Material, psychosocial, behavioural and biomedical factors in the explanation of relative socio-economic inequalities in mortality: evidence from the HUNT studyVeronika Skalická, Frank van Lenthe, Clare Bambra et al.|International Journal of Epidemiology|2009 BACKGROUND: Previous studies have assessed the relative importance of material, psychosocial and behavioural factors in the explanation of relative socio-economic inequalities in mortality, but research into the contribution of biomedical factors has been limited. Our study examines the relative contribution of (i) material, (ii) psychosocial, (iii) behavioural and (iv) biomedical factors in the explanation of relative socio-economic (educational and income) inequalities in mortality. METHODS: Cohort study--baseline data from the Norwegian total county population-based HUNT 2 study linked to mortality data (1995/97 to 2003). In this analysis, 18 247 men and 18 278 women aged 24-80 without severe chronic disease at baseline were eligible. RESULTS: No socio-economic inequalities in mortality among women were found. In men, educational- and income-related inequalities in mortality were found with a relative risk for the lowest educational group of 1.67 (1.29-2.15) and the lowest income quartile of 2.03 (1.57-2.70). Together, the four explanatory factors reduced the relative risk of mortality of the lowest educational group to 1.18 (0.90-1.55) and the relative risk of mortality in the lowest income quartile was attenuated to 1.17 (0.83-1.63). Known biomedical factors contributed least to both educational and income inequalities in mortality. CONCLUSIONS: Material factors were the most important in explaining income inequalities in mortality amongst men, whereas psychosocial and behavioural factors were the most important in explaining educational inequalities. This suggests that improving the material, psychosocial and behavioural circumstances of men might bring more substantial reductions in relative socio-economic inequalities in mortality.
Mutations in the amiloride-sensitive epithelial sodium channel in patients with cystic fibrosis-like diseaseWe investigated whether mutations in the genes that code for the different subunits of the amiloride-sensitive epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) might result in cystic fibrosis (CF)-like disease. In a small fraction of the patients, the disease could be potentially explained by an ENaC mutation by a Mendelian mechanism, such as p.V114I and p.F61L in SCNN1A. More importantly, a more than three-fold significant increase in incidence of several rare ENaC polymorphisms was found in the patient group (30% vs. 9% in controls), indicating an involvement of ENaC in some patients by a polygenetic mechanism. Specifically, a significantly higher number of patients carried c.-55+5G>C or p.W493R in SCNN1A in the heterozygous state, with odds ratios (ORs) of 13.5 and 2.7, respectively.The p.W493R-SCNN1A polymorphism was even found to result in a four-fold more active ENaC channel when heterologously expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes. About 1 in 975 individuals in the general population will be heterozygous for the hyperactive p.W493R-SCNN1A mutation and a cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene that results in very low amounts (0-10%) functional CFTR. These ENaC/CFTR genotypes may play a hitherto unrecognized role in lung diseases.
Phenotypic characterisation of patients with intermediate sweat chloride values: towards validation of the European diagnostic algorithm for cystic fibrosisBACKGROUND: In patients with symptoms suggestive of cystic fibrosis (CF) and intermediate sweat chloride values (30-60 mmol/l), extensive CFTR gene mutation analysis and nasal potential difference (NPD) measurement are used as additional diagnostic tests and a positive result in either test provides evidence of CFTR dysfunction. To define the phenotype of such patients and confirm the validity of grouping them, patients with intermediate sweat chloride values in whom either additional CF diagnostic test was abnormal were compared with subjects in whom this was not the case and patients with classic CF. METHODS: The phenotypic features of four groups were compared: 59 patients with CFTR dysfunction, 46 with an intermediate sweat chloride concentration but no evidence of CFTR dysfunction (CF unlikely), 103 patients with CF and pancreatic sufficiency (CF-PS) and 62 with CF and pancreatic insufficiency (CF-PI). RESULTS: The CFTR dysfunction group had more lower respiratory tract infections (p = 0.01), more isolation of CF pathogens (p<0.001) and clubbing (p = 0.001) than the CF unlikely group, but less frequent respiratory tract infections with CF pathogens than the CF-PS group (p = 0.05). Patients in the CF-PS group had a milder phenotype than those with PI. Many features showed stepwise changes through the patient groups. CONCLUSION: Patients with intermediate sweat chloride values and two CFTR mutations or an abnormal NPD measurement have a CF-like phenotype compatible with CFTR dysfunction and, as a group, differ phenotypically from patients with intermediate sweat chloride values in whom further CF diagnostic tests are normal as well as from CF-PS and CF-PI patients.
