Disease-specific reference equations for lung function in patients with cystic fibrosis
Kulich M, Rosenfeld M, Campbell J, Kronmal R, Gibson RL, Goss CH, Ramsey B.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2005 Oct 1;172(7):885-91. Epub 2005 Jun 23.
Department of Probability and Mathematical Statistics, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic.
Rationale
Forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1), an important measure of pulmonary disease severity in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF), is frequently expressed as a percentage of a predicted value derived from a healthy reference population.
There are limitations to comparing the lung function of a patient with CF to that of healthy control subjects, and potential advantages to comparing it to that of other patients with CF.
Objective
To estimate CF-specific percentiles of FEV1 as functions of height, age and sex.
Methods
We used 287,108 FEV1 observations among more than 21,000 patients with CF in the CF Foundation National Patient Registry between 1994 and 2001.
The percentiles were estimated using quantile regression methods.
Results
FEV1 percentile “growth grids” are presented, allowing comparison of an individual’s FEV1 to that of patients with CF of the same sex, age and height.
Their potential uses in clinical practice and research are illustrated.
Conclusions
CF-specific reference equations allow individual patients’ FEV1 to be placed in the context of the distribution of lung function of their peers with CF, and should improve generalizability of CF clinical trials by setting entry criteria that are equitable across sex and age ranges.
They may serve as a useful adjunct to conventional reference equations.