TY - JOUR
T1 - Asthma morbidity among inner-city adolescents receiving guidelines-based therapy
T2 - Role of predictors in the setting of high adherence
AU - Gruchalla, Rebecca S.
AU - Sampson, Hugh A.
AU - Matsui, Elizabeth
AU - David, Gloria
AU - Gergen, Peter J.
AU - Calatroni, Agustin
AU - Brown, Mark
AU - Liu, Andrew H.
AU - Bloomberg, Gordon R.
AU - Chmiel, James F.
AU - Kumar, Rajesh
AU - Lamm, Carin
AU - Smartt, Ernestine
AU - Sorkness, Christine A.
AU - Steinbach, Suzanne F.
AU - Stone, Kelly D.
AU - Szefler, Stanley J.
AU - Busse, William W.
N1 - Funding Information:
Supported in whole or in part with federal funds from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, under contracts NO1-AI-25496 and NO1-AI-25482 and from the National Center for Research Resources, National Institutes of Health, under grants RR00052, M01 RR00533, M01RR0071, 5UL1RR024992-02, and 5M01RR020359-04.
PY - 2009/8
Y1 - 2009/8
N2 - Background: With the expanding effort to provide guidelines-based therapy to adolescents with asthma, attention must be directed to evaluating which factors predict future asthma control when guidelines-based management is applied. Objective: We evaluated the role of fraction of exhaled nitric oxide in parts per billion, markers of allergic sensitization, airway inflammation, and measures of asthma severity in determining future risk of asthma symptoms and exacerbations in adolescents and young adults participating in the Asthma Control Evaluation study. Methods: Five hundred forty-six inner-city residents, ages 12 through 20 years, with persistent asthma were extensively evaluated at study entry for predictors of future symptoms and exacerbations over the subsequent 46 weeks, during which guidelines-based, optimal asthma management was offered. Baseline measurements included fraction of exhaled nitric oxide in parts per billion, total IgE, allergen-specific IgE, allergen skin test reactivity, asthma symptoms, lung function, peripheral blood eosinophils, and, for a subset, airway hyperresponsiveness and sputum eosinophils. Results: The baseline characteristics we examined accounted for only a small portion of the variance for future maximum symptom days and exacerbations-11.4% and 12.6%, respectively. Future exacerbations were somewhat predicted by asthma symptoms, albuterol use, previous exacerbations, and lung function, whereas maximum symptom days were predicted, also to a modest extent, by symptoms, albuterol use, and previous exacerbations, but not lung function. Conclusion: Our findings demonstrate that the usual predictors of future disease activity have little predictive power when applied to a highly adherent population with persistent asthma that is receiving guidelines-based care. Thus, new predictors need to be identified that will be able to measure the continued fluctuation of disease that persists in highly adherent, well-treated populations such as the one studied.
AB - Background: With the expanding effort to provide guidelines-based therapy to adolescents with asthma, attention must be directed to evaluating which factors predict future asthma control when guidelines-based management is applied. Objective: We evaluated the role of fraction of exhaled nitric oxide in parts per billion, markers of allergic sensitization, airway inflammation, and measures of asthma severity in determining future risk of asthma symptoms and exacerbations in adolescents and young adults participating in the Asthma Control Evaluation study. Methods: Five hundred forty-six inner-city residents, ages 12 through 20 years, with persistent asthma were extensively evaluated at study entry for predictors of future symptoms and exacerbations over the subsequent 46 weeks, during which guidelines-based, optimal asthma management was offered. Baseline measurements included fraction of exhaled nitric oxide in parts per billion, total IgE, allergen-specific IgE, allergen skin test reactivity, asthma symptoms, lung function, peripheral blood eosinophils, and, for a subset, airway hyperresponsiveness and sputum eosinophils. Results: The baseline characteristics we examined accounted for only a small portion of the variance for future maximum symptom days and exacerbations-11.4% and 12.6%, respectively. Future exacerbations were somewhat predicted by asthma symptoms, albuterol use, previous exacerbations, and lung function, whereas maximum symptom days were predicted, also to a modest extent, by symptoms, albuterol use, and previous exacerbations, but not lung function. Conclusion: Our findings demonstrate that the usual predictors of future disease activity have little predictive power when applied to a highly adherent population with persistent asthma that is receiving guidelines-based care. Thus, new predictors need to be identified that will be able to measure the continued fluctuation of disease that persists in highly adherent, well-treated populations such as the one studied.
KW - Asthma
KW - airway inflammation
KW - allergic sensitization
KW - asthma severity
KW - exhaled nitric oxide
KW - inner-city
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jaci.2009.05.036
DO - 10.1016/j.jaci.2009.05.036
M3 - Article
C2 - 19615730
AN - SCOPUS:67651211463
SN - 0091-6749
VL - 124
SP - 213-221.e1
JO - Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology
JF - Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology
IS - 2
ER -