Clinical Phenotype and Genotype of Children with Borderline Sweat Test and Abnormal Nasal Epithelial Chloride TransportIsabelle Sermet‐Gaudelus, E. Girodon, Dorota Sands et al.|American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine|2010 RATIONALE: The diagnosis of cystic fibrosis (CF) is based on a characteristic clinical picture in association with a sweat chloride (Cl(-)) concentration greater than 60 mmol/L or the identification of two CF-causing mutations. A challenging problem is the significant number of children for whom no definitive diagnosis is possible because they present with symptoms suggestive of CF, a sweat chloride level in the intermediate range between 30 and 60 mmol/L, and only one or no identified CF-causing mutation. OBJECTIVES: To investigate the function of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) protein in the airways of children with intermediate sweat tests and inconclusive genetic findings in correlation with clinical phenotype and genotype. METHODS: We developed a composite nasal potential difference (NPD) diagnostic score to discriminate patients with CF from non-CF patients. We tested NPD in 50 children (age, 6 mo to 18 yr) with equivocal diagnoses and correlated the NPD diagnostic score with clinical phenotypes and genotypes. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Fifteen of the 50 children had NPD scores in the CF range. Eight of the 15 carried two CFTR mutations compared with only 5 of the 35 children with normal NPD scores (P = 0.01). They were significantly younger at evaluation and had recurrent lower respiratory tract infections, chronic productive coughs, and chronic Staphylococcus aureus colonization significantly more often than the 35 children with normal NPD results. CONCLUSIONS: Evaluation of CFTR function in the nasal epithelium of children with inconclusive CF diagnoses can be a useful diagnostic tool and help clinicians to individualize therapeutic strategy.
Clinically Translatable Prevention of Anthracycline Cardiotoxicity by Dexrazoxane Is Mediated by Topoisomerase II Beta and Not Metal ChelationBackground: Anthracycline-induced heart failure has been traditionally attributed to direct iron-catalyzed oxidative damage. Dexrazoxane (DEX)—the only drug approved for its prevention—has been believed to protect the heart via its iron-chelating metabolite ADR-925. However, direct evidence is lacking, and recently proposed TOP2B (topoisomerase II beta) hypothesis challenged the original concept. Methods: Pharmacokinetically guided study of the cardioprotective effects of clinically used DEX and its chelating metabolite ADR-925 (administered exogenously) was performed together with mechanistic experiments. The cardiotoxicity was induced by daunorubicin in neonatal ventricular cardiomyocytes in vitro and in a chronic rabbit model in vivo (n=50). Results: Intracellular concentrations of ADR-925 in neonatal ventricular cardiomyocytes and rabbit hearts after treatment with exogenous ADR-925 were similar or exceeded those observed after treatment with the parent DEX. However, ADR-925 did not protect neonatal ventricular cardiomyocytes against anthracycline toxicity, whereas DEX exhibited significant protective effects (10–100 µmol/L; P <0.001). Unlike DEX, ADR-925 also had no significant impact on daunorubicin-induced mortality, blood congestion, and biochemical and functional markers of cardiac dysfunction in vivo (eg, end point left ventricular fractional shortening was 32.3±14.7%, 33.5±4.8%, 42.7±1.0%, and 41.5±1.1% for the daunorubicin, ADR-925 [120 mg/kg]+daunorubicin, DEX [60 mg/kg]+daunorubicin, and control groups, respectively; P <0.05). DEX, but not ADR-925, inhibited and depleted TOP2B and prevented daunorubicin-induced genotoxic damage. TOP2B dependency of the cardioprotective effects was probed and supported by experiments with diastereomers of a new DEX derivative. Conclusions: This study strongly supports a new mechanistic paradigm that attributes clinically effective cardioprotection against anthracycline cardiotoxicity to interactions with TOP2B but not metal chelation and protection against direct oxidative damage.