| Literature DB >> 31936693 |
Paraskevi Xepapadaki1, Paraskevi Korovessi1, Claus Bachert2, Susetta Finotto3, Tuomas Jartti4, John Lakoumentas1, Marek L Kowalski5, Anna Lewandowska-Polak6, Heikki Lukkarinen4, Nan Zhang2, Theodor Zimmermann7, Nikolaos G Papadopoulos1,8.
Abstract
Fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) is a non-invasive marker for eosinophilic airway inflammation and has been used for monitoring asthma. Here, we assess the characteristics of FeNO from preschool to school age, in parallel with asthma activity. A total of 167 asthmatic children and 66 healthy, age-matched controls were included in the 2-year prospective PreDicta study evaluating wheeze/asthma persistence in preschool-aged children. Information on asthma/rhinitis activity, infections and atopy was recorded at baseline. Follow-up visits were performed at 6-month intervals, as well as upon exacerbation/cold and 4-6 weeks later in the asthmatic group. We obtained 539 FeNO measurements from asthmatics and 42 from controls. At baseline, FeNO values did not differ between the two groups (median: 3.0 ppb vs. 2.0 ppb, respectively). FeNO values at 6, 12, 18 and 24 months (4.0, CI: 0.0-8.6; 6.0, CI: 2.8-12.0; 8.0, CI: 4.0-14.0; 8.5, CI: 4.4-14.5 ppb, respectively) increased with age (correlation p ≤ 0.001) and atopy (p = 0.03). FeNO was non-significantly increased from baseline to the symptomatic visit, while it decreased after convalescence (p = 0.007). Markers of disease activity, such as wheezing episodes and days with asthma were associated with increased FeNO values during the study (p < 0.05 for all). Age, atopy and disease activity were found to be important FeNO determinants in preschool children. Longitudinal and individualized FeNO assessment may be valuable in monitoring asthmatic children with recurrent wheezing or mild asthma.Entities:
Keywords: FeNO; PreDicta; asthma; preschool; spirometry
Year: 2020 PMID: 31936693 PMCID: PMC7020050 DOI: 10.3390/jcm9010187
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Baseline characteristics regarding disease activity and atopic history of the asthmatic children.
| Atopic History | Baseline Characteristics |
|
|---|---|---|
| Atopic history | Family history of atopic disease (yes), | 94 (91) |
| Family history of asthma/rhinitis (yes), | 89 (86) | |
| Any positive skin prick test (yes), | 70 (56) | |
| Upper Respiratory Symptoms | Rhinitis symptoms are present | |
| <4 days/week, | 61 (47) | |
| Rhinitis duration | ||
| <4 consecutive weeks, | 67 (51) | |
| Are rhinitis symptoms associated with…? | ||
| Sleep disturbance (yes), | 65 (89) | |
| School impairment (yes), | 17 (24) | |
| Leisure—sport (yes), | 35 (49) | |
| Visual analogue scale, median (CIs) | 5 (3–6) | |
| Number of medication courses for rhinitis in the last 12 months, median (CIs) | 1 (0–5) | |
| Lower Respiratory Symptoms | Days with symptoms in the last 3 months | |
| <1/week, | 83 (64) | |
| >1/week but <1/day, | 37 (28) | |
| daily, | 11 (8) | |
| Nights with symptoms in the last 3 months | ||
| ≤2 times/month, | 81 (62) | |
| >2 times/month, | 15 (12) | |
| >1/week, | 24 (18) | |
| daily, | 11 (8) | |
| Cough, wheeze or difficulty in breathing during or after exercise in the last 12 months (yes), | 84 (64) | |
| Limitation of activities limited by asthma symptoms (yes), | 46 (35) | |
| Child completely well between symptomatic periods (yes), | 92 (70) | |
| Number of episodes of wheezing/asthma/cough in the last 3 months, median (25–75 percentiles) | 1 (1–2) | |
| Number of episodes of wheezing/asthma/cough in the last 12 months, median (CIs) | 5 (3–8) | |
| Inhaled corticosteroids as prophylactic treatment (yes), | 107 (82%) |
Figure 1(a) Non-parametric correlation between subjects’ fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) and age, separately assessed in controls and cases. “P slopes” denote the p-value of the comparison between the slopes of the two separate trend lines, i.e., controls (black line) vs. cases (gray line). (b) FeNO progression slopes in preschool asthmatics for atopics (black line) and non-atopics (gray line), at baseline and during the 2-year follow-up.
Figure 2Variations in FeNO measurements from healthy state (baseline/follow-up) to the subsequent exacerbation and convalescence periods in preschool-aged children with recurrent wheeze/asthma. (A) Comparison of absolute FeNO values, (B) Comparison of FeNO % change.
Figure 3Difference in FeNO values of preschoolers with asthma during exacerbations and at their respective convalescent visits (A) in absolute values, (B) in FeNO % change (from baseline).