Publications

Comparison of methods for the analysis of airway macrophage particulate load from induced sputum, a potential biomarker of air pollution exposure.

Authors:

H, Rylance J, Patel L, Gordon SB, Mortimer K

Abstract:

BACKGROUND:
Air pollution is associated with a high burden or morbidity and mortality, but exposure cannot be quantified rapidly or cheaply. The particulate burden of macrophages from induced sputum may provide a biomarker. We compare the feasibility of two methods for digital quantification of airway macrophage particulate load.

METHODS:
Induced sputum samples were processed and analysed using ImageJ and Image SXM software packages. We compare each package by resources and time required.

RESULTS:
13 adequate samples were obtained from 21 patients. Median particulate load was 0.38 μm(2) (ImageJ) and 4.0 % of the total cellular area of macrophages (Image SXM), with no correlation between results obtained using the two methods (correlation coefficient = -0.42, p = 0.256). Image SXM took longer than ImageJ (median 26 vs 54 mins per participant, p = 0.008) and was less accurate based on visual assessment of the output images. ImageJ's method is subjective and requires well-trained staff.

CONCLUSION:
Induced sputum has limited application as a screening tool due to the resources required. Limitations of both methods compared here were found: the heterogeneity of induced sputum appearances makes automated image analysis challenging. Further work should refine methodologies and assess inter- and intra-observer reliability, if these methods are to be developed for investigating the relationship of particulate and inflammatory response in the macrophage.

Journal:

BMC pulmonary medicine

Year:

2015

PMID:

26542371

PMCID:

PMC4635991

Hyperlink:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26542371