
Hydrogen peroxide and nitric oxide in exhaled air of children with cystic fibrosis during antibiotic treatment
Author(s) -
Jöbsis Q.,
Raatgeep H.C.,
Schellekens S.l,
Kroesbergen A,
Hop W.C.j,
De Jongste J.c
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
european respiratory journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.021
H-Index - 241
eISSN - 1399-3003
pISSN - 0903-1936
DOI - 10.1034/j.1399-3003.2000.16a17.x
Subject(s) - exhaled nitric oxide , cystic fibrosis , medicine , exacerbation , nitric oxide , hydrogen peroxide , exhaled air , antibiotics , gastroenterology , airway , exhaled breath condensate , respiratory disease , lung , asthma , anesthesia , spirometry , microbiology and biotechnology , chemistry , toxicology , organic chemistry , biology
Cystic fibrosis (CF) patients characteristically have severe chronic airway inflammation associated with bacterial infection. A noninvasive marker of airway inflammation could be a useful guide to treatment of CF lung disease. The aim of this study was to assess whether measurement of hydrogen peroxide (H 2 O 2 ) and nitric oxide (NO) in exhaled air can serve to monitor the effect of treatment with antibiotics in CF‐children with acute infective pulmonary exacerbations. Sixteen CF‐patients (mean age 12.3 yrs) with exacerbation of their lung infection were treated with intravenous antibiotics in an uncontrolled study. During treatment, H 2 O 2 in exhaled air condensate was measured twice a week. In addition, serial NO measurements were performed in nine patients. During antibiotic treatment the median H 2 O 2 concentration in exhaled air condensate decreased significantly from 0.28 µM (range 0.07–1.20 µM) to 0.16 µM (range 0.05–0.24 µM, p=0.002) and the mean forced expiratory volume in one second significantly increased from 55% predicted to 75% pred (p=0.001). In individual subjects, changes of H 2 O 2 and FEV1 between pairs of serial measurements correlated weakly (p=0.08). Data on exhaled NO were inconclusive; exhaled NO did not change systematically during treatment. It is concluded that cystic fibrosis patients with an acute pulmonary exacerbation have abnormally high concentrations of hydrogen peroxide, but not of nitric oxide, in exhaled air, which decrease during intravenous antibiotic treatment. Further controlled studies should establish if exhaled hydrogen peroxide, may serve as a noninvasive parameter of airway inflammation to guide antibiotic treatment in cystic fibrosis lung disease.