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EDITORIALS |
266 | Recommendations from The Medical Education Editor
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269 | Changing trends in mesothelioma: Important lessons for an occupational disease registry
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271 | Familial pulmonary fibrosis: Defining inherited fibrotic lung disease in the era of clinical genetic testing
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274 | Cone-beam CT imaging for robotic navigation bronchoscopy
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COMMENTARIES |
277 | Respiratory health effects of cannabis—How should we respond to liberalization of cannabis laws?
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280 | What makes asthma characterized by airway eosinophilia become severe?
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INVITED REVIEW SERIES |
The Future of Asthma |
283 | Asthma in children—What's in the future
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286 | The long and winding road—Where to now for asthma?
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ORIGINAL ARTICLES |
Environmental and Occupational Lung Disease |
288 |
The Western Australian Mesothelioma Registry: Analysis of 60 years of cases
Fraser Brims, Chellan Kumarasamy, Lalitha Menon, Nola Olsen, Nick de Klerk, Peter Franklin
10.1111/resp.14648
This study describes the exposure and outcomes of 2796 mesothelioma cases. The median survival was 298 days and latency 46 years, both doubling over the study period. Most females have a non-occupational exposure to asbestos. The incidence of do it yourself (DIY)/home renovation exposure has fallen, suggesting the asbestos ban has been effective.
See related editorial |
295 | Lung function changes in children exposed to mine fire smoke in infancy
Emily J Hemstock, Rachel E Foong, Graham L Hall, Amanda J Wheeler, Shyamali C Dharmage, Marita Dalton, Grant J Williamson, Caroline Gao, Michael J Abramson, Fay H Johnston, Graeme R Zosky
10.1111/resp.14657
The Hazelwood coalmine fire (Victoria, Australia) was an extreme air pollution episode that lasted for 6-weeks leading to community concerns regarding the potential health effects. We found no evidence of ongoing lung function changes in children exposed in infancy. Previously reported deficits in lung function appeared to have resolved over time. |
Interstitial Lung Disease |
304 | Clinical course of suspected familial and sporadic idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis: Data from the PROOF-Next registry
Antoine Froidure, Benjamin Bondue, Caroline Dahlqvist, Julien Guiot, Natacha Gusbin, Gil Wirtz, Guy Brusselle, Danielle Strens, Hans Slabbynck, Wim A Wuyts
10.1111/resp.14650
Familial clustering affects about 10% of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. This prospective multicentric study provides a reliable estimate of familial fibrosis among IPF patients and demonstrates similar dismal prognosis despite a younger age and a lighter exposure to smoking. Our results warrant early referral of familial fibrosis patients to expert centres.
See related editorial |
312 | Similarities and differences of interstitial lung disease associated with pathogenic variants in SFTPC and ABCA3 in adults
Rémi Diesler, Marie Legendre, Salim Si-Mohamed, Pierre-Yves Brillet, Lidwine Wemeau, Effrosyni D Manali, Frédéric Gagnadoux, Sandrine Hirschi, Gwenaël Lorillon, Martine Reynaud-Gaubert, Vanessa Bironneau, Elodie Blanchard, Arnaud Bourdin, Stéphane Dominique, Aurélien Justet, Julie Macey, Sylvain Marchand-Adam, Hélène Morisse-Pradier, Hilario Nunes, Spyros A Papiris, Julie Traclet, Ibrahim Traore, Bruno Crestani, Serge Amselem, Nadia Nathan, Raphaël Borie, Vincent Cottin, the OrphaLung network
10.1111/resp.14667
We report the characteristics and follow-up data of 36 adult patients in France with ILD associated variant(s) in SFTPC or ABCA3. SFTPC and ABCA3-associated ILD present with a distinct phenotype and prognosis. A radiologic pattern of fibrosing ILD with ground-glass opacities and/or cysts is frequently found in these rare conditions. |
Interventional Pulmonology |
324 | Mobile cone-beam computed tomography complementing shape-sensing robotic-assisted bronchoscopy in the small pulmonary nodule sampling: A multicentre experience
David Abia-Trujillo, Erik E Folch, Alejandra Yu Lee-Mateus, Prasanth Balasubramanian, Fayez Kheir, Colleen M Keyes, Regina Villalobos, Ryan M Chadha, Britney N Hazelett, Sebastian Fernandez-Bussy
10.1111/resp.14626
While the overall diagnostic yield with and without mobile cone-beam CT for sampling small pulmonary nodules with shape-sensing robotic bronchoscopy was similar, the use of mobile cone-beam CT allows for safely biopsying more complex and subsolid nodules.
See related editorial |
Lung Cancer |
333 | Next-generation sequencing using tissue specimen collected with a 1.1 mm-diameter cryoprobe in patients with lung cancer
Mi-Hyun Kim, Soo Han Kim, Geewon Lee, Jeongha Mok, Min Ki Lee, Ju Sun Song, Jung Seop Eom
10.1111/resp.14680
A total of 56 patients underwent transbronchial cryobiopsy using a 1.1 mm cryoprobe for next-generation sequencing (NGS) testing. The yields of NGS using cryobiopsy was 95% in both DNA and RNA sequencing. Patients did not develop any life-threatening complications during the procedure. |
FORUM AND DEBATE |
Scientific Letter |
340 | Oxygen therapy could improve survival in patients with early desaturation in the 6-minute walk test: A post hoc analysis
Ignacio García-Talavera, Juan Marco Figueira-Gonçalves, Cristobal Esteban, Rafael Golpe, Silvia García-Talavera, Carlos Amado, Amaia Aramburu, Lina I Pérez-Méndez, Alicia Conde-Martel
10.1111/resp.14688 |
Respirology Column |
344 | Blowing in the wind—Tobacco control legislation
Natasha Smallwood BMedSci, MBBS, MSc, AFRACMA, FRCP, FRACP, PhD, FThorSoc
10.1111/resp.14677 |
346 | Siloed thinking is limiting health care delivery
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347 | Up-to-date data on NightLase laser treatment of snoring for discussion
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349 | Reply: Up-to-date data on NightLase laser treatment of snoring for discussion
Leba M Sarkis, Andrew C Jones, Andrew Ng, Christopher Pantin, Sarah L Appleton, Stuart G MacKay
10.1111/resp.14682
See related letter |