Guia02 PDF
Guia02 PDF
Guia02 PDF
Albert L. Sheffer, MD
Brigham and Womens Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Wan-Cheng Tan, MD
National University Hospital
Singapore
John Warner, MD
Southampton General Hospital
South Hampton, London, UK
Ann Woolcock, MD ( February, 2001)
Institute of Respiratory Medicine
Sydney, Australia
Consultant Contributors
Peter J. Barnes, DM, DSc, FRCP
Imperial College
London, UK
Richard Beasley, MD
Wellington School of Medicine
Wellington South, New Zealand
Hans Bisgaard, MD
Copenhagen University Hospital
Copenhagen, Denmark
Homer A. Boushey, Jr. MD
University of California SF
San Francisco, California, USA
Adnan Custovic, MD
Wythenshawe Hospital
Manchester, UK
J. Mark FitzGerald, MD
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Robert Lemanske, MD
University of Wisconsin Hospital
Madison, Wisconsin, USA
Fernando Martinez, MD
University of Arizona
Tucson, Arizona, USA
Ron Neville, MD
General Practicioner, Dundee
Dundee, Scotland, UK
Mike Silverman, MD
University of Leicester
Leicester, UK
iii
Virginia Taggart
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
Bethesda, Maryland, USA
Charles K. Naspitz, MD
President, Latin American Society of
Pediatric Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology
Escola Paulista de Medicina
Sao Paulo, Brazil
Hugo Neffen, MD
President, Argentine Association of
Allergy and Clinical Immunology
Clinica Alergia E Immunologie
Cordoba, Argentina
Sankei Nishima, MD
Japanese Society of Pediatric Allergy and
Clinical Immunology
National Minami-Fukuoka Hospital
Fukuoka, Japan
Ken Ohta, MD, PhD
Teikyo University School of Medicine
Tokyo, Japan
Arjun Padmanabhan, MD
Fort Trivandrum, Kerala, India.
Harish K. Pemde, MD
Honorary Secretary, Indian Academy of Pediatrics
BJRM Hospital
Delhi, India
Klaus Rabe, MD, PhD
Leiden University
Leiden, The Netherlands
Josep Roca, MD
President, European Respiratory Society
Barcelona, Spain
Gail Shapiro, MD
President, American Academy of Allergy,
Asthma and Immunology
University of Washington
Seattle, Washington, USA
Raj B. Singh, MD
Apollo Hospital
Chennai, India
Jeyaindran Sinnadurai, MD
Hospital Kuala Lumpur
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Surinder K. Jinda, MD
Chandigarh, India
Andrzej Szczeklik, MD
Copernicus Academy of Medicine
Krakow, Poland
Allen P. Kaplan, MD
President, World Allergy Organization
Medical College of South Carolina
Charleston, South Carolina, USA
Adam Wanner, MD
President, American Thoracic Society
University of Miami
Miami, Florida, USA
iv
PREFACE
Asthma is a serious global health problem. People of all
ages in countries throughout the world are affected by this
chronic airway disorder that can be severe and sometimes
fatal. The prevalence of asthma is increasing everywhere,
especially among children. Asthma is a significant burden,
not only in terms of health care costs but also of lost
productivity and reduced participation in family life.
During the past two decades, we have witnessed many
scientific advances that have improved our understanding
of asthma and our ability to manage it effectively.
However, the diversity of national health care service
systems and variations in the availability of asthma
therapies require that recommendations for asthma care
be adapted to local conditions throughout the global
community. In addition, public health officials require
information about the costs of asthma care, how to
effectively manage this chronic disease, and best
education methods in order to develop asthma care
services and programs responsive to the particular needs
and circumstances within their countries.
Accordingly, in 1993, the National Heart, Lung, and Blood
Institute collaborated with the World Health Organization to
convene a workshop that led to the Global Strategy for
Asthma Management and Prevention, a Workshop Report
that presented a comprehensive plan to manage asthma
with the goal of reducing chronic disability and premature
deaths while allowing patients with asthma to lead
productive and fulfilling lives.
