European Respiratory Society guidelines for the diagnosis of primary ciliary dyskinesia

Archive ouverte

Lucas, Jane | Barbato, Angelo | Collins, Samuel | Goutaki, Myrofora | Behan, Laura | Caudri, Daan | Dell, Sharon | Eber, Ernst | Escudier, Estelle | Hirst, Robert | Hogg, Claire | Jorissen, Mark | Latzin, Philipp | Legendre, Marie | Leigh, Margaret | Midulla, Fabio | Nielsen, Kim | Omran, Heymut | Papon, Jean-Francois | Pohunek, Petr | Redfern, Beatrice | Rigau, David | Rindlisbacher, Bernhard | Santamaria, Francesca | Shoemark, Amelia | Snijders, Deborah | Tonia, Thomy | Titieni, Andrea | Walker, Woolf | Werner, Claudius | Bush, Andrew | Kuehni, Claudia

Edité par CCSD ; European Respiratory Society -

International audience. The diagnosis of primary ciliary dyskinesia is often confirmed with standard, albeit complex and expensive, tests. In many cases, however, the diagnosis remains difficult despite the array of sophisticated diagnostic tests. There is no “gold standard” reference test. Hence, a Task Force supported by the European Respiratory Society has developed this guideline to provide evidence-based recommendations on diagnostic testing, especially in light of new developments in such tests, and the need for robust diagnoses of patients who might enter randomised controlled trials of treatments. The guideline is based on pre-defined questions relevant for clinical care, a systematic review of the literature, and assessment of the evidence using the GRADE (Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation) approach. It focuses on clinical presentation, nasal nitric oxide, analysis of ciliary beat frequency and pattern by high-speed video-microscopy analysis, transmission electron microscopy, genotyping and immunofluorescence. It then used a modified Delphi survey to develop an algorithm for the use of diagnostic tests to definitively confirm and exclude the diagnosis of primary ciliary dyskinesia; and to provide advice when the diagnosis was not conclusive. Finally, this guideline proposes a set of quality criteria for future research on the validity of diagnostic methods for primary ciliary dyskinesia.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Associations between respiratory pathogens and lung function in primary ciliary dyskinesia: cross-sectional analysis from the PROVALF-PCD cohort

Archive ouverte | Rubbo, Bruna | CCSD

International audience. Introduction Respiratory pathogens are frequently isolated from airway samples in primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) patients. Few studies have investigated associations between these pathogens...

Topological data analysis reveals genotype–phenotype relationships in primary ciliary dyskinesia

Archive ouverte | Shoemark, Amelia | CCSD

International audience. Background Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a heterogeneous inherited disorder caused by mutations in approximately 50 cilia-related genes. PCD genotype–phenotype relationships have mostly...

Standardised clinical data from patients with primary ciliary dyskinesia: FOLLOW-PCD

Archive ouverte | Goutaki, Myrofora | CCSD

International audience. Clinical data on primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) are limited, heterogeneous and mostly derived from retrospective chart reviews, leading to missing data and unreliable symptoms and results o...

Chargement des enrichissements...