Exhaled nitric oxide fractions are well correlated with clinical control in recurrent infantile wheeze treated with inhaled corticosteroids.

2010 
Ghdifan S, Verin E, Couderc L, Lubrano M, Michelet I, Marguet C. Exhaled nitric oxide fractions are well correlated with clinical control in recurrent infantile wheeze treated with inhaled corticosteroids. Pediatr Allergy Immunol 2010: 21: 1015–1020. © 2010 John Wiley & Sons A/S Fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) is a non-invasive marker of bronchial inflammation in asthma. However, the interest of FeNO measurement remained limited in infantile wheeze. The aim of this prospective study was to evaluate the feasibility and reproducibility of FeNO off-line measurement in very young children with recurrent wheeze and to assess whether clinical control of infantile wheeze correlates with FeNO levels. Two exhalation samples were collected in mylar balloon during quite tidal breathing. FeNO measurements were performed off-line by a NO analyzer. The participating patients were aged ≤36 months, wheezes had started before the age of 24 months, and they were receiving maintenance treatment with inhaled corticosteroids for at least 3 months duration. The studied population comprised of 40 uncontrolled infants with persistent wheezy respiratory symptoms, median age 14.5 months, and 40 with optimal controlled infantile wheeze, median age 14 months. The reproducibility was excellent (r = 0.95; p  15 ppb, the predictive values for uncontrolled disease were as follows: positive predictive value = 65%, negative predictive value = 90%. FeN0 levels were not increased by atopy or passive tobacco. Off-line assessment of FeNO is feasible, reproducible, and well accepted in wheezy very young children. Optimal clinical control of infantile wheeze appeared to be associated with the control of bronchial inflammation when evaluated by FeNO measurements.
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