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Association of Nutrition and T Cell Immune Activity With Disease Progression in Nontuberculous Mycobacterial Pulmonary Disease
Sponsor: Seoul National University Hospital
Summary
Nontuberculous mycobacterial pulmonary disease (NTM-PD) is a chronic lung infection caused by environmental mycobacteria. The clinical course of NTM-PD varies widely among patients. Some individuals remain stable for long periods without treatment, while others experience worsening lung disease that requires antibiotic therapy or may lead to death. Currently available clinical tools are limited in their ability to predict which patients will experience disease progression. This observational study aims to better understand how the body's immune response and nutritional status are related to disease progression in adults with confirmed or suspected NTM-PD. In particular, the study focuses on T cells, a type of immune cell that plays an important role in controlling mycobacterial infections. Prior research suggests that impaired T-cell function may contribute to disease progression in NTM-PD, but most studies have relied on blood samples rather than immune cells from the lung, where the infection occurs. In this study, immune cells obtained from bronchoalveolar lavage fluid during clinically indicated bronchoscopy will be analyzed to assess inhibitory and exhausted T-cell profiles in the lung. In addition, systemic T-cell function will be evaluated using the mitogen response from the QuantiFERON-TB Gold Plus blood test. Nutritional status and body composition will also be assessed, as poor nutrition is known to affect immune function and disease outcomes. Participants will be followed over time as part of routine clinical care. The primary outcome of the study is the time from enrollment to the initiation of antibiotic treatment due to clinical disease progression. Secondary outcomes include identifying immune predictors of treatment initiation, examining the relationship between nutritional status and immune activity, evaluating changes in body composition and immune markers with disease progression, and determining whether immune and nutritional measures improve prediction of mortality beyond established clinical risk scores. By integrating lung immune profiling, blood-based immune testing, nutritional assessment, and clinical data, this study seeks to improve risk stratification in NTM-PD. The results may help identify patients at higher risk for disease progression and poor outcomes, support more personalized monitoring strategies, and inform future studies targeting immune and nutritional pathways in NTM-PD.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
50
Start Date
2026-01
Completion Date
2027-12-31
Last Updated
2026-01-23
Healthy Volunteers
No
Locations (1)
SMG-SNU Boramae Medical Center
Seoul, Dongjak-gu, South Korea