Abstract
As we move toward an era of precision medicine, novel biomarkers of disease will enable the identification and personalized treatment of new endotypes. In asthma, fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) serves as a surrogate marker of airway inflammation that often correlates with the presence of sputum eosinophils. The increase in FeNO is driven by an upregulation of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) by cytokines, which are released as a result of type-2 airway inflammation. Scientific evidence supports using FeNO in routine clinical practice. In steroid-naive patients and in patients with mild asthma, FeNO levels decrease within days after corticosteroid treatment in a dose-dependent fashion and increase after steroid withdrawal. In difficult asthma, FeNO testing correlates with anti-inflammatory therapy compliance. Assessing adherence by FeNO testing can remove the confrontational aspect of questioning a patient about compliance and change the conversation to one of goal setting and ways to improve disease management. However, the most important aspect of incorporating FeNO in asthma management is the reduction in the risk of exacerbations. In a recent primary care study, reduction of exacerbation rates and improved symptom control without increasing overall inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) use were demonstrated when a FeNO-guided anti-inflammatory treatment algorithm was assessed and compared to the standard care. A truly personalized asthma management approach—showing reduction of exacerbation rates, overall use of ICS and neonatal hospitalizations—was demonstrated when FeNO testing was applied as part of the treatment algorithm that managed asthma during pregnancy. The aim of this article is to describe how FeNO and the NIOX VERO® analyzer can help to optimize diagnosis and treatment choices and to aid in the monitoring and improvement of clinical asthma outcomes in children and adults.
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Introduction: Asthma and the Beginning of the Age of Precision Medicine
Fifteen years ago, I was interviewed for a research fellowship. I think the two eminent professors leading the questioning were quietly enjoying themselves. Indeed, I was finding the experience quite jolly until I was asked a simple but insightful question. One of my interviewers (a respiratory pediatrician and superb researcher) looked me in the eye and asked, ‘Are you a lumper or a splitter?’ I fumbled for a few poorly chosen words and played for time by suggesting that it depended upon the context, but I did not give a particularly illuminating answer. I cannot honestly recall whether I finally decided whether I was, at heart, a lumper or a splitter. I did, however, get the job.
In the intervening years, I have considered this question deeply. Lumping has distinct advantages; in clinical settings, it allows guidelines to be constructed and applied. By ‘lumping’ a group of heterogeneous wheezing disorders of childhood together and applying a diagnostic label of ‘asthma,’ we have created a condition that is sufficiently common and important to enable research and develop an evidence base for treatment. Moreover, the simplistic approach of combining distinct phenotypes under a single term enables educational strategies to be adopted on a large scale. However, despite a wealth of evidence and the production of high-quality national and international guidelines, asthma control remains poor for most children. The gap between optimal outcomes for children with asthma in research settings and observed outcomes is undoubtedly multifactorial. However, the current strategy of lumping is not serving children with asthma or their families.
Guidelines currently suggest, for the most part, a ‘one size fits all’ approach with a step-up and step-down scheme that belies the inherent complexity and variation seen between individuals. Precision medicine is a new term that describes an approach for disease treatment and prevention that takes into account individual variability in genes, environment, and life choices. It facilitates the customization of health care tailored to each individual patient. It is particularly valuable for conditions such as asthma where there is considerable heterogeneity in phenotype. While precision medicine is evolving, and has had notable successes in the treatment of some types of cancer, it is not currently in use for most diseases, and asthma is no exception.
There are ranges of clinical and genetic factors, which are known to have some value in predicting the response to treatment in children with asthma. Thus, age, atopic status, bronchodilator responsiveness (BDR), ethnicity, gender, ethnicity and obesity have all been shown to predict responsiveness to inhaled corticosteroids (ICSs), leukotriene receptor antagonists (LTRA) and long-acting beta-2 agonists in selected populations of children (Table 1) [1–4].
These observations may be helpful in choosing ‘what next?’ when children present with persistent symptoms or recurrent exacerbations. However, these factors are often superseded by practical considerations in clinical practice. For instance, a young child who is uncooperative with the administration of inhaled medicines will be less likely to benefit from an inhaled treatment, and oral therapy may be more successful.
