key: cord-0953128-y0wd0fht authors: Kent, Brian D. title: Infectious disease in respiratory medicine date: 2021-03-08 journal: Breathe (Sheff) DOI: 10.1183/20734735.0022-2022 sha: 86ddd74a920555dcabaed8ed1946ed268ad7eb9e doc_id: 953128 cord_uid: y0wd0fht COVID-19 has brought respiratory infections into the spotlight, but other infectious diseases remain important causes of respiratory illness and death https://bit.ly/36t6Rhf Perhaps the oldest of these foes is Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Tuberculosis (TB) has been part of the human story since prehistory, with evidence of its baleful influence found everywhere from Egyptian mummies to Mayan temples. In the developed world, it can be easy to dismiss it as a quaint slice of Victoriana, conjuring as it may images of romantic poets wasting away elegantly, but TB remains a global menace, causing in the range of 2 million deaths every year. In this issue of Breathe, GILL et al. [1] discuss the contemporary management of TB, including the use of emerging therapies and dealing with drug-resistant strains. The last time a respiratory pathogen caused the levels of global disease and death we have witnessed over the past 2 years was the great influenza pandemic of 1918-1919. Whilst influenza has been largely held in abeyance by the public health measures deployed to tackle COVID-19, we can be confident of its re-emergence as these measures are unwound. In parallel with this, other respiratory viruses, such as respiratory syncytial virus, are likely to make their mark. In a forthcoming article, C. Nunes-Silva and co-authors review non-COVID respiratory viral infections, including their clinical impact and treatment. During the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic there was widespread fear that infection with SARS-CoV-2 could be particularly problematic for people living with chronic respiratory disease. Unfortunately, this particularly proved to be the case for those with interstitial lung disease (ILD), with mortality rates approaching 50% for ILD patients hospitalised due to COVID-19 [2] . This isn't the only relationship between COVID-19 and ILDa significant minority of patients admitted with COVID-19 pneumonia go on to develop ILD, with associated impacts on lung function and quality of life [3] . These interactions between COVID-19 and ILD are explored in detail by MYALL et al. [4] . The lower airways were historically seen as a largely sterile environment, with any microbes identified within them viewed as threatening interlopers. However, as detailed in a forthcoming article by CAMPBELL et al. [5] , the lungs turn out to be home to a rich and diverse microbial flora. As they discuss, whilst the study of the respiratory microbiome is comparatively inchoate, what data we have suggests that it may play an important role in health and disease, and in determining outcomes of treatment for respiratory illness. It is now over 2 years since the first cases of COVID-19 were reported in Europe. Inevitably, as frontline clinicians delivering care to patients with COVID-19, many colleagues working in respiratory medicine across the continent have themselves contracted the virus, with some tragically dying as a result. This issue of Breathe is dedicated to the memories of these "precious friends hid in death's dateless night", and to other respiratory clinicians around the world who have made the ultimate sacrifice in caring for their patients. New developments in tuberculosis diagnosis and treatment Outcome of hospitalization for COVID-19 in patients with interstitial lung disease. An international multicenter study Persistent post-COVID-19 interstitial lung disease. An observational study of corticosteroid treatment How COVID-19 interacts with interstitial lung disease A clinicians' review of the respiratory microbiome Conflict of interest: B.D. Kent has participated in advisory boards and/or received speaker fees from AstraZeneca, Chiesi, GSK, Novartis, and Teva; has received educational travel bursaries from Boehringer Ingelheim, Chiesi, and Napp; and has received research funding from Itamar Medical.