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Does lung function change in the months after an asthma exacerbation in children?

Does lung function change in the months after an asthma exacerbation in children?
Does lung function change in the months after an asthma exacerbation in children?
Background: There are limited data describing lung function changes in children after an asthma exacerbation. Our hypothesis was that lung function does not fully recover in children in the months following an asthma exacerbation.

Methods: We used a data set of children with asthma where lung function (including FEV1, FEV1/FVC ratio and FEF25-75) was measured at 3-month intervals over a year. Mixed-level models compared spirometry measured on two occasions 3 months apart before a single exacerbation (assessments 1 and 2) with measurements made on two occasions after the exacerbation (assessments 3 and 4), with adjustment for covariates. Changes in spirometry over a year were also analysed across those with exacerbations in no, one or more than one 3-month periods.

Results: For the 113 children who had a single exacerbation, spirometry measured at assessments 1 or 2 did not differ from measurements at assessments 3 or 4 when the whole population was considered. When stratified into tertiles by change in %FEV1 between assessments 2 and 3, those with the greater reduction were more likely to be treated with long-acting beta-agonist, but in this category, %FEV1 at assessment 4 had returned to the value at assessment 1. %FEV1 did not change over a 12-month period within and between the three exacerbation categories (n = 809).

Conclusion: One or more asthma exacerbation was not associated with a fall in lung function for the whole population. In a subset of individuals, lung function does fall after an exacerbation but returns to pre-exacerbation values after a period of months.
asthma, child, exacerbation, nitric oxide, pulmonary function testing
0905-6157
1208-1216
Martin, Joanne
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Pijnenburg, Marielle W.
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Roberts, Graham
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Pike, Katherine C.
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Petsky, Helen
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Chang, Anne B.
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Szefler, Stanley J.
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Gergen, Peter
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Vermeulen, Francoise
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Vael, Robin
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Turner, Steve
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Martin, Joanne
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Pijnenburg, Marielle W.
2fc055f2-ddbc-4bb7-801b-45ac9d8663a9
Roberts, Graham
ea00db4e-84e7-4b39-8273-9b71dbd7e2f3
Pike, Katherine C.
ead25e26-3985-4a2a-9346-a3b35f95fffa
Petsky, Helen
a41e62d7-b4c2-42f5-a8a9-777c165f30d0
Chang, Anne B.
4fd39b50-d44b-4207-83da-73e7f9ae9901
Szefler, Stanley J.
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Gergen, Peter
fa2bb4bb-c97e-47cb-af11-be85da2af9d4
Vermeulen, Francoise
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Vael, Robin
bd841c51-c08f-41c7-830b-86e28f6cbc12
Turner, Steve
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Martin, Joanne, Pijnenburg, Marielle W., Roberts, Graham, Pike, Katherine C., Petsky, Helen, Chang, Anne B., Szefler, Stanley J., Gergen, Peter, Vermeulen, Francoise, Vael, Robin and Turner, Steve (2021) Does lung function change in the months after an asthma exacerbation in children? Pediatric Allergy and Immunology, 32 (6), 1208-1216. (doi:10.1111/pai.13503).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: There are limited data describing lung function changes in children after an asthma exacerbation. Our hypothesis was that lung function does not fully recover in children in the months following an asthma exacerbation.

Methods: We used a data set of children with asthma where lung function (including FEV1, FEV1/FVC ratio and FEF25-75) was measured at 3-month intervals over a year. Mixed-level models compared spirometry measured on two occasions 3 months apart before a single exacerbation (assessments 1 and 2) with measurements made on two occasions after the exacerbation (assessments 3 and 4), with adjustment for covariates. Changes in spirometry over a year were also analysed across those with exacerbations in no, one or more than one 3-month periods.

Results: For the 113 children who had a single exacerbation, spirometry measured at assessments 1 or 2 did not differ from measurements at assessments 3 or 4 when the whole population was considered. When stratified into tertiles by change in %FEV1 between assessments 2 and 3, those with the greater reduction were more likely to be treated with long-acting beta-agonist, but in this category, %FEV1 at assessment 4 had returned to the value at assessment 1. %FEV1 did not change over a 12-month period within and between the three exacerbation categories (n = 809).

Conclusion: One or more asthma exacerbation was not associated with a fall in lung function for the whole population. In a subset of individuals, lung function does fall after an exacerbation but returns to pre-exacerbation values after a period of months.

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PAI-20-O-0611 marked up 24-02-21 UNMARKED - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 9 March 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 March 2021
Published date: 31 July 2021
Additional Information: Funding Information: We thank our colleagues Dr Maria Fritsch and Prof Thomas Frischer for sharing data from their study with us and that have been used in other analyses, but not the present analysis. We acknowledge the valuable input of Professor Johan de Jongste to two of the RCTS whose data are included in this work, and we wish him the best in retirement. We are also grateful to Dr Delapo Ayansina for his comments on the statistical approach taken for the analysis. Publisher Copyright: © 2021 EAACI and John Wiley and Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley and Sons Ltd.
Keywords: asthma, child, exacerbation, nitric oxide, pulmonary function testing

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 448963
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/448963
ISSN: 0905-6157
PURE UUID: 62e685e9-1ac2-401d-9205-1fafee4953d1
ORCID for Graham Roberts: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2252-1248

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Date deposited: 12 May 2021 16:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 06:29

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Contributors

Author: Joanne Martin
Author: Marielle W. Pijnenburg
Author: Graham Roberts ORCID iD
Author: Katherine C. Pike
Author: Helen Petsky
Author: Anne B. Chang
Author: Stanley J. Szefler
Author: Peter Gergen
Author: Francoise Vermeulen
Author: Robin Vael
Author: Steve Turner

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