Biomarkers are likely to play an important role in the application of precision medicine to clinical practice. They have an established role in improving diagnosis and can accurately predict treatment response. A role probably exists for a range of markers including sputum eosinophils, exhaled breath condensate and the pattern of volatile organic compounds (VOCs). This article critically reviews the role of fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) and specifically the role of the NIOX VERO® in the application of precision medicine to children and adults with asthma.
Compliance with Ethics Guidelines
This article is based on previously conducted studies and does not involve any new studies of human or animal subjects performed by the author. It is a commissioned, peer-reviewed article specifically aimed at giving details of asthma endotypes and the use of the NIOX VERO device in clinical practice.
Endotypes: Exhaled Nitric Oxide and How it Relates to Asthma
Initial attempts at subdividing asthma types were dependent upon careful delineation of the observable characteristics and clinical features, the phenotype. Originally, this led to a division between intrinsic and extrinsic asthma. In the last decade, there has been a renewed enthusiasm within the research community to split, or subdivide, the asthma phenotype [5]. This renewed interest has, to an extent, been the result of increased availability of mathematical modelling to approach the available patient data [6]. This has resulted in a ‘re-discovery’ of work initially conducted in Derby in the late 1950s that identified the importance of sputum eosinophilia in determining treatment response [7, 8].
Phenotypical analysis is fraught with difficulty. Most biological characteristics or laboratory indices are not dichotomous but continuous; moreover, they are variable over time and influenced by treatment. In an attempt to resolve these difficulties, there has been a shift away from phenotyping to endotyping [9]. An endotype is defined by a distinct functional or pathobiological mechanism. This has led to the identification of new distinct groups of children and adults with asthma. Some examples of how phenotypes may overlap with multiple endotypes in children and adults are given in Table 2.
The relationship between exhaled nitric oxide (eNO) and asthma is complex. Nitric oxide is produced by nitric oxide synthase (NOS) enzymes and is extremely short lived unlike other biological markers. There are three distinct forms of NOS enzymes: endothelial (eNOS), inducible (iNOS) and neuronal (nNOS). eNO is produced in the lung epithelia as a result of expression of iNOS [10, 11]. The activity of iNOS is highly variable, and the concentration of eNO on the breath is dependent upon many factors including the degree of type-2 airway inflammation, presence of other atopic diseases, exposure to environmental tobacco smoke and body mass index (Table 3) [12–20].
Despite this apparent heterogeneity, eNO has established itself within clinical guidelines as a useful adjunct in the diagnosis of asthma in children and adults [21]. Moreover, changes over time within an individual can be extremely helpful in determining response to treatment profiles and indirectly confirming adherence patterns [22].
While eNO concentrations provide evidence of type-2 airway inflammation, FeNO measurement is relatively cheap to perform, is noninvasive and is performed easily in children above 4 years of age. A number of commercially available systems measuring FeNO are available to clinicians, and I have previously written about my experience with one of these (NIOX MINO®) [22].
NIOX VERO®: The Latest Generation Device to Measure FeNO
There are many devices available commercially for the measurement of FeNO in clinical practice. NIOX VERO® (Fig. 1a) is a point-of-care, hand-held, electrochemical FeNO analyzer and is the next-generation device from the predicate, NIOX MINO® (Fig. 1b). NIOX VERO® complies with all essential aspects of the American Thoracic Society (ATS) and European Respiratory Society (ERS) recommendations for standardized exhaled NO measurement procedures [23] and has been recently cleared for use in the US, Japan and China. In order to complete this review article, I contacted the manufacturer of the NIOX VERO® device to determine what validation had been undertaken prior to its release. These data were provided upon request by Cirassia/Aerocrine. To date, two technical validation studies and two clinical validation studies have been performed by the manufacturer that have supported the clinical utility of NIOX VERO®, the results of which are summarized in the following sections.
Data Supporting Precision and Accuracy
To calculate the precision and accuracy, mixtures of a certified calibration gas of 200 ppb NO in nitrogen were used, yielding concentrations of 5, 25, 75 and 200 ppb. The gas mixer was connected in line with the NIOX VERO® instrument, and five sensors were mounted in five NIOX VERO® instruments.
