Cluster Analysis and Clinical Asthma Phenotypes
Glenfield Hospital · University of Aberdeen
Abstract
To explore the application of a multivariate mathematical technique, k-means cluster analysis, for identifying distinct phenotypic groups.
We performed k-means cluster analysis in three independent asthma populations. Clusters of a population managed in primary care (n = 184) with predominantly mild to moderate disease, were compared with a refractory asthma population managed in secondary care (n = 187). We then compared differences in asthma outcomes (exacerbation frequency and change in corticosteroid dose at 12 mo) between clusters in a third population of 68 subjects with predominantly refractory asthma, clustered at entry into a randomized trial comparing a strategy of minimizing eosinophilic inflammation (inflammation-guided strategy) with standard care. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Two clusters (early-onset atopic and obese, noneosinophilic) were common to both asthma populations. Two clusters characterized by marked discordance between symptom expression and eosinophilic airway inflammation (early-onset symptom predominant and late-onset inflammation predominant) were specific to refractory asthma. Inflammation-guided management was superior for both discordant subgroups leading to a reduction in exacerbation frequency in the inflammation-predominant cluster (3.53 [SD, 1.18] vs. 0.38 [SD, 0.13] exacerbation/patient/yr, P = 0.002) and a dose reduction of inhaled corticosteroid in the symptom-predominant cluster (mean difference, 1,829 mug beclomethasone equivalent/d [95% confidence interval, 307-3,349 mug]; P = 0.02).
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 36.25
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 26
Authors
8- PHPranabashis HaldarCorresponding
Glenfield Hospital
- IPIan Pavord
Glenfield Hospital
- DSDominick Shaw
Glenfield Hospital
- MAMichael A. Berry
Glenfield Hospital
- MTMichael Thomas
University of Aberdeen
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Asthma
- Exacerbation
- Population
- Eosinophilic
- Cluster (spacecraft)
- Confidence interval
- Internal medicine
- Good health and well-being