Asthma Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Longitudinal Study of Exhaled Nitric Oxide in Children
Five percent of children in the UK are prescribed steroid inhalers to control asthma
symptoms but there is no test to determine whether the dose of steroids is correct. Too much
steroid treatment has potential side effects and too little may lead to asthma attacks.
Exhaled nitric oxide (ENO) is a gas present in everyone's breath and may be a useful "meter"
for asthma control. In children, ENO can be measured easily and quickly, the results are
available immediately to the doctor or nurse and for these reasons ENO is an attractive
clinical test.
Pioneering studies have used ENO to help clinicians treat asthmatic adults and children and
the results are promising. Breathing tests improved among those where asthma treatment was
guided by ENO and asthma symptoms were slightly less frequent. These studies all used a
single ENO value to increase or reduce treatment and study authors have suggested there
should be a range of ENO values where treatment is neither increased nor reduced; what is
not known is what these ENO values may be. Elevated NO is associated with a number of
factors other than asthma, including allergy and pollen exposure. What is not known is how
factors other than asthma affect ENO measurements over time.
The proposed study will answer two important questions: What values of ENO indicate that
steroid treatment should be increased or reduced? And how much does ENO rise and fall
normally? The investigators will recruit 200 asthmatic and non-asthmatic children. The
investigators will measure ENO on six occasions over a 12-month period. The investigators
will measure factors that may affect ENO other than asthma. For the asthmatic children, the
investigators will also assess asthma control. The investigators' methodology is based on
several years experience with ENO. The investigators' results will allow ENO to be used to
monitor asthma.
Our hypotheses are that there will be different ENO values that correlate with loss of/gain
in asthma control and that ENO variability is related to environmental exposures including
tobacco smoke and pollen. Our research questions are:
1. Do determine what values or % change in ENO correlates with gain and loss of asthma
control
2. To determine by how ENO measurements vary within an individual over a 12-month period
among children aged 6-16
3. To determine whether ENO measurements vary by the same degree for stable asthmatic,
non-asthmatic atopic and non-asthmatic non-atopic children
4. To determine whether variability in ENO correlates with environmental exposures
including tobacco smoke, pollen, domestic animals, mould and ambient NO2
Background Asthma is a common chronic condition that affects approximately one million
children in the UK and 5% of all children in the UK are prescribed inhaled corticosteroids
(ICS) to palliate asthma symptoms. The 2008 British Thoracic Society/Scottish
Intercollegiate Guidelines Network guidelines for the management of asthma recommends a
step-wise approach to treatment, i.e. treatment is stepped up and down as symptoms relapse
and remit. There is no definition of which severity or duration of symptoms should prompt a
step-up in treatment. The guideline suggests a "trial and error" approach to stepping down
treatment in symptom-free individuals. In the 21st century, the management of asthma remains
based on highly subjective clinical decisions and there is a pressing need for a biomarker
to guide asthma treatment. "Priorities for respiratory research in the UK" recommends that
"Rigorous evaluation is needed of the use of new technologies for diagnostic and monitoring
purposes [in asthma], for example exhaled nitric oxide".
A small number of pioneering studies have sought to use ENO to guide asthma treatment, and
these have been reviewed recently by the lead applicant. These studies all find ENO-guided
treatment is associated with improvements in bronchial hyperresponsiveness, spirometry or
ENO. Although all studies found ENO-guided management was associated with improved symptom
control, this only achieved significance in one of the four populations studied. The dose of
ICS was often considerably higher in individuals where treatment was guided by ENO. One
possible reason for the lack of improved symptom control despite increased ICS dose is that
all studies used a single cut-off value for ENO to step up or step down ICS treatment; in
this situation treatment may be stepped up in an individual with minimal/no symptoms but
with a relatively small increase in ENO. Use of separate ENO values for stepping up and
stepping down treatment may be more effective, and a recent study has found that changes in
paired ENO measurements between -40% and +30% from baseline did not indicate gain or loss of
asthma control. Additionally, approximately 10% of individuals with high ENO do not have
airway eosinophilia and in this subgroup, who have minor asthma symptoms, ENO does not
reduce with ICS treatment. Whilst the present literature suggests that ENO is a promising
biomarker for asthma, the findings to date are conflicting and questions remain. In
particular, what is still not understood is (i) what values of ENO (or change in ENO)
correspond with loss or gain in asthma control? (ii) the variability of ENO over time
independent of asthma.
Our study will include rigorous clinical evaluation of participants and will have good
statistical power (a weakness of some previous studies). In the proposed study we will take
ENO measurements on six occasions over a 12-month period in well-phenotyped asthmatic,
non-asthmatic atopic and non-atopic non-asthmatic children. We will describe changes in ENO
in the context of asthma control. We will use the results to produce a series of cut-offs
for change in ENO measurements in children; analogous to traffic lights there will be a
green range (little or no change), amber range (slight increase in ENO), red range
(significant increased in ENO). This "traffic light" approach to asthma management is
analogous to current asthma management plans where symptoms and peak flows measurements are
used. We will also report on changes in ENO in the context of atopy and also environmental
exposures including tobacco smoke, pollen, domestic animals, mould and ambient nitrogen
dioxide (NO2) levels. In future, and in collaboration with colleagues in primary care, we
will use these ranges to design clinical trials where ENO is used to safely monitor asthma.
