CF is the most common
inherited disease in white people, affecting
about 1 in every 2,500 children born. It is much
more rare in people of African or Asian descent.
Diagnosis of CF
About one in five babies with
CF are diagnosed at birth, when their gut
becomes blocked by extra thick meconium (the
black tar-like bowel contents that all babies
pass soon after birth). This condition may need
surgery.
Just over half of people with
CF are diagnosed as babies because they are not
growing or putting on weight as they should.
This is because the pancreas is not producing
chemicals (enzymes) which pass into the gut as
food leaves the stomach. Without these enzymes,
the fat in food cannot be properly digested. In
children who are affected, the fat passes
straight through the gut. The child does not
benefit from the energy from the fat. Since the
stools contain an excess of fat, they are oily
and very smelly.
Other symptoms
CF is a "multi-system"
disease, meaning that it affects many body
organs. However, most of the symptoms are to do
with the lungs and the gut.
In a healthy person, there is
a constant flow of mucus over the surfaces of
the air passages in the lungs. This removes
debris and bacteria. In someone with CF, this
mucus is excessively sticky and cannot perform
this role properly. In fact, the sticky mucus
provides an ideal environment for bacterial
growth.
People with CF are at risk of
bacterial chest infections. About half of people
with CF have repeated chest infections and
pneumonia. If they are not treated early and
properly, these are very difficult to treat.
Symptoms include persistent coughing, excess
production of sputum (saliva and mucus),
wheezing, and shortness of breath with ordinary
activities.
If people with CF do not have
proper treatment, they will continue to have
oily bowel movements, abdominal pain, and
problems putting on weight. Constipation is also
a frequent symptom. Occasionally the gut becomes
completely blocked, resulting in extreme stomach
pain.
Other problems associated with
CF can include:
- small growths (polyps) in
the nose,
- increased roundness of
finger and toe nails with loss of the
shallow groove between the bottom of the
nail and skin (clubbing),
- an enlarged liver and
spleen,
- diabetes,
- infertility in men,
because the tube that carries sperm, the vas
deferens, may fail to form,
- fertility problems in
women, due to thicker mucus making
fertilisation difficult.
Diagram of how cystic
fibrosis is inherited
How CF is inherited
In each cell in our bodies we
have 22 pairs of chromosomes and one pair of sex
chromosomes. These contain the genes that help
to determine how cells grow and function.
The abnormal gene that causes
CF is found on chromosome number 7. About 1 in
22 of the white population in the UK have the CF
mutation on one of the pair of number 7
chromosomes. These people are called "carriers"
of the CF gene. They have no symptoms of CF –
this happens only when there are CF mutations on
both number 7 chromosomes (see diagram). When
both parents are carriers, there is a one in
four chance of having a child with CF, a one in
two chance of having a child who is a carrier
and a one in four chance of having an unaffected
child.
There are several different
types of genetic mutation which are associated
with different degrees of severity of the
disease.
The long-term outlook
Although there is currently no
cure for CF, there is a lot of research under
way to try to find a cure for CF lung disease
through gene therapy.
Children born with CF do not
have a normal life expectancy, though it is
improving all the time. The average survival is
now more than 30 years, but with the best
treatment, children today with CF have a greater
than 80% chance of living into their late
forties.
Screening for CF
If someone has a family
history of CF, they can be tested to see if they
carry the CF gene before they have a family. If
a couple are both carriers or if they already
have a child with CF, tests can be done early in
pregnancy to see if the fetus is affected. This
is called chorionic villus sampling and involves
taking a biopsy (a sample of tissue) from the
placenta. However, there is a small risk a
miscarriage with this test. Also, if the biopsy
produces a positive result for CF, the parents
then face a difficult decision of whether or not
to continue with the pregnancy.
Routine newborn (neonatal)
screening for CF has recently received
government approval. It is done using the same
blood sample that is already taken from the baby
six days after birth to test for two other
conditions, low thyroid function and
phenylketonuria.
Treatment
People with CF need daily
chest physiotherapy, which involves vigorous
massage to help loosen the sticky mucus. Parents
of a child with CF are taught by hospital staff
how to do this. Older children and adults with
CF can be taught to do this for themselves.
People with CF also need to
have any chest infection treated quickly with
antibiotics. The usual childhood vaccinations,
such as MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) and DTP
(diptheria, tetanus and whooping cough) are
important for people with CF, and they should
also be vaccinated against flu and pneumococcus
to help prevent chest infections.
With each meal or snack, most
people with CF need to take capsules that supply
the missing pancreatic enzymes and allow proper
digestion.
There is a range of other
possible treatments, according to each person’s
condition. These may include:
- daily oral or inhaled
antibiotics to counter lung infection,
- inhaled anti-asthma
therapy,
- corticosteroid tablets,
- dietary vitamin
supplements, especially A and D,
- inhalation of a
medication called pulmozyme to make the
sputum less sticky,
- medicines to relieve
constipation or to improve the activity of
the enzyme supplements,
- insulin for CF-related
diabetes,
- medication for
CF-associated liver disease,
- oxygen to help with
breathing,
- in severe cases, a lung
or heart and lung transplant operation,
- help to overcome
fertility problems,
- counselling to help cope
with the psychological aspects.