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The objective of this observational study is to assess the relevance of inflammometry (based on the measurement of fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) and blood eosinophil count (BEC)) as a tool for prioritizing respiratory diagnostic tests.
The study will evaluate the role of inflammometry (FeNO and BEC) in prioritizing diagnostic respiratory tests. It will include patients aged six and older with suspected asthma, referred by non-pulmonologists for diagnostic asthma testing (spirometry or methacholine challenge test) at three hospital centers: Sherbrooke University Hospital Center (CHUS), Sainte-Justine University Hospital Center (CHU Sainte-Justine), and the Montreal Children's Hospital.
The hypothesis is that using inflammometry as a prioritization tool would reduce diagnostic delays for high-risk patients with elevated biomarkers. This study could help shorten wait times, relieve congestion in diagnostic testing queues, and improve the diagnostic pathway. Additionally, it would enhance the interpretation of pulmonary function test results by incorporating inflammometry findings, leading to better patient stratification.
Patients referred from primary care will undergo pulmonary function testing (spirometry ± methacholine challenge) and, as part of the study:
FeNO measurement using a portable device Blood test for eosinophil count Questionnaire on asthma control and quality of life, completed at the visit and at follow-ups at 4, 8, and 12 months
Full description
BACKROUND : Asthma is one of the most prevalent chronic diseases worldwide. In Canada, it affects 11% of the population. In Quebec, an estimated 900,000 people suffer from asthma, including 300,000 children. Type 2 eosinophilic inflammation is present in 50% of asthma cases and in 95% of individuals with severe disease, who consume more healthcare resources. This type of inflammation is clinically identified through non-invasive measurements of exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) and blood eosinophil count (BEC).
Asthmatic patients with Type 2 inflammation are at higher risk of asthma attacks and appear to be at risk of accelerated lung function decline, both in adults and children. The presence of Type 2 inflammation predicts a strong response to inhaled corticosteroids (ICS).
Currently, post-bronchodilator reversibility and/or bronchial hyperresponsiveness documented via spirometry are the two main approved methods for diagnosing asthma. Bronchial provocation testing is required in 80% of suspected asthma cases, but our population faces a severe lack of access to this test.The average wait time for this 1-2 hour procedure exceeds one year in our three centers.
Currently, prioritization is based on the order in which requests are received, with internal referrals given priority over external ones. In Europe, FeNO is already used as a complementary diagnostic tool in primary care, while in Quebec, it is only accessible in severe asthma clinics.
Type 2 eosinophilic inflammation is present in 50% of asthma cases and in 95% of severe asthma cases. This inflammation can be identified through non-invasive biomarkers, such as FeNO and blood eosinophil count. Individuals with type 2 inflammation are at higher risk for asthma attacks and are more likely to experience accelerated decline in respiratory function, both in adults and children. However, type 2 inflammation also predicts a strong response to inhaled corticosteroids (ICS).The identification of these markers represents a treatable trait.
HYPOTHESIS
As a prognostic procedure that identifies a treatable trait, early measurement of inflammatory biomarkers could:
OBJECTIVES
For patients ≥6 years old with suspected asthma, referred by non-pulmonologists for diagnostic testing, the study aims to use inflammometry to:
METHODOLOGY For one year, an additional respiratory therapist at each center will conduct diagnostic tests for suspected asthma (spirometry with pre/post-bronchodilator testing or methacholine challenge) requested by non-pulmonologists at the Sherbrooke University Hospital Center (CHUS), CHU Sainte-Justine, and the Montreal Children's Hospital.
All patients ≥6 years old on the waiting list will be invited to a clinic visit, where a complementary assessment will be offered. This innovative approach includes:
If spirometry is non-diagnostic, bronchial provocation will be prioritized based on inflammatory profile:
If spirometry or provocation confirms asthma, additional biomarker data will inform the physician about the risk of asthma attacks.
OUTCOMES The primary outcome will be diagnostic delay evolution for high- vs. low-risk asthma patients, analyzed before, during, and after the project.
Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curves will be used to assess the diagnostic performance of inflammometry as a potential diagnostic tool, including determining thresholds that could eliminate the need for provocation test. The analyses will be completed by questionnaires evaluating user satisfaction, economic efficiency measures (cost-effectiveness, cost-utility, budget impact), and an environmental impact assessment (measured in kgCO2 emitted by inhalers used when asthma is not diagnosed).
IMPACT
1/ Implementation of an evidence-based prioritization system for primary care referrals, substituting the current chronological approach, to reduce wait times for high-risk patients. 2/ Integrating biomarker results with pulmonary function test outcomes will refine their interpretation and better assess the likelihood of an asthma diagnosis, exacerbation risk, and response to anti-inflammatory treatments. 3/The resources allocated by this project will help reduce waitlists. 4/ Real-world evidence from Quebec will be used to improve the asthma diagnostic algorithm, facilitating the integration of inflammometry into asthma diagnosis in the province. This could potentially eliminate 20% of bronchial provocation tests, reducing costs with net-zero financial impact.
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1,500 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Simon Couillard, MD, MSc
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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