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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Dec 2012
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative StudyThe utility of fractional exhaled nitric oxide suppression in the identification of nonadherence in difficult asthma.
- Diarmuid M McNicholl, Michael Stevenson, Lorcan P McGarvey, and Liam G Heaney.
- Centre for Infection and Immunity, Queen's University of Belfast, Level 8, Belfast City Hospital, Lisburn Road, Belfast, Northern Ireland BT9 7AB, UK.
- Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. 2012 Dec 1; 186 (11): 110211081102-8.
RationaleNonadherence to inhaled corticosteroid therapy (ICS) is a major contributor to poor control in difficult asthma, yet it is challenging to ascertain.ObjectivesIdentify a test for nonadherence using fractional exhaled nitric oxide (Fe(NO)) suppression after directly observed inhaled corticosteroid (DOICS) treatment.MethodsDifficult asthma patients with an elevated Fe(NO) (>45 ppb) were recruited as adherent (ICS prescription filling >80%) or nonadherent (filling <50%). They received 7 days of DOICS (budesonide 1,600 μg) and a test for nonadherence based on changes in Fe(NO) was developed. Using this test, clinic patients were prospectively classified as adherent or nonadherent and this was then validated against prescription filling records, prednisolone assay, and concordance interview.Measurements And Main ResultsAfter 7 days of DOICS nonadherent (n = 9) compared with adherent subjects (n = 13) had a greater reduction in Fe(NO) to 47 ± 21% versus 79 ± 26% of baseline measurement (P = 0.003), which was also evident after 5 days (P = 0.02) and a Fe(NO) test for nonadherence (area under the curve = 0.86; 95% confidence interval, 0.68-1.00) was defined. Prospective validation in 40 subjects found the test identified 13 as nonadherent; eight confirmed nonadherence during interview (three of whom had excellent prescription filling but did not take medication), five denied nonadherence, two had poor inhaler technique (unintentional nonadherence), and one also denied nonadherence to prednisolone despite nonadherent blood level. Twenty-seven participants were adherent on testing, which was confirmed in 21. Five admitted poor ICS adherence but of these, four were adherent with oral steroids and one with omalizumab.ConclusionsFe(NO) suppression after DOICS provides an objective test to distinguish adherent from nonadherent patients with difficult asthma. Clinical trial registered with www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT 01219036).
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