| Literature DB >> 24009412 |
Susanne Jh Vijverberg1, Bart Hilvering, Jan Am Raaijmakers, Jan-Willem J Lammers, Anke-Hilse Maitland-van der Zee, Leo Koenderman.
Abstract
Asthma is a chronic disease characterized by airway inflammation, bronchial hyperresponsiveness, and recurrent episodes of reversible airway obstruction. The disease is very heterogeneous in onset, course, and response to treatment, and seems to encompass a broad collection of heterogeneous disease subtypes with different underlying pathophysiological mechanisms. There is a strong need for easily interpreted clinical biomarkers to assess the nature and severity of the disease. Currently available biomarkers for clinical practice - for example markers in bronchial lavage, bronchial biopsies, sputum, or fraction of exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) - are limited due to invasiveness or lack of specificity. The assessment of markers in peripheral blood might be a good alternative to study airway inflammation more specifically, compared to FeNO, and in a less invasive manner, compared to bronchoalveolar lavage, biopsies, or sputum induction. In addition, promising novel biomarkers are discovered in the field of breath metabolomics (eg, volatile organic compounds) and (pharmaco)genomics. Biomarker research in asthma is increasingly shifting from the assessment of the value of single biomarkers to multidimensional approaches in which the clinical value of a combination of various markers is studied. This could eventually lead to the development of a clinically applicable algorithm composed of various markers and clinical features to phenotype asthma and improve diagnosis and asthma management.Entities:
Keywords: airway inflammation; asthma; biological markers; metabolomics; pharmacogenomics
Year: 2013 PMID: 24009412 PMCID: PMC3762671 DOI: 10.2147/BTT.S29976
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biologics ISSN: 1177-5475
Figure 1Asthma biomarkers.
Abbreviations: BAL, bronchoalveolar lavage; ECP, eosinophil cationic protein; FeNO, fraction of exhaled nitric oxide; IgE, immunoglobulin E; uLTE4, urinary leukotriene E4.
Figure 2Inflammatory phenotypes of adult asthma patients obtained by sputum induction. (A) Eosinophilic type; marked by the presence of eosinophils ≥3% (red arrow). The hollow arrow indicates an alveolar macrophage. (B) Neutrophilic type; marked by the presence of neutrophils (blue arrow) ≥61%. The hollow arrow indicates an alveolar macrophage. (C) Mixed type; marked by the presence of both eosinophils (red arrow) ≥3% and neutrophils (blue arrow) ≥61%. (D) Paucigranulocytic type; marked by a lack of eosinophils (<3%) and neutrophils (<61%). The arrow shows a ciliated pseudostratified columnar airway epithelial cell (black arrow), a neutrophil with phagocytosed bacteria inside (blue arrow) and an alveolar macrophage (hollow arrow). May-Grünwald/Giemsa staining, photograph at 100× magnification, courtesy of Dr JAM van der Linden (UMC Utrecht, The Netherlands).
