Elsevier

Respiratory Medicine

Volume 144, November 2018, Pages 22-29
Respiratory Medicine

Validation of ATS clinical practice guideline cut-points for FeNO in asthma

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rmed.2018.09.014Get rights and content
Under an Elsevier user license
open archive

Highlights

  • Validation of the ATS cut points for FeNO to monitor the level of EOS.

  • Investigated in a real life-population.

  • Easy to use the findings in a clinical setting.

Abstract

Background

The American Thoracic society (ATS) has suggested using fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) to monitor the level of eosinophilic (EOS) airway inflammation in asthma, but validation of the proposed cut-points is required in real-life populations.

Objective

To validate FeNO cut-points suggested by ATS in relation to sputum EOS count in a real life population of asthma patients.

Methods

All patients referred consecutively over a 12-months period for specialist assessment of asthma, were examined with FeNO and induced sputum, and re-examined 12 months later.

The predicted values of a positive and a negative test (PPV and NPV) for a cut off 3% EOS in sputum were calculated. Change in FeNO was defined in accordance with ATS (>20% or 10 ppb if FeNO was <50 ppb).

Results

144 adult asthma patients were examined (59% female). Low FeNO (<25 ppb) at baseline was found in 94 (65%), FeNO between 25 and 50 ppb in 34 (24%) subjects and high FeNO >50 ppb in 16 (11%) subjects. The PPV for FeNO >25 ppb and >50 ppb to predict EOS 3% was 45% and 77%, NPV was 88% and 83%. The sensitivity decreased from 70% to 37% at the >50 ppb cut-off. A significant reduction in FeNO was associated with a reduction in sputum EOS (p = 0.01).

Conclusion

The findings support the validity of the FeNO cut-points suggested by ATS to monitor eosinophilic airway inflammation in asthma. However, in this real-life population, a large proportion of patients had intermediate FeNO values, which may limit the clinical usefulness of the ATS FeNO cut-points.

Keywords

Nitric oxide
Eosinophilic airway inflammation
Asthma

Cited by (0)

In this study we use the ATS cut-points for FeNO in predicting sputum eosinophilia and investigate whether a change of FeNO over over 12 months corresponds with changes in sputum EOS in order to asses ATS guidelines applicability in a real life setting.