Precision
This was determined in house by the manufacturer. Two replicate determinations of each concentration were made twice a day (more than 2 h apart) for 20 days. The repeatability and within-device precision were calculated for five instruments. Both standard deviation (SD) estimates met the precision claim at all four concentration levels, and the repeatability and within-device precision were well within the specification limit: <3 ppb of measured values <30 ppb and <10 % of measured values >30 ppb. Both SD estimates for repeatability and within-device precision met the precision claim in the labeling at all four concentration levels.
Accuracy
This is the deviation of the measured value from a known nominal value, i.e., the certified concentration of a NO reference standard. Two replicate determinations were made at each occasion. For each test occasion the mean NO concentration (M) for each set of replicates and the absolute deviation of each replicate mean (D) from the nominal gas concentration (G) were calculated. The mean D, SD and 95 % confidence interval (CI) for all instruments were calculated. At >50 ppb concentration levels, D is expressed as a percentage of the nominal NO concentration. The results for the five NIOX VERO® systems showed the accuracy was within the technical specification: ±5 ppb <50 ppb or maximum 10 % at >50 ppb.
Data-Supporting Agreement and Repeatability
NIOX VERO® Versus NIOX MINO®: Are the Results Obtained Comparable in Clinical Practice?
Pooled data from two randomized, multi-center, single-visit studies in 112 subjects aged ≥7 years demonstrated clinically acceptable agreement between the NIOX VERO® and NIOX MINO® devices and supported a high degree of intra-subject repeatability with the new device. The mean observed paired difference for the first valid FeNO measurement on each device was −4.6 ppb (95 % CI −5.825 to −3.377; p < 0.0001). Weighted Deming regression analysis showed paired differences were centered close to 0. Agreement was also seen when comparing the first valid FeNO measurement or the mean of two measurements. Intra-subject repeatability of NIOX VERO® was significantly better than for NIOX MINO® (p = 0.0112). Although FeNO measurements using the NIOX VERO® were slightly lower than with the NIOX MINO®, there were no substantial differences between replicates within age groups, gender groups or randomization sequences, and the difference was within the technical specifications of the device (Fig. 2).
Inter-Operator Repeatability
Pooled data from two multi-center, single-visit, point-of-care studies showed that NIOX VERO® gave repeatable and consistent FeNO measurements with no observable pattern of training effect or order effect on FeNO when measured three times by three different operators. The studies were performed in 122 subjects aged ≥7 years with physician-diagnosed asthma; the majority had mean FeNO values of <50 ppb with a mean of 31.4 ± 32.97 ppb overall and ranged from 5 to 174 ppb. Intra-subject mean FeNO values were not significantly different for subjects with FeNO <50 ppb versus those with ≥50 ppb (p = 0.9979 versus p = 0.8006). A total of 54 operators participated, of which 46 % were registered nurses and 20 % were licensed practical nurses or had an associated nursing degree. Inter-operator repeatability was demonstrated with a mean intra-subject variance of 6.61 ± 17.954 ppb (upper 95 % CI 9.41). The coefficient of variance was 0.066 ± 0.054 (upper 95 % CI 0.074) (Fig. 3).
Weighted Deming regression analysis of the three possible pairs of measurements showed no evidence of bias relating to the order of testing with an estimated bias of <2 % for all pairs; these findings provided further evidence of repeatability. Repeatability was also shown for those subjects with a mean FeNO <50 ppb, the within-subject paired FeNO difference was <10 ppb, and the majority of subjects (97 %) with a mean FeNO ≥50 ppb had a difference ≤20 %. Hence, while the variability in intra-subject FeNO values increased with higher values, the CVs (upper 95 % CI) from both subject groups remained similar [0.072 (0.082) versus 0.048 (0.060)].
Ease of Use
The NIOX VERO® device provides a slightly different user experience with some advantages over the NIOX MINO® device. My personal observation in clinical practice with children and adolescents is that the ‘in-built’ nature of the incentive software is advantageous and reduces the overall ‘set-up’ time required to obtain a single measurement. In most other respects, the user experience and feedback are equivalent, and even young children (4 years and older) are able to perform measurements using the 6-s mode (see below) after relatively little coaching.