Our data will also be made public and could be used by colleagues to design studies where
ENO is used to step-up and step-down corticosteroid treatment in asthmatic children.
c) Experimental design and methods Study design Protocol. Two hundred children aged between
6 and 10 years at enrolment will be recruited from local schools. The initial assessment
will take place at hospital and the remaining five will take place at school. The following
will be included in the initial phenotyping assessment: height and weight, a standard
respiratory questionnaire (ISAAC), Child Asthma Control Test (CACT) for asthmatics, ENO,
spirometry, in bronchodilator response and skin prick reactivity. Longitudinal measurements
of ENO will thereafter be taken at two monthly intervals. Asthmatic children will complete a
CACT at each assessment where changes in asthma medication will also be recorded. The
defined primary end point is change in ENO between assessments where asthma control changes.
The defined secondary end point will be variability in ENO over 12 months.
Eligibility. Children attending schools in Aberdeen city will be eligible. There is a long
tradition of Aberdonian schools and school children participating with asthma studies and we
are fortunate to have had the support of Aberdeen City Council, headteachers, class
teachers, parents and children over the last 40 years. Our experience is that blanket
distribution of letters to parents via class teachers results in relatively poor enrolment
rates. We will therefore meet with headteachers and representative of the parent-teachers
associations to explain the purpose of the study, gain their approval and include articles
in school parent bulletins before approaching the parents and children. Children aged under
6 years will not be included since we have shown that ENO measurements cannot be obtained in
the majority of this young age-group. Children who are unable to provide an ENO measurement
on the initial assessment will not be included for future assessments. In the event that few
children with severe asthma (defined as BTS/SIGN treatment step 3 and 4) are recruited from
schools in the first year of the study, we will enrich the cohort with severe asthmatics
enrolled from hospital clinics. At the start of the study, written consent will be obtained
from parents and verbal assent will be obtained for each assessment from the child.
Categorisation of participants. Children with asthma will be defined as those with
affirmative responses to both questions "have you/your child ever had asthma?" and "have
you/your child had wheezing or whistling in the chest during the last 12 months?" The number
of non-atopic asthmatic children (ie asthma and negative skin prick reactivity) is
anticipated to be small; in the final analysis, and only if the number of non-atopic
asthmatics is sufficient, we will determine whether the variability for this group differs
for the atopic asthmatics. A stable asthmatic will be defined as an asthmatic child where
CACT remains ≥19 and treatment does not change over one month.
Questionnaires. At enrolment a validated questionnaire used for the International Study of
Allergy and Asthma in Children will be completed. Parents of primary school children
(aged≤11 years) will complete the wheezing, rhinitis and eczema modules in the core
questionnaire for 6-7 year olds. Children attending secondary schools (aged >12 years) will
themselves complete the wheezing, rhinitis and eczema modules in the core questionnaire for
13-14 year olds. Asthmatic children will also complete the CACT. A CACT score of ≥19 will be
defined as loss of asthma control. A CACT score of <16 will be used to define good asthma
control and has a 79% negative predictive value for physician-defined uncontrolled asthma.
Indoor NO2 exposure will be ascertained using questions relating to open gas fires and hobs
in the home. Current cat and dog exposure will be defined as an affirmative response to the
questions "Do you currently have a cat at home?" and "Do you currently have a dog at home?"
Mould exposure will be determined from the response to the "Is there visible damp within the
home?" if so which room?" Home will be defined as the residence where the child spends most
of the week.
ENO measurements. A portable NO analyser (MINO®, Aerocrine, Sweden) will be used to measure
ENO in accordance with manufacturer's recommendations. The same MINO® will be used for each
school to eliminate the risk of potential variability for measurements between analysers.
Our group has already validated the use of the MINO® for use in children. The child will be
asked to inhale through the analyser and the exhale slowly, using the visual and auditory
incentives, at 50ml/s for six seconds. In keeping with international guidelines11, we will
report the mean ENO from three measurements within 10% or two measurements within 5% of each
other; this approach minimises any inherent variability in ENO measurements due to the
analyser itself. Measurements will be taken at the same time of day for each child, if
possible, and this will eliminate any possible diurnal variability in ENO measurements.
Exhaled measurements will not be taken in children who have a concurrent cold since this may
affect the ENO result.
Spirometry. Spirometry will be used to phenotype the study participants. A standard portable
pneumotachograph (ML3500, MicroLab) will be calibrated and used in accordance with the
manufacturer's recommendations, international recommendations will be followed. Each child
will complete three forced expiratory manoeuvres, the highest FEV1 and FVC values will be
identified, FEV1 and FEV1/FVC ratio will be recorded.
Bronchodilator response. We will measure FEV1 before and 15 minutes after 200 micorg
salbutaom (mid/spacer).
Skin Prick Reactivity. The skin prick test will be used to determine reactivity to cat
dander, house dust mite, hen's egg, tree pollen, timothy grass, dog dander, cat dander,
Aspergillus and Alterneria (allergens provided by ALK, Northampton). Positive (histamine
10mg/ml) and negative controls (0.9% saline) will be used. Atopy will be defined as at least
one wheal that measures more than 2mm in longest diameter.
Ambient NO2 concentration. Using the Aberdeen NO2 diffusion tube network we will assess the
likely average weekly NO2 exposure for each child in the week in which their measurements
were made. This will be supplemented by an assessment of indoor NO2 exposure from
questionnaire data.
Pollen exposure. This will be done by looking at the predictable seasonality of pollen
production, ie. Tree pollen March/April Grass pollen June/July. Pollen concentrations are
not measured in Aberdeen and concentrations in Dundee will be used as a frame of reference
and provided at cost (£500) by the National Pollen and Aerobiology Research Unit. The pollen
season difference between Aberdeen and Dundee is likely to be very small and insufficient to
affect the timing of pollen exposures.
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