Inflammatory endotypes of chronic rhinosinusitis based on cluster analysis of biomarkers

Peter Tomassen, Griet Vandeplas, Thibaut van Zele, Lars-Olaf Cardell, Julia Arebro, Heidi Olze, Ulrike Förster-Ruhrmann, Marek L. Kowalski, Agnieszka Olszewska-Ziąber, Gabriele Holtappels, Natalie de Ruyck, Xiangdong Wang, Cornelis van Drunen, Joaquim Mullol, Peter Hellings, Valerie Hox, Elina Toskala, Glenis Scadding, Valerie Lund, Luo ZhangWytske Fokkens, Claus Bachert

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

800 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Current phenotyping of chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) into chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps (CRSwNP) and chronic rhinosinusitis without nasal polyps (CRSsNP) might not adequately reflect the pathophysiologic diversity within patients with CRS. We sought to identify inflammatory endotypes of CRS. Therefore we aimed to cluster patients with CRS based solely on immune markers in a phenotype-free approach. Secondarily, we aimed to match clusters to phenotypes. In this multicenter case-control study patients with CRS and control subjects underwent surgery, and tissue was analyzed for IL-5, IFN-γ, IL-17A, TNF-α, IL-22, IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, eosinophilic cationic protein, myeloperoxidase, TGF-β1, IgE, Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxin-specific IgE, and albumin. We used partition-based clustering. Clustering of 173 cases resulted in 10 clusters, of which 4 clusters with low or undetectable IL-5, eosinophilic cationic protein, IgE, and albumin concentrations, and 6 clusters with high concentrations of those markers. The group of IL-5-negative clusters, 3 clusters clinically resembled a predominant chronic rhinosinusitis without nasal polyps (CRSsNP) phenotype without increased asthma prevalence, and 1 cluster had a TH17 profile and had mixed CRSsNP/CRSwNP. The IL-5-positive clusters were divided into a group with moderate IL-5 concentrations, a mixed CRSsNP/CRSwNP and increased asthma phenotype, and a group with high IL-5 levels, an almost exclusive nasal polyp phenotype with strongly increased asthma prevalence. In the latter group, 2 clusters demonstrated the highest concentrations of IgE and asthma prevalence, with all samples expressing Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxin-specific IgE. Distinct CRS clusters with diverse inflammatory mechanisms largely correlated with phenotypes and further differentiated them and provided a more accurate description of the inflammatory mechanisms involved than phenotype information only
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1449-1456.e4
JournalJournal of allergy and clinical immunology
Volume137
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2016

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