A user-device interaction two-center study was conducted in eight female users who reported Swedish as their primary language and held education in healthcare; none had previous experience with the NIOX VERO® device, but seven of eight were familiar with NIOX MINO®. All users could operate the device and assess user-device instructions with the NIOX Panel. The majority of tasks were completed without assistance (75 %); one user required help to create a quality control (QC) user and perform a QC test, and two users needed assistance to handle the exemption at foreseeable misuses and stop exhaling before the analysis time was finished; the observer indicated that only one user actually needed help. Where one was worst imaginable and five were best imaginable, the overall impression was rated between 3 and 4, while ease-of-use and visual impression were rated between 4 and 5.
Are There Improvements over NIOX MINO®?
As already shown, intra-subject repeatability of the NIOX VERO® is significantly better than for NIOX MINO®. Moreover, NIOX VERO® can be used without connection to a power supply and better visibility of the display screen, enabling a degree of portability and flexibility in the clinical setting. Experienced users of the NIOX MINO® will undoubtedly recall the frustration of an accidental power cable disconnection (usually by the child) after a successful exhalation prior to the calculation of the eNO value. As with NIOX MINO®, the NIOX VERO® can be operated using the 10- and 6-s exhalation modes in a clinical setting and in young children aged 4 years and older. The 6-s mode is particularly useful in clinical practice with younger children.
A randomized, single-visit, clinical validation study was conducted using NIOX VERO® in asthmatic children aged 4–10 years. Data from the subgroup aged 6–10 years (mean age 8.1 years) showed a high level of agreement between the 6- and 10-s modes, and this was further demonstrated using a Weighted Deming regression analysis in which the intercept was 0 and slope was 1.0. Furthermore, FeNO measurements were repeatable with a median intra-subject SD of 0.707 for both modes and no significant differences (p = 0.3090). Children in the subgroup aged 4–5 years also successfully used the NIOX VERO® using the 6- and 10-s modes, with greater success seen using the former. Mean FeNO results were comparable between the 6-s (12.6 ppb) and 10-s (10.6 ppb) modes (Table 4).
Data to Support Measuring FeNO in Clinical Practice
FeNO provides a complementary and noninvasive assessment of airway inflammation when used alongside more traditional methods, such as history, examination, spirometry and bronchial lability measures [24–26]. It provides a more complete assessment of asthma severity and control [27, 28] than traditional assessments, has utility in primary care settings and can be measured in patients of most ages. Furthermore, FeNO is useful for monitoring adherence to anti-inflammatory medications and predicting exacerbation risk [27, 29] and offers potential cost savings [26, 30, 31].
Diagnosis
In primary care clinical practice, the monitoring of asthma control is currently focused on evaluating clinical symptoms and lung function parameters. However, GINA guidelines and ATS FeNO guidelines suggest that airway inflammation could be assessed to optimize treatment strategies [11, 32, 33].
FeNO is used to define and confirm airway allergic and eosinophilic inflammation in patients with asthma [16]. Routine use of FeNO alongside traditional clinical assessments may improve diagnostic accuracy and enables tailored therapeutic regimens [16, 34, 35]. In a study comparing FeNO and sputum cell counts with serial spirometry and peak flow recordings in children and adults, the sensitivity of spirometry was lower (47 %) than that of either FeNO (88 %) or sputum induction (86 %) [32, 36]. In addition, FeNO and sputum eosinophils showed a specificity of 92 % compared with 73 % for spirometry [32, 36].
Given that FeNO is representative of Th2-driven local inflammation specifically in the bronchial mucosa [32, 37–39], it has the potential to predict the response to ICS therapy in asthma [3, 40–46]. Data suggest that asthma patients who have elevated baseline FeNO levels are more likely to respond to ICS than those with baseline FeNO levels within predefined normal ranges [32, 40, 41, 47]. However, there is conflicting evidence: in a study by Klaassen et al., symptoms not FeNO levels predicted response to ICS [48], and Prieto et al. showed that FeNO was not useful in predicting response above a baseline cut-off of 20 ppb [49]. However, in the first study, FeNO was measured using an offline tidal breathing method rather than the recommended online measurement [48].
