RATIONALE: Multiple-breath washout (MBW)-derived lung clearance index (LCI) detects lung disease in children with cystic fibrosis (CF). Correction of a cross-talk error in the software of the MBW device Exhalyzer D in a new software version has generated significant interest regarding its impact on previous MBW findings. Since LCI and chest magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) correlated before in CF children, this study aims to reassess previous MBW data after correction. PATIENTS/METHODS: Reanalysis of the main findings from a previously published study comparing MBW and MRI in a pediatric CF cohort by reassessment of nitrogen (N(2)) MBW of 61 stable children with CF, 75 age-matched healthy controls (HC), and 15 CF children with pulmonary exacerbation (PEx) in the corrected software version. RESULTS: The corrected LCI (N(2)LCI(cor)) decreased in the entire cohort (-17.0 (11.2)%), HC (-8.5 (8.2)%), stable CF children (-22.2 (11.1)%), and within the PEx group at baseline, at PEx and after antibiotic therapy (-21.5 (7.3)%; -22.5 (6.1)%; -21.4 (6.6)%; all P<0.01). N(2)LCI(cor) and N(2)LCI(pre) correlated with chest MRI scores in stable CF (r=0.70 to 0.84; all P<0.01) without a significant difference between N(2)LCI(cor) and N(2)LCI(pre). Change in LCI from baseline to PEx and from PEx to after therapy decreased from N(2)LCI(pre) to N(2)LCI(cor), but these changes remained significant (all P=0.001). DISCUSSION/CONCLUSIONS: Our results indicate that N(2)LCI(cor) is significantly lower than N(2)LCI(pre), but key results published in the original study demonstrating N(2)MBW and MRI as complementary methods for clinical surveillance in children with CF remain unaffected.
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