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Dive into the research topics where HuiChuan J. Lai is active.

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Featured researches published by HuiChuan J. Lai.


Pediatrics | 2009

Recovery of birth weight z score within 2 years of diagnosis is positively associated with pulmonary status at 6 years of age in children with cystic fibrosis.

HuiChuan J. Lai; Suzanne Shoff; Philip M. Farrell

OBJECTIVE. We recently reported that 60% of children newly diagnosed with cystic fibrosis who had pancreatic insufficiency responded to treatment initiation and achieved catch-up weight gain to a level comparable with their birth weight z score within 2 years of diagnosis (“responders”), whereas the remaining 40% failed to do so (“nonresponders”). The present study examined the impact of this early weight recovery on subsequent growth pattern and pulmonary status at 6 years of age. PATIENTS AND METHODS. Sixty-three children with cystic fibrosis who had pancreatic insufficiency but no meconium ileus, and were enrolled in the Wisconsin Cystic Fibrosis Neonatal Screening Project, were studied. Responders were defined by a recovery of weight z score comparable with that at birth within 2 years of diagnosis. From ages 2 to 6, growth was measured by both height and BMI. Pulmonary status was evaluated by symptoms, spirometry, quantitative chest radiography, and respiratory microbiology. RESULTS. The majority (71%) of the responders maintained their early weight recovery through 6 years of age, whereas only 32% of the nonresponders achieved substantial growth improvement from 2 to 6 years of age. Proportionately fewer responders reported cough symptoms (10% daytime cough; 22% nighttime cough) compared with nonresponders (41% daytime cough; 45% nighttime cough) at age 6. The percentage of predicted forced expiratory volume in 1 second at age 6 was 11% higher in responders (99.5% ± 13.9%) compared with nonresponders (88.3% ± 18.5%). Responders had significantly better Brasfield (20.1 ± 1.4) and Wisconsin chest radiograph (8.3 ± 3.3) scores compared with nonresponders (Brasfield: 18.9 ± 1.8; Wisconsin: 12.3 ± 8.3). Respiratory microbiology results were not significantly different. Multiple regression analyses indicated that the positive association between responder and percent predicted forced expiratory volume in 1 second at 6 years of age remained statistically significant after controlling for infections with Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus and chest radiograph scores. Growth patterns from 2 to 6 years of age were not associated with pulmonary measures at age 6. CONCLUSIONS. Patients with cystic fibrosis with pancreatic insufficiency who achieved early growth recovery within 2 years of diagnosis had fewer cough symptoms, higher lung function, and better chest radiograph scores at 6 years of age.


The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 2011

Growth and pulmonary outcomes during the first 2 y of life of breastfed and formula-fed infants diagnosed with cystic fibrosis through the Wisconsin Routine Newborn Screening Program

Sarah A Jadin; Grace S Wu; Zhumin Zhang; Suzanne Shoff; Benjamin M Tippets; Philip M. Farrell; Tami Miller; Michael J. Rock; Hara Levy; HuiChuan J. Lai

BACKGROUND The optimal feeding (breast milk, formula, or a combination) for infants with cystic fibrosis (CF) is unknown. Recommendations from the CF Foundation are based on limited data. OBJECTIVE We compared growth and pulmonary outcomes between breastfed and formula-fed infants through the age of 2 y. DESIGN A total of 103 CF infants born in 1994-2006 and diagnosed through newborn screening in Wisconsin were studied. Breastfed infants were classified by the duration of exclusive breastfeeding (ExBF). Exclusive formula-feeding (ExFM) was classified by the formulas caloric density (ie, standard [0.67 kcal/mL (20 kcal/oz) (ExFM20)] throughout infancy or high density [≥0.74 kcal/mL (22 kcal/oz) (ExFM22+)] for some duration of infancy). RESULTS Fifty-three infants (51% of infants) were breastfed and 50 infants (49% of infants) were ExFM. In breastfed infants, the duration of ExBF was <1 mo (53% of infants), 1-1.9 mo (21% of infants), 2-3 mo (17% of infants), and 4-9 mo (9% of infants). In ExFM infants, 23 infants (46%) received a formula with a high caloric density; approximately half (n = 13) of the ExFM infants received the formula by 6 mo of age. Proportionately more infants with pancreatic sufficiency (n = 9) were ExBF ≥1 mo (44% of infants), and none of the infants were ExFM22+, compared with infants with meconium ileus (n = 24; 13% of infants were ExBF ≥1 mo, and 38% of infants were ExFM22+) or pancreatic insufficiency (n = 70; 25% of infants were ExBF ≥1 mo, and 20% of infants were ExFM22+) (P = 0.02). In infants with pancreatic insufficiency, weight z scores declined from birth to 6 mo (P < 0.0001) in infants who were ExBF ≥2 mo, and the number of Pseudomonas aeruginosa infections through the age of 2 y was fewer in breastfed than in ExFM infants (P = 0.003) but did not differ by the duration of ExBF. CONCLUSION For infants with CF, ExBF <2 mo does not compromise growth and is associated with a respiratory benefit.