FeNO is of particular interest for diagnosing and phenotyping asthma in children with suspected asthma, therefore enabling optimal treatment and control (Fig. 4; Table 5). Diagnosing asthma in children, particularly pre-schoolers, can be challenging. The advantage of FeNO is that, unlike other assessments, it does not involve a forced vital capacity maneuver, which makes it easier for children, and especially young children, to perform, therefore aiding cooperation [50]. Furthermore, the measurements are easy, quick to perform in the clinic and reproducible [51–53], providing cost-effective and real-time inflammatory data [54, 55].
Management to Reduce Exacerbations
Perhaps the most important aspect of incorporating FeNO in asthma management is the reduction in the risk of exacerbations. It is speculated that exacerbations are preceded by an increase in eosinophilic airway inflammation, so FeNO levels may identify patients at risk of exacerbations given the level of cross-correlation between FeNO and symptoms [56, 57].
In clinically stable adults with asthma, the combined use of FeNO and forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) positively predicted the risk of exacerbation (FeNO ≥28 ppb; FEV1 ≤76 %) showing an 85 % probability of a future exacerbation, while those with FeNO levels <28 ppb and FEV1 >76 % showed no risk of exacerbation [32, 58]. FeNO may predict loss of control following ICS withdrawal [32, 59, 60], and FeNO has been associated with a positive predictive value of 80–90 % for predicting and diagnosing loss of control [32, 59]. When FeNO was used to guide treatment and manage asthma in pregnant women, there was a substantial reduction in exacerbations in the FeNO-managed group compared to the control group [61].
More recently, three studies have shown that the use of a handheld NO analyzer can reduce exacerbations by as much as 50 % [62–64]. In adults, Syk et al. showed that the use of FeNO to guide treatment alongside usual clinical care reduced the frequency that asthma symptoms worsened [62]. Keeping inflammation under control can reduce the risk of catching a viral infection or having that viral infection lead to an exacerbation. Using FeNO to guide treatment does not lead to fewer symptom-free days but does decrease the frequency of asthma exacerbations [63]. In the study by Peirsman et al., 24 % of children with asthma who were monitored by FeNO experienced exacerbations compared to 48 % from the control group [57], and Petsky et al. reported a smaller percentage of children (22 %) experienced exacerbations when FeNO was utilized to manage their asthma, compared to 54 % when it was not [64]. Petsky et al. also showed that taking atopy into account reduces the number of severe exacerbations, although higher doses of ICS were administered. However, they concluded that FeNO is unlikely to be beneficial for improving asthma symptoms. This seems to suggest that symptoms and exacerbations are not related to the same physiological mechanisms, with one more strongly related to airway inflammation and one more strongly related to bronchoconstriction [64].
High FeNO levels in ICS-treated patients usually suggest uncontrolled asthma with high FeNO being correlated with high use of short-acting beta-agonists and oral corticosteroids as well as lower predicted FEV1 levels during the preceding year compared to patients with low FeNO values [65]. In the follow-up study, high FeNO was shown to predict future uncontrolled asthma in patients treated with ICS; by adding FeNO to an asthma control questionnaire and spirometry during routine visits, patients likely to suffer exacerbations could be identified [66].
Negative studies on the use of FeNO for asthma management have been reported [32, 67–70]. Use of FeNO was not recommended to tailor ICS treatment when compared to managing treatment based on clinical symptoms alone in a meta-analysis in 2009 [70]. However, this meta-analysis did not include many of the most recent studies that demonstrated a decrease in exacerbations, these studies were small, the majority of subjects had mild-to-moderate asthma, and the means of measuring outcomes varied. Indeed, a newer meta-analysis of these data with the addition of newer studies showed the rate of exacerbations to be significantly lower in FeNO-guided children compared with the control group [27]. This result was confirmed recently in a further meta-analysis in children [71]. Combining the results of six eligible studies involving children, the odds ratio of exacerbation was significantly lower in the FeNO-guided management group (OR 0.690, 95 % CI 0.532, 0.895; p = 0.005). Further research is planned, and a large multicenter study in the UK is due to start recruitment by the end of 2016.
Adherence and Objective Goals with Patients
In clinical practice, I have found that FeNO is a very useful indicator of adherence. In particular, unexplained changes in FeNO measurements within an individual over time should prompt a more complete review of medication use. FeNO has the potential to monitor ICS adherence because FeNO responds quickly and dose dependently to ICS treatment [26, 29, 32, 72]—persistently high FeNO levels may indicate poor compliance [73].
