Paediatric Respiratory Reviews
Volume 9, Issue 2 , Pages 127-131, June 2008

The value of FeNO measurement in asthma management: the motion for Yes, it's NO – or, the wrong end of the Stick!

  • Andrew Bush

      Affiliations

    • Imperial School of Medicine at National Heart and Lung Institute, London, UK
    • Royal Brompton Hospital, London, UK
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Department of Paediatric Respiratory Medicine, Royal Brompton Hospital, Sydney Street, London SW3 6NP, UK. Tel.: +44 0207 351 8232; Fax: +44 0207 351 8763.
  • ,
  • Ernst Eber

      Affiliations

    • Respiratory and Allergic Disease Division, Paediatric Department, Medical University of Graz, Austria

Summary 

The utility of measurements of exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) will likely depend on context, being most helpful in moderate and severe asthma, rather than mild asthmatics and community based studies. Atopy on its own is a cause of elevation in FeNO. Adult and paediatric studies have clearly established that measurement of some aspect of airway inflammation is part of state of the art management of asthma, but it is as yet unclear which of several techniques is most useful. The relationship between FeNO and sputum eosinophils is relatively loose, but this does not preclude it being a useful test in clinical practice. In fact, there are only poor correlations between sputum, proximal mucosal, and distal eosinophils, and the importance of these different compartments is unclear. A low FeNO in the setting of supposedly poorly controlled asthma should cast doubt on the diagnosis. We certainly cannot treat an isolated elevation in FeNO, which may be due to a simple viral cold, or constitutional. If FeNO is elevated, particularly if asthma is uncontrolled, it suggests an imbalance between anti-inflammatory therapy and pro-inflammatory environmental influences. Inadequate anti-inflammatory therapy may be due to the prescribed dose being too low; the drug delivery device not being used correctly; or the medication not being taken. Adverse pro-inflammatory environmental influences driving up FeNO include IgE and non-IgE mediated allergen sensitivity in the home, and even in the child's school. Novel technology allows home monitoring of FeNO, but the role of these devices is less clear. Although more data is needed properly to define the role of FeNO measurements in clinical practice, there is sufficient data already published to conclude that ‘inflammometry’ is an important part of asthma management at the more severe end of the spectrum, and that FeNO measurements are probably the most useful at the moment.

Keywords: nitric oxide, eosinophil, induced sputum, bronchoalveolar lavage, exhaled breath condensate, airway inflammation

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PII: S1526-0542(07)00133-9

doi:10.1016/j.prrv.2007.12.006

Paediatric Respiratory Reviews
Volume 9, Issue 2 , Pages 127-131, June 2008