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In vitro, in silico and in vivo study challenges the impact of bronchial thermoplasty on acute airway smooth muscle mass loss

Chernyavsky, Igor L.; Russell, Richard J.; Saunders, Ruth M.; Morris, Gavin E.; Berair, Rachid; Singapuri, Amisha; Chachi, Latifa; Mansur, Adel H.; Howarth, Peter H.; Dennison, Paddy; Chaudhuri, Rekha; Bicknell, Stephen; Rose, Felicity R A.J.; Siddiqui, Salman; Brook, Bindi S.; Brightling, Christopher E.

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Authors

Igor L. Chernyavsky

Richard J. Russell

Ruth M. Saunders

Gavin E. Morris

Rachid Berair

Amisha Singapuri

Latifa Chachi

Adel H. Mansur

Peter H. Howarth

Paddy Dennison

Rekha Chaudhuri

Stephen Bicknell

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FELICITY ROSE FELICITY.ROSE@NOTTINGHAM.AC.UK
Professor of Biomaterials and Tissue Engineering

Salman Siddiqui

BINDI BROOK BINDI.BROOK@NOTTINGHAM.AC.UK
Professor of Mathematical Medicine and Biology

Christopher E. Brightling



Abstract

Bronchial thermoplasty is a treatment for asthma. Whether during thermoplasty the airway wall fraction exposed to temperatures necessary to affect cells is sufficient to explain its histopathological impact is unclear.
Airway smooth muscle and bronchial epithelial cells were exposed to media (37-70°C) for 10 seconds to mimic thermoplasty. In silico we developed a mathematical model of airway heat distribution following thermoplasty. In vivo we determined airway smooth muscle mass and epithelial integrity pre- and post-thermoplasty in 14 severe asthmatics.
In vitro airway smooth muscle and epithelial cell number decreased significantly following addition of media heated to ≥65°C. In silico simulations showed heterogeneous heat distribution; amplified in larger airways, with 60°C for airways with an inner radius ~4mm. In vivo 6 weeks post-thermoplasty asthma control (ACQ6) improved (mean difference: 0.7 [95%-CI 0.1-1.3]; p=0.03), airway smooth muscle mass decreased (absolute median reduction: 5 [IQR 0-10]%; p=0.03) and epithelial integrity increased (14 [6-29]%; p=0.007); neither of which were related to improved asthma control.
Integrated in vitro and in silico modelling suggested that the reduction in airway smooth muscle post-thermoplasty cannot be fully explained by acute heating; nor did this reduction confer a greater improvement in asthma control.

Citation

Chernyavsky, I. L., Russell, R. J., Saunders, R. M., Morris, G. E., Berair, R., Singapuri, A., …Brightling, C. E. (2018). In vitro, in silico and in vivo study challenges the impact of bronchial thermoplasty on acute airway smooth muscle mass loss. European Respiratory Journal, 51(5), Article 1701680. https://doi.org/10.1183/13993003.01680-2017

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 30, 2018
Online Publication Date Apr 26, 2018
Publication Date May 1, 2018
Deposit Date Apr 4, 2018
Publicly Available Date Apr 26, 2018
Journal European Respiratory Journal
Print ISSN 0903-1936
Electronic ISSN 1399-3003
Publisher European Respiratory Society
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 51
Issue 5
Article Number 1701680
DOI https://doi.org/10.1183/13993003.01680-2017
Keywords asthma, bronchial thermoplasty, airway remodelling, airway smooth muscle, bronchial epithelium, bioheat transfer
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/928603
Publisher URL http://erj.ersjournals.com/content/51/5/1701680

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