At the same time, a program called the Global Initiative for
Asthma (GINA) was implemented to develop a network of
individuals, organizations, and public health officials to
disseminate information about the care of patients with
asthma while at the same time assuring a mechanism to
incorporate the results of scientific investigations into
asthma care. Three publications based on the Workshop
Report were prepared to promote international
collaboration and dissemination of information:
vi
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION ..............................................................xi
REFERENCES ................................................................21
vii
CLINICAL DIAGNOSIS....................................................68
History and Measurements of Symptoms ..................68
Physical Examination ..................................................68
Measurements of Lung Function ................................69
Spirometry ..............................................................69
Peak expiratory flow................................................70
Airway hyperresponsiveness ..................................71
REFERENCES ................................................................59
viii
REFERENCES ................................................................90
ix
ASSESSMENT OF SEVERITY OF
THE EXACERBATION ..............................................133
PREVENTION ..............................................................174
BURDEN OF ASTHMA..................................................174
DIAGNOSIS AND MONITORING..................................174
ASTHMA GUIDELINES ................................................174
PATIENT EDUCATION AND DELIVERY OF CARE ....174
SEVERE ASTHMA ........................................................175
ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE ..........................................175
ASTHMA MANAGEMENT ............................................175
NEW APPROACHES TO ASTHMA TREATMENT ......175
INTRODUCTION
xi
FUTURE CHALLENGES
In spite of the efforts to improve asthma care that have
taken place over the past decade, a majority of patients
have not benefited from advances in asthma treatment
and many lack even the rudiments of care. A challenge for
the next several years is to work with primary health care
providers and public health officials in various countries to
design and evaluate asthma care programs to meet local
needs. The GINA Executive Committee recognizes that
this is a difficult task and, to aid in this work, has formed a
Dissemination Committee. The Dissemination Committee
will work to enhance communication with asthma
specialists, primary-care health professionals, other health
care workers, and patient support organizations. The
Committee will also examine barriers to implementation of
the recommendations in this Report, especially the
challenges that arise in primary-care settings and in
developing countries.
In an effort to evaluate new scientific findings and their impact on management recommendations made in the
Workshop Report, the GINA Executive Committee has
formed a GINA Scientific Committee. This Committee will
examine new clinical trial publications in peer-reviewed
journals. As new findings are identified that affect recommendations made in the GINA publications, they will be
described on the GINA website (http://www.ginasthma.com)
Developments in asthma prevention are promising and
research in this important area is a priority. There are
many other important areas for investigation, one of which
is continued epidemiologic studies. One of our colleagues,
Dr. Ann Woolcock, who devoted much of her career to the
study of asthma through epidemiologic studies in large
populations, died on February 17, 2001. Her contributions
to asthma research, and the GINA program, will be greatly
missed.
METHODS USED TO DEVELOP THIS REPORT
xii
Sources of
Evidence
Nonrandomized trials.
Observational studies.
REFERENCES
1. Jadad AR, Moher M, Browman GP, Booker L, Sigouis
C, Fuentes M, et al. Systematic reviews and
metanalyses on treatment of asthma: critical
evaluation. BMJ 2000;320:537-40.
Definition
xiii
CHAPTER
1
DEFINITION
KEY POINTS:
Asthmairrespective of the severityis a chronic
inflammatory disorder of the airways.
Airway inflammation is associated with airway
hyperresponsiveness, airflow limitation, and
respiratory symptoms.
Airway inflammation produces four forms of airflow
limitation: acute bronchoconstriction, swelling of the
airway wall, chronic mucus plug formation, and
airway wall remodeling.
Atopy, the production of abnormal amounts of IgE
antibodies in response to common environmental
allergens, is the strongest identifiable predisposing
factor for developing asthma.
Considering asthma an inflammatory disorder has
implications for the diagnosis, prevention, and
management of the disorder.
Hypertrophy of smooth
muscle
Subbasement membrane
thickening
Submucus gland
hyperplasia
and goblet cell
Vasodilation
DEFINITION OF ASTHMA
Many attempts have been made to define asthma in terms
of its impact on lung functionthat is, airflow limitation, its
reversibility, and airway hyperresponsiveness1. However,
these attempts have been frustrated by a lack of
understanding of the mechanisms involved in asthma.
2 DEFINITION
Desquamation
of epithelium
Mucus plug
Edema of mucosa
and submucosa,
inflitration with
eosinophils, neutrophils,
mast cells, and T cells
with both large and small airways being filled with plugs
comprised of a mixture of mucus, serum proteins,
inflammatory cells, and cell debris. Microscopically there
is usually extensive infiltration of the airway lumen and wall
with eosinophils and lymphocytes accompanied by
vasodilatation, evidence of microvascular leakage, and
epithelial disruption (Figure 1-1)4. Trophic changes
identified in postmortem studies include smooth muscle
hypertrophy, new vessel formation, increased numbers of
epithelial goblet cells, and the deposition of interstitial
collagens beneath the epithelium (basement membrane
thickening), changes which may arise as the result of
injury and may lead to remodeling. Thus, there is
evidence of both acute and chronic inflammation that is
irregularly distributed throughout the airways, including the
smallest airways (less than 2 mm in diameter), and the
parenchyma5. This wide distribution of inflammation
carries implications for delivery of inhaled medications to
the appropriate areas of the lung.