Studies that assessed the association between fraction of FeNO and asthma control
| Study population | Study design | NO device | Asthma control | Outcome | Evidence for association | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vijverberg et al[ | 601 children (age: 4–12 yrs) with a reported use of asthma medication | Cross-sectional | NIOX Mino | ACQ-6 | Weak positive correlation between FeNO and ACQ score ( | +/− |
| Ozier et al[ | 90 adults with asthma | Prospective follow-up of 3 wks for controlled patients and 3–6 months for uncontrolled patients | EndoNO, NIOX Mino | ACQ-6 | No correlation between FeNO measurements and ACQ scores. PPV of FeNO < 50% to predict uncontrolled asthma. FeNO had a high NPV to predict loss of control in already controlled patients (>95%). | +/− |
| Mahut et al [ | 200 asthmatic patients (107 children and 93 adults) | Prospective, 12 weeks of follow-up | ENDONO 8000 | 7-item and 6-item ACQ | FeNO did not correlate with ACQ at inclusion or during follow-up. | − |
| Sardón-Prado et al[ | 268 asthmatic children (age: 7–14 yrs) | Cross-sectional | NIOX Mino | CAN questionnaire | Weak correlation between FeNO and asthma control (r = 0.2). | +/− |
| Pérez-de-Llano et al[ | 102 adults with suboptimal asthma control | Prospective | NIOX Mino | ACT | FeNO had a PPV of 87.5% and a NPV of 90.6% to predict asthma control. | + |
| Shirai et al[ | 105 asthmatic patients | Cross-sectional | Sievers NOA 280i | ACT | Weak correlation between FeNO and asthma control (r =-0.3 1, P = 0.003). | +/− |
| Khalili et al[ | 100 asthma patients (age: 6–86 yrs) | Cross-sectional | NIOX | ACT, ACQ, NAEPP goals of therapy, JTFPP on attaining optimal asthma control, GINA guidelines | No significant association was found between FeNO level and asthma control based on ACQ ( | − |
| Michils et al[ | 341 adults with asthma | Prospective with post hoc data analysis | LR 2000 | ACQ-6 | FeNO is a good marker of asthma control over time (especially in patients with low doses of ICS). FeNO decrease <40% or increase <30% precludes asthma control optimization or deterioration, (NPV: 79% and 82%, respectively). In the low-dose ICS group, a decrease >40% indicated control optimization (PPV: 83%). | + |
| Senna et al[ | 27 newly diagnosed asthma patients (age: 16–57 yrs) | Cross-sectional | CLD 88 sp | ACT | Good correlation between ACT score and FeNO ( | + |
| Robroeks et al[ | 64 asthmatic children (5–16 yrs) | Cross-sectional | NIOX | Based on GINA | FeNO was associated with poor asthma control, but the association was strongest when FeNO was combined with markers in exhaled breath condensate (AUC 0.761, | +/− |
| Rosias et al[ | 23 children with mild to moderate asthma (age: 6–16 yrs) | Cross-sectional | NIOX | ACQ | No significant correlation between FeNO and ACQ ( | − |
| Strunk et al[ | 144 children with mild to moderate persistent asthma (age: 6–17 yrs) | Cross-over RCT ICS/LTRA | NIOX | Patient diary | No correlation between FeNO and clinical characteristics. | − |
| Franklin et al[ | 155 children (mean age: 1 1.5 ± 2.3 yrs) | Prospective birth cohort | Sievers NOA 280i | Modified ATS questionnaire | FeNO was not associated with symptoms (recent wheeze), | − |
| Jones et al[ | 78 mild/moderate asthma patients (age: 18–74 yrs) | Prospective, max 6 weeks or to LOC | Unknown | LOC based on: lung function decrease, increase bronchodilator use, nocturnal asthma symptoms, distressing asthma symptoms | Good correlation between FeNO at final study visit, change of FeNO over time and symptom score ( | + |
| Sippel et al[ | 100 asthma patients (age: 7–80 yrs) | Cross-sectional | Sievers NOA 280i | Questionnaire based on National Heart, Blood and Lung Institute Epidemiology Standardization project/dyspnea score | FeNO significantly correlated with asthma symptoms within the past 2 weeks ( | + |
Abbreviations: ACQ, Asthma Control Questionnaire; ACT, Asthma Control Test; ATS, American Thoracic Society; AUC, area under the receiver operating characteristic curve; CAN, Control de Asma en Ninõs; FeNO, fraction of exhaled nitric oxide; GINA, Global Initiative for Asthma; ICS, inhaled corticosteroids; JTFPP, Joint Task Force Practice Parameter; LTRA, leukotriene receptor antagonist; NAEPP, National Asthma Education and Prevention Program; LOC, loss of asthma control; NPV, negative predictive value; PPV, positive predictive value; RCT, randomized controlled trial; wks, weeks; yrs, years; CI, confidence interval.