Optimum ICS dosing is important for ensuring patient safety while maintaining adequate asthma control [32]. However, in order to obtain these benefits, ICS must be taken regularly, and many studies have shown that treatment compliance among patients with asthma is frequently poor, which leads to loss of control and increased morbidity [74]. Reliably identifying non-compliance could be valuable in improving the understanding of factors contributing to on-going symptoms in asthma [29, 74].
Increased FeNO levels (>25 ppb) in children prescribed ICS was associated with reduced treatment adherence (OR 0.25, 95 % CI 0.15–0.41) [32, 75], and improved ICS adherence correlated with a greater reduction in FeNO in patients with difficult-to-treat asthma [29, 32]. Another study found serial FeNO measurements helped to determine treatment adherence and showed that adherence with ICS was significantly associated (p < 0.001) with a fall in FeNO over the study period [12, 22]. Although elevated FeNO levels may reflect poorer adherence, confounding factors such as disease activity and inhaler technique need to be carefully considered [74]. It is not unusual, in my clinical experience, to see an increase in FeNO accompanied by a ‘loss of optimal inhaler technique’ in many children and young adults. This is often a complete surprise to parents, particularly when they find that the use of large-volume spacers has been abandoned or that other important steps in inhaler use are being omitted.
Cost-Effectiveness and Recent NICE Recommendations
FeNO is a useful tool for targeting those patients who will benefit from anti-inflammatory treatment [76]. In difficult, poorly controlled asthma, when symptoms may have multiple causes, FeNO may be used to monitor treatment to avoid unnecessary increases in steroid therapy [76, 77]. This is particularly important in light of financial constraints in healthcare especially given the large cost implication of ineffective treatments. FeNO measurements offer the potential to reduce costs while simultaneously improving the quality of patient care with more accurate phenotypic assessment and precision treatment [76].
In the US, 30 % of asthma patients have severe or difficult-to-treat asthma, achieve suboptimal control and show relative non-responsiveness to medication. It is estimated that this relatively small proportion of patients accounts for 80 % of asthma medical costs [31]. Adding FeNO to standard asthma management offers potential cost savings. The inclusion of FeNO measurements may ensure parity was reached with the current standard of care in the US, assuming a reduction of 5 % in hospitalization and emergency department costs; this is despite the costs of performing the FeNO tests [31].
The cost effectiveness of FeNO was investigated in a German study [30]. Based on a reimbursement price of €34 using the portable analyzer, NIOX MINO®, an asthma diagnosis cost €12 more per patient than standard diagnostic methods, but offered improved accuracy. The use of FeNO in treatment decisions was less costly than standard asthma management and provided similar health benefits.
In the UK, FeNO is recommended by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) as a cost effective measurement for the diagnosis and management of asthma when used as an adjunct to traditional clinical testing [26]. NICE also considers FeNO as a potential tool for monitoring treatment adherence [26]. NICE compared the use of three NO analyzers (NIOX MINO®, NIOX VERO® and NOBreath) with current standard tests used in England and Wales [26]. Base-case results for asthma management in children and adults indicated that the use of FeNO alongside tests recommended by the British guidelines produced a small health benefit in terms of disease burden [0.05 quality-adjusted life year (QALY)] when compared to following the British guidelines alone (0.04 QALY), although the addition of FeNO increased costs because of projected ICS use. Their review also showed that FeNO testing plus bronchodilator reversibility testing in adults and children delivered equal or greater QALYs at a lower incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) than other tests and that FeNO assessment in conjunction with existing tests was more cost-effective than when existing tests were used alone. They concluded that FeNO was both cost and clinically effective when used to support symptomatic asthma management in adults and children using ICS, with the caveat that the results should be interpreted with caution given the uncertainty relating to the economic models used. FeNO is not recommended to help the stepping down of ICS use [26].
Future Research
In the UK, measurement of FeNO has gradually crept into clinical practice. Initial concerns about cost and the reliability of the measurements have been replaced largely with a growing enthusiasm as clinicians have found the technology easy to use and helpful in guiding treatment decisions. This change was reflected in the recent interim NICE guidance on diagnosis and management of asthma [26]. Nonetheless, many uncertainties exist, and there are still large gaps in the evidence base, particularly in children.
