Does a primary host defense abnormality involving monocytes-macrophages underlie the pathogenesis of lung disease in cystic fibrosis?
The primary cause of morbidity and mortality in cystic fibrosis (CF) patients is chronic pulmonary disease. Pulmonary disease in CF is characterized in part by: (a) obstruction of the bronchi and bronchioles by inspissated secretions (mucus is hypersecreted and may also be abnormal), (b) recurrent or persistent bacterial infections, and (c) a chronic inflammatory state. We propose herein that much of the pathophysiology of lung disease in CF stems from a genetically inherited metabolic defect in monocyte-macrophages (M-Mphi), and we review evidence which indicates that CF M-Mphi are innately metabolically abnormal. Once activated by various stimuli, CF M-Mphi become metabolically hyperactive and hypersecretory as evidenced by the production of excessive levels of a variety of mediators which could have definite roles in both the initiation of pulmonary obstruction and the accelerated development of a chronic inflammatory response in CF. Evidence is also reviewed which indicates that ot