pathogens and daily sputum: “Pseudomonas” (16%), “Other chronic infection” (24%), “Daily sputum” (33%) and “Dry bronchiectasis” (27%). Patients in the four clusters showed significant differences in terms of quality of life, exacerbations, hospitalisations and mortality during follow-up. In the validation cohort, free neutrophil elastase activity, myeloperoxidase activity and interleukin-1β levels in sputum were significantly different among the clusters.Identification of four clinical phenotypes in bronchiectasis could favour focused treatments in future interventional studies designed to alter the natural history of the disease.Daily sputum and chronic infection with Pseudomonas or other bacteria define clinical phenotypes in bronchiectasis http://ow.ly/W4H9m ER -