Pre-School Wheeze and FeNO
As I reflect upon clinical practice in wheezing pre-school children, I am reminded of the aphorism popularized by Maslow: ‘If all you have is a hammer then everything looks like a nail’ [78]. Thus, for clinicians there is a temptation to label everything that wheezes as asthma as treatments are both available and of proven efficacy. Pre-school wheeze is a common problem, affecting up to a third of all children [79, 80]. The disappointing results from recent randomized controlled studies in this group of children have highlighted the lack of evidence for any effective treatments in an unrefined population of early-onset wheezers [81, 82]. There is an urgent need for improved identification of endotypes in young wheezy children, particularly those who present acutely and recurrently to hospital with viral-induced wheeze.
Current treatment strategies broadly separate children into two distinct groups: those with episodic viral symptoms or those with multiple triggers [79, 80]. In clinical practice, intuition and experience are required as parental report alone is often misleading [83]. Despite a paucity of evidence, children with recurrent symptoms are often treated speculatively with either increasing doses of ICS or LTRA. FeNO discriminates between different subtypes of wheeze and predicts the likely natural history [84, 85]. Studies are now required to determine whether FeNO plus clinical parameters can be used to predict response (or non-response) to any treatment.
Longitudinal Measurement of FeNO and Home Measurement
Studies in which longitudinal measures of FeNO have been used to drive clinical decisions have not been wholly successful in either adults or children [32]. This is probably due to a number of factors including differences in study design, sample size, methodology, the application of different FeNO algorithms and devices, and inconsistencies in predefined study endpoints. The desire to define a single value upon which treatment decisions are based is almost certainly a big limitation and works contrary to everything that is known about personalized medicine.
The (lack of) evidence here seems at odds with what is known about the biology and clinical experience. In clinical practice, a change in FeNO (in either direction) in an individual patient can give important clues about adherence (intentional or non-intentional) and even predict a likely moderate exacerbation in advance of other symptoms [57]. Daily measurement of FeNO is not practical for most clinical care and would only be possible if home monitoring was available. Home use of spirometry to enhance clinical management in children has been disappointing, largely because effort diminishes in most individuals over time [86, 87]. However, FeNO measurement is less effort dependent and may allow rational treatment adjustments to be made between clinic appointments in response to variation in airway inflammation.
Conclusion
Throughout the last decade we have appeared to be on the threshold of an era of personalized medicine for asthma. Despite the regular headlines and breakthrough discoveries, this has mostly failed to emerge and make its way into clinical practice. However, a change of approach moving away from classic phenotyping and the identification of biologically relevant endotypes is already bearing fruit. The measurement of FeNO is helpful in securing an accurate diagnosis, and data are emerging showing that FeNO-guided management is likely to reduce the risk of exacerbation. The NIOX VERO® device builds upon existing sensor technologies to provide accurate, easy, point-of-care measurement of FeNO. Its clear, user-friendly display and portability represent significant improvements over preceding devices while matching their accuracy and precision.
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Acknowledgments
Kathryn White of Cathean Ltd. medical writing services provided written and editorial support for this manuscript; the funding for this was provided by Circassia/Aerocrine. Technical data on the NIOX VERO® device were provided by Circassia/Aerocrine on request, and the manufacturer of the agent under review was also offered an opportunity to comment on the article. Changes resulting from comments received were made by the author based on their scientific and editorial merit. No funding or sponsorship was received for this study or publication of this article. The author meets the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) criteria for authorship for this manuscript and takes responsibility for the work as a whole and has given final approval for the version to be published.
Disclosures
In the last 5 years, WD Carroll has received honoraria and speaker fees from Aerocrine, Alk-Abello, GlaxoSmithKline and Novartis. He is Editor-in-Chief of a journal (Paediatrics and Child Health) that is cited in this review.
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This article is based on previously conducted studies and does not involve any new studies of human or animal subjects performed by the author.
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Carroll, W.D. NIOX VERO: Individualized Asthma Management in Clinical Practice. Pulm Ther 2, 171–188 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s41030-016-0018-y
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s41030-016-0018-y