Journal of Cystic Fibrosis | 2013

Nutritional status is associated with health-related quality of life in children with cystic fibrosis aged 9–19 years

Suzanne Shoff; Audrey Tluczek; Anita Laxova; Philip M. Farrell; HuiChuan J. Lai

BACKGROUND The impact of improved nutritional status on health-related quality of life (HRQOL) is unknown for children with cystic fibrosis (CF). METHODS Associations between nutritional status and HRQOL were examined over 2 years in 95 children, aged 9-19 years, who were followed in the Wisconsin Newborn Screening Project. HRQOL was assessed using the Cystic Fibrosis Questionnaire (CFQ). Associations between height z-score (HtZ), BMI z-score (BMIZ) and seven CFQ dimensions were evaluated. RESULTS Mean values of at least 80 were observed for all CFQ dimensions except respiratory symptoms and treatment burden. Treatment burden was significantly worse in patients with meconium ileus (57) compared to pancreatic insufficient (65) and sufficient (78) subjects, p<0.0001. HtZ and BMIZ were positively associated with physical functioning and body image (p<0.05). CONCLUSIONS Better nutritional status was associated with increased HRQOL scores. Early diagnosis through newborn screening and improved nutrition provides an opportunity to enhance quality of life and body image perception.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 2013

Pubertal height velocity and associations with prepubertal and adult heights in cystic fibrosis.

Zhumin Zhang; Mary J. Lindstrom; HuiChuan J. Lai

OBJECTIVES To test the hypothesis that pubertal peak height velocity (PHV) in cystic fibrosis (CF) has improved and is influenced by prepubertal growth and genetic potential. STUDY DESIGN PHV from 1862 children born in 1984-87 and documented in the 1986-2008 US CF Foundation Registry was determined by statistical modeling and classified into normal, delayed (2-SD > average age), attenuated (magnitude <5th percentile), or both delayed and attenuated (D&A). Genetic potential for height was estimated by parental stature. RESULTS PHV averaged 8.4 cm/year at age 14.0 years in boys and 7.0 cm/year at age 12.1 years in girls, ∼6-month delay and ∼15% reduction compared with healthy children. PHV was normal in 60%, delayed in 9%, attenuated in 21%, and D&A in 5%. Patients with delayed PHV reached similar adult height percentile (boys: 34th, girls: 46th) to those with normal PHV (boys: 33rd, girls: 34th); both were significantly taller than the attenuated (boys: 11th, girls: 19th) and D&A PHV subgroups (boys: 8th, girls: 14th). Pancreatic-sufficient patients had taller prepubertal and adult heights but similar PHV compared with pancreatic-insufficient or meconium ileus patients. Adjusting for genetic potential reduced adult height percentiles more in boys (from 25th to 16th) than girls (from 28th to 24th). Height at age 7 years, PHV age and magnitude, and parental stature significantly predicted adult height. CONCLUSIONS Pubertal PHV has improved in children with CF born after mid-1980s compared with older cohorts but remains below normal. Suboptimal prepubertal and pubertal growth led to adult height below genetic potential in CF.


