Clinical Markers and Monitoring for Post-9-11 Deployment Lung Diseases

NIH RePORTER · VA · IK2 · · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

The overall goals of this project are to recruit and characterize a VA-based cohort of veterans with post- 9/11 southwest Asia, Afghanistan, and Djibouti (SWAAD) deployment with and without deployment-related lung diseases (DLD) such as asthma, bronchiolitis, and other small airways/distal airways disease and to identify clinical markers to accurately diagnose and monitor longitudinal lung function and health outcomes. This approach will lay the groundwork for future research efforts to identify treatment/management strategies to improve the health of United States veterans, understand and reduce disability, and avoid costly and unnecessary medical testing. Nearly three million military men and women have deployed to Iraq, Afghanistan, and other southwest Asia locations since 2001 as a part of several major military operations. The major ones include Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) and Operation Freedom's Sentinel (OFS) in Afghanistan as well as Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF), Operation New Dawn (OND) and Operation Inherent Resolve (OIR) in Iraq. Deployment to these regions is associated with exposure to complex inhalational hazards that may include burn pit/trash- burning emissions, desert dust, diesel particulates, and combat dust. Previous studies have demonstrated links between these exposures and post-9/11 deployment-related asthma and small airways/distal lung diseases such as bronchiolitis. Several studies have shown that DLD diagnosis often is challenging using conventional diagnostic tools, and long-term prognosis of DLD is unknown. Previously, our deployment lung disease research team demonstrated that newer techniques such as the lung clearance index (LCI) test may have a role in disease detection as a noninvasive marker of deployment-related distal lung disease. LCI testing may be more sensitive in detection of deployment-related distal lung diseases (DDLD) such as bronchiolitis than traditional diagnostic testing that includes pulmonary function testing, cardiopulmonary exercise testing, and chest imaging with computerized tomography. Thus, LCI also may be a more sensitive test to monitor longitudinal lung function in those with DLD that was missed by traditional lung function testing but detected by lung biopsy (the goal-standard diagnostic method for lung disease). Our study hypothesis is that post-9/11 southwest Asia and Afghanistan veterans with DLD will have longer deployment duration, lower diffusion capacity (e.g. abnormal diffusion/possible gas exchange abnormalities) on lung function testing, exhibit clinical biomarkers of increased cell activation and inflammation, and have worse longitudinal respiratory health outcomes (decline in lung function) compared to post-9/11 southwest Asia and Afghanistan veterans without DLD. We anticipate that LCI testing will be a useful early marker of distal lung injury in deployers and will correlate with abnormalities on surgical lung biopsy better than spirometry. We also hypothesize tha...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10295182
Project number
5IK2CX001779-03
Recipient
VA EASTERN COLORADO HEALTH CARE SYSTEM
Principal Investigator
Silpa Dhoma Krefft
Activity code
IK2
Funding institute
VA
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
Award type
5
Project period
2019-10-01 → 2024-09-30