Most pathologic studies of living subjects with asthma
have employed endobronchial biopsies of patients with
mild disease. Generally, these tissue findings reflect those
seen in autopsy. However, studies of patients with more
severe asthma, in both acute and chronic settings, suggest
that in addition to eosinophils and lymphocytes,
neutrophils are also present and may play a contributing
role in this more severe disease6. These reports support
earlier studies that suggest neutrophils dominate the lungs
of people with asthma who die suddenly of the disease7.
The relationship between the pathological changes and
clinical indices has been difficult to obtain. Because there
are no well-validated noninvasive measurements of airway
inflammation in asthma, clinicians have had to rely on
surrogate indices such as sputum eosinophils and exhaled
nitric oxide. Clinicians have long recognized an
association of sputum and blood eosinophilia with asthma8,
although in parts of the world where parasitic disease is
endemic, these tests are of limited value. The application
of fiberoptic bronchoscopy to obtain lavage and tissue
directly from the airways has provided the most convincing
evidence linking disordered lung function to a specific type
of mucosal inflammation9. In all forms of asthma, there is
evidence to implicate mast cells and eosinophils as the
key effector cells of the inflammatory responsethrough
their capacity to secrete a wide range of preformed and
newly generated mediators that act on the airways both
directly and indirectly through neural mechanisms10.
The application of immunological and molecular biological
techniques to asthma has placed T lymphocytes as pivotal
cells in orchestrating the inflammatory response through
Figure 1-2. Mechanisms of Acute and Chronic Inflammation in Asthma and Remodeling Processes 3
Reprinted with permission from the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.
4 DEFINITION
RELATIONSHIP OF AIRWAY
PATHOLOGY TO DISORDERED
LUNG FUNCTION
Airway hyperresponsiveness and acute airflow limitation
are the two predominant manifestations of disordered
lung function.
Airway Hyperresponsiveness
An important component of asthma underlying the
instability of the airways is the presence of an exaggerated
bronchoconstrictor response to a wide variety of
exogenous and endogenous stimuli. Several
mechanisms have been proposed to explain this airway
hyperresponsiveness, but evidence suggests that
airway inflammation is a key factor. The state of
hyperresponsiveness in which the airways narrow too
easily and too much in response to many different
provoking stimuli is sometimes referred to as nonspecific,
but in reality the stimuli often used to reveal it act by highly
specific mechanisms. They may be classified as causing
airflow limitation directly by stimulating airway smooth
muscle (e.g., methacholine and histamine); indirectly by
releasing pharmacologically active substances from
mediator-secreting cells, such as mast cells (exercise
hyper- and hypo-osmolar stimuli) or nonmyelinated
sensory neurons (sulfur dioxide and bradykinin); or by a
combination of both mechanisms (Figure 1-3 and
Figure 1-4)21.
In the laboratory, airway hyperresponsiveness can be
quantified by constructing stimulus-response curves and
describing the position and shape of these either in terms
of the provocative dose or concentration of agonist producing a specified fall in lung function, usually in forced
Normal
20
Asthma
Direct agonists
e.g. Methacholine
Airway with
limited airflow
Nerve
SO2
Bradykinin
Mediators
Mast Cell
Printed with permission from Dr. Stephen T. Holgate.
Note: Each FEV1 curve represents the highest of three repeat measurements.
6 DEFINITION
Acute bronchoconstriction
(contraction of smooth muscle)
2.
3.
15.
16.
17.
18.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
19.
9.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
10
11.
12.
13.
14.
8 DEFINITION
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
35.
36.
37.
38.
39.
40.
DEFINITION
10 DEFINITION
CHAPTER
2
BURDEN OF
ASTHMA
KEY POINTS:
Asthma is one of the most common chronic diseases
worldwide, imposing a substantial social burden on
both children and adults.
DEFINITIONS RELATED TO
ASTHMA EPIDEMIOLOGY
In this section, the terms used in asthma epidemiology in
this report are defined, methods of classifying populations
12 BURDEN OF ASTHMA
13
PREVALENCE OF ASTHMA
Children
The prevalence of asthma symptoms in children varies
from 0 to 30 percent in different populations. Figure 2-1
shows illustrative (not comprehensive) data on the
prevalence of current asthma, diagnosed asthma, recent
wheeze (symptoms in the last 12 months), airway
hyperresponsiveness, and atopy in children. There are
many data available for Australia and England, but fewer
data for other countries other than those derived from
questions on wheeze in the ISAAC study13.