Journal of Cystic Fibrosis | 2012

Comparing age of cystic fibrosis diagnosis and treatment initiation after newborn screening with two common strategies

Don B. Sanders; HuiChuan J. Lai; Michael J. Rock; Philip M. Farrell

BACKGROUND Newborn screening (NBS) for CF has become widespread, although there are multiple strategies. Little is known about outcomes such as age of diagnosis after different NBS methods. METHODS We used the U.S. Cystic Fibrosis Foundation Patient Registry to identify infants with CF born between 2001 and 2008 in states that utilized NBS. We compared ages at diagnosis, genotyping, sweat test, and first visit to a CF Centre between states that used serial immunoreactive trypsinogen (IRT/IRT) levels and states that used IRT and DNA analysis (IRT/DNA). RESULTS We identified 1288 infants with CF. Compared to infants born in IRT/IRT states, infants born in IRT/DNA states were younger at the time of diagnosis (median 2.3 weeks versus 4.0 weeks in IRT/IRT states, p<0.001), genotyping (0.7 weeks versus 5.3 weeks, p<0.001), and initial CF Centre visit (5.9 weeks versus 7.7 weeks, p=0.008). CONCLUSIONS Although there is room to improve outcomes with both strategies, infants born in IRT/DNA states have treatment initiated at a younger age than infants born in IRT/IRT states.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 2015

Comparing the Use of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and World Health Organization Growth Charts in Children with Cystic Fibrosis through 2 Years of Age

Zhumin Zhang; Suzanne Shoff; HuiChuan J. Lai

OBJECTIVE To examine differences between use of World Health Organization (WHO) and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) growth reference in children with cystic fibrosis (CF) up to 2 years of age. STUDY DESIGN Growth from 1-24 months in 2587 children, born 2003-2006 and recorded in the US CF Foundation Registry, was evaluated using WHO and CDC references. RESULTS In both boys and girls with CF aged 1-24 months, use of WHO charts resulted in ∼8 percentile lower length-for-age and ∼13% higher short stature rate (length-for-age <5th percentile). WHO weight-for-age was ∼9 percentile lower prior to age 6 months, crossed at 6-7 months, and remained ∼14 percentile higher at 8-24 months. WHO weight-for-length (WFL) percentile (WFLp) was similar before 12 months but ∼10 percentile higher at 12-24 months compared with CDC. When using WHO charts, 9% of children had underweight (WFLp <50th) classified differently and this rate varied with age: 4% in the first year, 7% at 12, 13% at 15, and 16% at 18 months, respectively. Weight status assessed by WHO body mass index (BMI) charts was different from WHO WFL charts. At 24 months when switching back to CDC, 26% of children with normal WFLp on WHO charts appeared underweight on CDC charts. A 70th percentile of WHO BMI percentile was equivalent to the 50th percentile CDC BMI percentile. CONCLUSIONS Growth status in children with CF differed when using WHO and CDC references, particularly during the second year of life. These differences need to be considered for all uses of growth assessment in CF.


Pediatrics | 2016

Pubertal Height Growth and Adult Height in Cystic Fibrosis After Newborn Screening

Zhumin Zhang; Mary J. Lindstrom; Philip M. Farrell; HuiChuan J. Lai

BACKGROUND: To examine long-term growth benefit of newborn screening (NBS), adolescent peak height velocity (PHV), and adult height were compared between the screened (diagnosed early via NBS) and the control (identified generally by symptoms) in the Wisconsin Randomized Clinical Trial. METHODS: Data from 107 children born in 1985–1994 and followed through 2012 were analyzed. PHV was estimated by a semiparametric growth curve model and compared with Tanner reference. RESULTS: Meconium ileus (MI; n = 25) was associated with the worst pubertal growth and adult height, including 1 child who did not experience apparent PHV; children with pancreatic sufficiency (n = 18) achieved the best growth (normal PHV and adult height). In children with pancreatic insufficiency without meconium ileus (n = 64), the subgroup most likely to benefit from NBS, screened children had similar PHV but better adult height compared with controls. Specifically, in boys, the screened group (n = 22) achieved normal PHV (9.5 cm at 13.5 years); the control group (n = 19) had similar onset age (13.6 years) but 0.6-cm lower magnitude (P = .08). In girls, the screened group (n = 10) had somewhat later (12.5 years vs 11.7 years, P = .12) and lower PHV (7.3 cm vs 7.9 cm, P = .33) than the controls (n = 13), coinciding with later menarche (13.6 years vs 12.2 years, P = .10). Adult height was taller in the screened than the control (50th vs 29th percentile, P = .02), even after adjusted for genetic potential (32nd vs15th percentile, P = .006). Differences in adult height were primarily attributable to NBS and better prepubertal growth. CONCLUSIONS: Early linear growth benefits of NBS were sustained through puberty, leading to better adult height in cystic fibrosis.


