Background: Fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) is a biomarker for eosinophilic inflammation used for diagnosis and monitoring of asthma. High FeNO indicates significant airway eosinophilia and steroid-responsive airway inflammation. Some children with asthma have extremely high FeNO levels, but whether these levels represent a different asthma phenotype compared with those with mildly elevated FeNO is unclear. The objective of this study is to investigate whether the extent of high FeNO levels correlates with clinical phenotype, asthma control, comorbidity, and pulmonary function test (PFT) findings in children with asthma.Methods: Anthropometric data, daytime and nighttime symptoms, controller treatment, comorbidity, and PFT findings were retrieved from the Pediatric Pulmonology Unit database (2014-2020) and correlated with FeNO levels in pediatric asthma patients with high FeNO levels.Results: Two-hundred children and adolescents with high FeNO levels (range 36-227 ppb) were included. Within this range, higher FeNO levels positively correlated with increased daytime and nighttime symptoms (p = .013 and p = .01, respectively) and poorly controlled asthma (p = .034). A FeNO level of ≥80 ppb was the cutoff for significantly more severe daytime and nighttime symptoms and very poorly controlled asthma compared with levels <80 ppb (p = .004, p = .005, and p = .036, respectively). No correlation was found between FeNO and controller treatment, comorbidity, and PFT performance.
Conclusion:In pediatric asthma patients, high FeNO levels correlate with increased symptom severity and poor asthma control. A FeNO level of ≥80 ppb may serve as an objective indicator for severe asthma.
Compared to healthy controls, nNO is increased in children with SDB, but it is not correlated with disease severity. This is probably due to the local mechanical processes and snoring.
This data demonstrate an important variability among pediatric pulmonologists in Israel regarding the practice of pre-operative treatment of infants and children with asthma especially for the less controlled and high risk children. This is most probably explained by the paucity of evidence-based data and the lack of established guidelines. Consensus guidelines for the pre-operative management of asthmatic children are needed.
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