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Clinical characteristics and etiologies of bronchiectasis in Korean children: A multicenter retrospective study

Authors
Lee, E | Shim, JY | Kim, HY | Suh, DI | Choi, YJ | Han, MY | Baek, KS | Kwon, JW | Cho, J | Jung, M | Kim, YS | Sol, IS | Kim, BS | Chung, EH | Lee, S  | Jeong, K  | Jang, YY | Jang, GC | Hyun, MC | Yang, HJ | Shin, M | Kim, JT | Kim, JH | Hwang, YH | Ahn, JY | Seo, JH | Jung, JA | Kim, HS | Oh, MY | Park, Y | Lee, MH | Lee, SY | Jung, S | Hong, SJ | Ahn, YM | on the behalf of Pediatric Respiratory and Diseases Study Party
Citation
Respiratory medicine, 150. : 8-14, 2019
Journal Title
Respiratory medicine
ISSN
0954-61111532-3064
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bronchiectasis is a chronic pulmonary disease characterized by progressive and irreversible bronchial dilatation. The aim of the present study was to investigate the etiologies and clinical features of bronchiectasis in Korean children.
METHODS: We performed a retrospective review of the medical records for children diagnosed with bronchiectasis between 2000 and 2017at 28 secondary or tertiary hospitals in South Korea.
RESULTS: A total of 387 cases were enrolled. The mean age at diagnosis was 9.2+/-5.1 years and 53.5% of the patients were boys. The most common underlying cause of bronchiectasis was preexisting respiratory infection (55.3%), post-infectious bronchiolitis obliterans (14.3%), pulmonary tuberculosis (12.3%), and heart diseases (5.6%). Common initial presenting symptoms included chronic cough (68.0%), recurrent pneumonia (36.4%), fever (31.1%), and dyspnea (19.7%). The most predominantly involved lesions were left lower lobe (53.9%), right lower lobe (47.1%) and right middle lobe (40.2%). No significant difference was observed in the distribution of these involved lesions by etiology. The forced expiratory volume in 1s (FEV1) levels were lowest in cases with interstitial lung disease-associated bronchiectasis, followed by those with recurrent aspiration and primary immunodeficiency.
CONCLUSIONS: Bronchiectasis should be strongly considered in children with chronic cough and recurrent pneumonia. Long-term follow-up studies on pediatric bronchiectasis are needed to further clarify the prognosis and reduce the disease burden in these patients.
Keywords

MeSH

DOI
10.1016/j.rmed.2019.01.018
PMID
30961955
Appears in Collections:
Journal Papers > School of Medicine / Graduate School of Medicine > Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine
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