Journal of Cystic Fibrosis | 2018

Early life growth patterns persist for 12 years and impact pulmonary outcomes in cystic fibrosis

Don B. Sanders; Zhumin Zhang; Philip M. Farrell; HuiChuan J. Lai

BACKGROUND In children with cystic fibrosis (CF), recovery from growth faltering within 2 years of diagnosis (Responders) is associated with better growth and less lung disease at age 6 years. This study examined whether these benefits are sustained through 12 years of age. METHODS Longitudinal growth from 76 children with CF enrolled in the Wisconsin CF Neonatal Screening Project was examined and categorized into 5 groups: R12, R6, and R2, representing Responders who maintained growth improvement to age 12, 6, and 2 years, respectively, and I6 and N6, representing Non-responders whose growth did and did not improve during ages 2-6 years, respectively. Lung disease was evaluated by % predicted forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) and chest radiograph (CXR) scores. RESULTS Sixty-two percent were Responders. Within this group, 47% were R12, 28% were R6, and 25% were R2. Among Non-responders, 76% were N6. CF children with meconium ileus (MI) had worse lung function and CXR scores compared to other CF children. Among 53 children with pancreatic insufficiency without MI, R12 had significantly better FEV1 (97-99% predicted) and CXR scores during ages 6-12 years than N6 (89-93% predicted). Both R6 and R2 experienced a decline in FEV1 by ages 10-12 years. CONCLUSIONS Early growth recovery in CF is critical, as malnutrition during infancy tends to persist and catch-up growth after age 2 years is difficult. The longer adequate growth was maintained after early growth recovery, the better the pulmonary outcomes at age 12 years.


Biometrical Journal | 2016

Nonparametric association analysis of bivariate left-truncated competing risks data.

Yu Cheng; Pao-Sheng Shen; Zhumin Zhang; HuiChuan J. Lai

We develop time-varying association analyses for onset ages of two lung infections to address the statistical challenges in utilizing registry data where onset ages are left-truncated by ages of entry and competing-risk censored by deaths. Two types of association estimators are proposed based on conditional cause-specific hazard function and cumulative incidence function that are adapted from unconditional quantities to handle left truncation. Asymptotic properties of the estimators are established by using the empirical process techniques. Our simulation study shows that the estimators perform well with moderate sample sizes. We apply our methods to the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation Registry data to study the relationship between onset ages of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus infections.


Journal of Cystic Fibrosis | 2012

WS3.4 Determinants of lung disease progression in children with CF

Philip M. Farrell; Zhanhai Li; Don B. Sanders; HuiChuan J. Lai; Anita Laxova; Michael J. Rock; Hara Levy; J. Collins; Claude Férec

Ireland has the world’s highest incidence of Cystic Fibrosis at approximately 1 in 1400 [1,2]. CF was integrated into the newborn bloodspot screening programme in July 2011 using an IRT/ DNA analysis strategy. Babies with a blood IRT above the 99th percentile and with one or two CFTR mutations detected are referred for sweat testing. The anticipated number of CF cases (54) and carriers (94), were calculated based on the birth rates from the 2008 census and assuming a 2.5-fold enrichment of carriers within the top IRT percentile. During the first 6 months of the programme, 37,435 babies were screened and 391 (1.0%) were referred for DNA testing. 16 CF cases (all with 2 mutations and confirmed by sweat testing) and 35 unaffected carriers were detected, giving an annualised CF incidence of 1 in 2340. Just 59% of the predicted number of CF cases (p = 0.038) and 74% of the predicted number of unaffected carriers (p = 0.014) were detected. Data from 2010 indicates that 25% of newborns in Ireland had non-Irish mothers. When the expected numbers were recalculated, based on the CF incidence in the nationality of the mother (and assuming the father has the same nationality), 72% of expected cases (p = 0.187) and 100% of expected unaffected carriers were detected. The apparent reduction in the number of cases and the changing incidence of CF in Ireland may reflect the significant increase in immigration (particularly from Eastern Europe) since 2004, after the published CF incidence figures were calculated.

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Philip M. Farrell

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Zhumin Zhang

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Suzanne Shoff

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Michael J. Rock

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Anita Laxova

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Don B. Sanders

Riley Hospital for Children

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Hara Levy

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Mary J. Lindstrom

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Zhanhai Li

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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