Respiratory medicine | 2019
Association between exhaled nitric oxide and nasal polyposis in severe asthma.
Abstract
BACKGROUND\nAlthough several contributions exist on the role of fractional exhaled NO (FeNO) in diagnosis and management of asthma, no studies have analysed the association between FeNO in patients with severe asthma and nasal polyposis.\n\n\nAIM\nWe investigated the potential association between FeNO and the presence of nasal polyps in patients affected by severe asthma.\n\n\nMETHODS\nStudy population included 93 severe asthmatic adult patients consecutively enrolled from four Italian specialist clinic centres from 2015 to 2018. In these patients lung function, asthma control, FeNO, blood eosinophils and CT scan of paranasal sinuses were evaluated.\n\n\nRESULTS\nNasal polyposis was observed in 28 patients (30%). Among univariate predictors (lower BMI, higher FeNO, eosinophil and neutrophil count), recursive partitioning analysis identified as best predictors of nasal polyposis high values of eosinophil count (≥6.5% or >420\u202fcells/mm3) and FeNO (≥39\u202fppb). The 40 patients with low eosinophil count and FeNO had a significant lower occurrence of nasal polyposis than those with higher values (8% vs 58%; p\u202f<\u202f0.001). The stratification algorithm had a good performance in discriminate patients with and without nasal polyposis (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.768).\n\n\nCONCLUSIONS\nOur results show that FeNO might improve to detect nasal polyposis in patients with severe asthma and a low level of blood eosinophils counts, identifying individuals with high susceptibility to this condition.