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This study aims to assess the level of FeNO in Chinese asthma patients with respect to the different levels of asthma control over 1 year.
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Introduction Measurement of fractional nitric oxide (NO) concentration in exhaled breath (FeNO) has been shown to be a non-invasive, quantitative biomarker related to airway inflammation. Although there is inadequate evidence to support the use of FENO to aid the diagnosis of asthma, recent studies demonstrate the usefulness of FENO in phenotyping and management of asthma. American Thoracic Society (ATS) Clinical Practice Guideline recommended the use of FeNO in the diagnosis of eosinophilic airway inflammation and in determining the likelihood of steroid responsiveness in individuals with chronic respiratory symptoms possibly due to airway inflammation. The guideline recommends in adults with FENO less than 25 parts per billion (ppb) indicates eosinophilic inflammation and responsiveness to corticosteroids are less likely, and greater than 50 ppb indicates eosinophilic inflammation and, in symptomatic patients, responsiveness to corticosteroids are likely.
However, a validation study of ATS guideline showed almost one-fourth of patients had intermediate FENO values (i.e. 25-50ppb), which may limit the clinical usefulness of the ATS FeNO cut-points. Furthermore, FENO values are affected by multiple factors. In a recent study that assessed the determinants of FENO in men and women without lung diseases using data from 25 centres across 11 European countries and Australia involving 3881 subjects, it was found that gender, smoking status, height, IgE sensitization would affect the FeNO level measured.
A prior study also showed the FeNO levels of healthy Chinese children and adult without significant lung diseases are higher than the Caucasian population. An earlier genotyping findings of nitric oxide synthase genes suggested that the frequencies of minor alleles associated with nitric oxide production were substantially lower in Chinese subjects. Therefore, ethnic-specific references must be considered when setting the cut-off values for assessing asthma status in different populations.
There are many studies on the cut-off of FeNO for making a diagnosis of asthma. There are, however, not much information on the level of FeNO in Chinese asthma patients with different levels of asthma control in a real-life setting and whether the ATS clinical practice guideline is applicable for Chinese asthma subjects given that the healthy subjects had a higher FeNO than the Caucasian population.
The aim of this study is to assess the level of FeNO in Chinese asthma patients with respect to the different levels of asthma control over a period of 1 year.
Method Subject recruitment This is an observational study in which FeNO was measured in Chinese adults asthma patients in Hong Kong. Subjects will be recruited from the general medical and respiratory clinic of the Prince of Wales Hospital in Hong Kong. After an explanation of the study, the investigator will obtain the written informed consent from all the patients who meet the inclusion criteria and with no exclusion criteria.
Inclusion criteria:
• Chinese subjects aged between 18 and 90 years and have a diagnosis of asthma according to The Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) guideline 2019. Asthma is defined as those with a consistent history and prior documented evidence of variable airflow obstruction, with evidence of an increase in FEV1 greater than 12% or 200 mL following bronchodilator or bronchial hyperresponsiveness on bronchial provocation testing, when stable.
Exclusion criteria:
In addition, healthy subjects with no respiratory symptoms and asthma as defined above, and other significant lung diseases, such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, history of tuberculosis and bronchiectasis) with normal CXR will be recruited as control subjects.
Assessment of the subjects:
After recruitment, asthma patient will be followed up in the research clinic every 4 months for one year. Patients will have the following assessment in each visit.
For control subject, they will attend the research clinic once to have assessments of demographic characteristics, FENO level, spirometry, airway resistance, blood and skin test as described above.
Primary endpoint of the study: FeNO level in Chinese asthma of different levels of asthma control.
Secondary endpoint: FeNO level and risk of exacerbation in the subsequent 12 months, correlation of FeNO with makers of atopy and lung function including skin prick test, IgE level, eosinophil level and lung function parameters (spirometry and airway resistance).
Statistics Data will be analyzed by the Statistical Package of the Social Science Statistical software (SPSS) for Window, Version 22.0.0 (IBM SPSS Inc, IL, USA). The clinical characteristics of the subjects will be expressed as mean (SD) for normally distributed parameters or median (IQR) for non-normally distributed ones. FeNO levels between different levels of asthma control will be assessed by one-way ANOVA, while within individual variations with regard to the level of control and over time will be assessed by ANOVA with repeated measures, adjusted by age, sex, height and presence of atopy. Comparison of the FeNO levels of the asthma and control group will be assessed by independent sample t-test. Levels of FENO and time to first exacerbation will be assessed by Cox proportional-hazards model and log-rank test as appropriate. A p-value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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