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Airways Disorders Network

  • Bronchiectasis: A call to action

    Bronchiectasis: A call to action

    Bronchiectasis is an extremely heterogeneous airways disease, making it difficult to study. For years, the noncystic fibrosis (CF) bronchiectasis community has been trying to organize to provide better care for more than half a million adults with bronchiectasis in the United States. Internationally, the Europeans created the European Bronchiectasis Registry, which has been a powerful…


  • Expanding recommendations for RSV vaccination

    Expanding recommendations for RSV vaccination

    Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) has been increasingly recognized as a prevalent cause of lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) among adults in the United States. The risk of hospitalization and mortality from RSV-associated respiratory failure is higher in those with chronic lung disease. In adults aged 65 years or older, RSV has shown to cause up…


  • Severe early-life respiratory infections heighten pediatric OSA risk

    Severe early-life respiratory infections heighten pediatric OSA risk

    Children with severe lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs) within the first 2 years of life had a 2.06-fold increased risk of developing pediatric OSA by age 5, according to a study comparing patients hospitalized with LRTI to controls without severe LRTI.1 Prior studies linked LRTI and OSA, but the impact of LRTI severity was unknown.2…


  • Eradicating uncertainty: A review of Pseudomonas aeruginosa eradication in bronchiectasis

    Eradicating uncertainty: A review of Pseudomonas aeruginosa eradication in bronchiectasis

    Bronchiectasis patients have dilated airways that are often colonized with bacteria, resulting in a vicious cycle of airway inflammation and progressive dilation. Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a frequent airway colonizer and is associated with increased morbidity and mortality in cystic fibrosis (CF) and noncystic fibrosis bronchiectasis (NCFB).1 Both CF and NCFB guidelines recommend eradication of P.…


  • Emerging role of biologics in COPD: A new direction

    Emerging role of biologics in COPD: A new direction

    Remodeling of airways and destruction of parenchyma by immune and inflammatory mechanisms are the leading cause of lung function decline in patients with COPD. Type 2 inflammation has been recognized as an important phenotypic pathway in asthma. However, its role in COPD has been much less clear, which had been largely associated with innate immune…