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June 28, 2022
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Viral infection common, leads to more acute symptoms in children with uncontrolled asthma

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Children with uncontrolled asthma who visited the ED had a higher frequency of viral infections and more acute symptoms than children with controlled asthma, according to a study published in Annals of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology.

These acute symptoms occur especially among patients with allergy, Darrell L. Dinwiddie, PhD, assistant professor in the department of pediatrics and scholar in the Clinical Translational Sciences Center at the University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center, and colleagues wrote.

Increases in mean acute asthma symptoms among patients with uncontrolled asthma and VRAE include 7.23 for patients with a positive specific IgE test and 3.24 for patients with no positive specific IgE test.
Data were derived from Dinwiddie DL, et al. Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol. 2022;doi:10.1016/j.anai.2022.06.017.

The prospective, cross-sectional study involved 120 children aged 4 to 18 years presenting with acute exacerbations of asthma at the Arkansas Children’s Hospital ED between the fall of 2014 and the fall of 2017.

The researchers collected information from questionnaires detailing past and present medical history, the Asthma Control Test (ACT) and pediatric respiratory symptoms (PRS) scores, of which researchers defined scores 1 to 5 as mild and 6 to 15 as moderate/severe. Providers also performed nasopharyngeal swabs, collected blood samples and conducted inflammatory mediator testing.

Based on ACT scores, there were 33 patients with controlled and 87 patients with uncontrolled asthma. The patients with controlled asthma had a mean PRS score of 4.839 (standard deviation [SD], 3.184), and those with uncontrolled asthma had a comparable mean PRS score of 6.205 (SD, 3.432).

The caregiver reports indicated that 73% of the patients had a history of allergy, including 67% of those with controlled asthma and 78% of those with uncontrolled asthma.

Upon analysis, 72% of the cohort had a virus at time of presentation in the ED. The most common viruses included rhinovirus (RV; 48%), respiratory syncytial virus (RSV; 18%) and influenza (15%).

Specifically, 77% of those with uncontrolled asthma and 58% of those with controlled asthma had virus-related asthma exacerbations (VRAE) at presentation.

Patients with uncontrolled asthma with VRAE had more acute symptoms based on PRS score (mean, 6.26; SD, 3.19) than those with controlled asthma and VRAE (4.41; SD, 3.39) and those without any virus (mean, 3.43; SD, 3.8), suggesting that viral infection significantly enhances acute symptoms in this population, according to the researchers.

Moreover, patients with uncontrolled allergy, VRAE and reported allergy had PRS scores that were a mean of 3.363 points higher than those with well-controlled asthma, allergy and virus (P = .041).

Among patients with uncontrolled asthma and VRAE, those with total IgE greater than 371 IU/dL had modestly higher acute symptoms with a mean PRS score of 7.75 (SD, 3.32) compared with those with lower total IgE, with a mean PRS score of 4.12 (SD, 5.07).

Patients with uncontrolled asthma, VRAE and a positive specific IgE test had an increase in mean acute asthma symptoms (7.23; SD, 3.14) compared with those with uncontrolled asthma, VRAE and no positive IgE test (3.24; SD, 1.86).

Also, patients with uncontrolled asthma had higher mean nasal periostin levels (13.98 pg/mL; SD, 18.39) during an exacerbation compared with those with controlled asthma (4.39 pg/mL; SD, 4.09; P = .028). Patients with more severe PRS scores had higher periostin levels as well, the researchers wrote, adding that levels of the protein might be a good indicator of asthma control prior to exacerbations.

Overall, the researchers concluded, there is an association between uncontrolled asthma and higher frequency of viral infections when presenting at the ED, with more acute symptoms among those with VRAE and allergy.