Study year
Number
Age
Current asthma
Australia
82
86
91-93
1,487
1,217
6,394
8 to 10
8 to 11
8 to 11
5.4
6.7
10.3
Australian
Aborigines
91
215
7 to 12
0.1
New
Zealand
81
88
89
813
1,084
873
9
6 to 11
12
11.1#
9.1
8.1#
England
93?
847
8 to 11
Germany
95-96
95-96
1,887
725
9 to 11
5 to 7
89-90
1,287
9 to 11
Denmark
92-93
Spain
744
8 to 10
2,842
13 to 14
92
647
12 to 20
Kenya
91
402
9 to 12
95
507
12 to 15
86-97
790
Austria
US (Tucson)
Diagnosed asthma
AHR
Atopy (SPT)
Ref
21.7
26.5
24.3
10.1(H)
10.0(H)
18.0(H)
38
31.9
39.3
15
15
16
8.4
2.8(H)
20.5
17
27.0
14.2
16.8
22
17.9
22.0(M)
20.0(H)
12.0(E)
45.8+
18
19
20
10
23
31(M)++
11.10
17.3
30.2
7.9
4.1
3.4
Recent wheeze
8.1
5.9
8.4(C)
6.6
4
11
3.3
11.4
16(S)
14
32.8
25
26
49
27
28
14(S)
29
40
*Data are illustrative of the variation of childhood asthma prevalence and not a comprehensive list.
Current asthma: airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) + wheeze in the last 12 months; #: indicates a figure calculated from published data; diagnosed
asthma: asthma ever diagnosed; H: histamine; M: methacholine; E: exercise; S: saline; C: cold; SPT: skin prick test; +: 2 mm wheal; ++: >12.2 mol.
All figures relating to asthma prevalence are expressed as a percentage of the population tested.
14 BURDEN OF ASTHMA
24
2.3(E)
10.7(E)
26.8
22
23
11.4(E)
1.1
42.2
21
32.1
20.3
(RAST)
20.6
30
Israel
ADULTS
Australia
Belgium
Finland
Study year
Number
769
795
Age
82
92
75
89
77
91
66
90
82
92
89
94
80
89
435
4,335
3,059
1,655
2,323
5,556
5,801
3,403
4,034
834
802
8 to 11
8 to 11
12 to 18
12 to 18
12 to 18
12 to 18
6 to 7
6 to 7
5 to 11
5 to 11
9 to 11
9 to 11
7 to 12
7 to 12
81
90
78
91
75
81
90
553
1,028
605
1,650
14,468
15,317
12,219
18 to 55
18 to 55
17 to 31
17 to 31
33 to 59
33 to 59
33 to 59
Current asthma
6.5
9.9
0.1 (self-reported)
2.8 (self-reported)
3.9 (self-reported)
6.1 (self-reported)
3.45 (self-reported)
9.4 (self-reported)
Diagnosed asthma
Ref
12.9
19.3
26.2*
34.0
32
33
6
6
34
34
35
35
36
36
37
37
38
38
10.2
19.6
9 (asthma ever)
13 (asthma ever)
5.4
6.3
1.2
3.7
9.0
16.3
2.4
7.2
2
2.1
3
39
39
40
40
41
41
41
BURDEN OF ASTHMA
15
MORTALITY
Mortality data are of limited value because they are
available for relatively few countries, and they are rarely
available for different populations within the countries.
However, trends in mortality may give an indication of
the way a country is responding to the increasing burden
of asthma.
Study year
AHR (M)
Atopy
Australia
92-93
Number
745
20-44
Age
11.9
28.1
35.6
56.4
Ref
(Lismore)
91-92
814
18-55
5.4
17.9
18.8
7.4 {5.6-9.2}
44
42
(Wagga Wagga)
91-92
711
18-55
5.6
18.9
18.6
8.6 {6.5-10.7}
44.3
42
39
42
(Busselton)
81
553
18-55
5.4
9.5
17.5
10.6
38.5
(Busselton)
90
1,028
18-55
6.3
16.3
28.8
7.9 (H)
41.2
39
Australian Aborigines
90-91
715
20-84
3.3
11.1
7.4
35
43
New Zealand
92-93
1,254
20-44
Belgium
78
91
51,107
44,305
17-31
17-31
England
92-93
92-93
1,198
1,802
20-44
20-44
1.2
3.7
10.5
26.6(M) {22.7-27.6}
2.4
7.2
1.2
3.7
12
12
27
30.3
19.9 {15.5-27.6}
16.5
44 {42-45}
5, 44, 45
40
40
40 {38-43}
28
5, 44, 45
46
Germany
92-93
1,608
20-44
2.7
17
14 {12-17.5}
35 {34-36}
5, 44, 45
Spain
92-93
1,331
20-44
22
10.5 {3.4-21.3}
34.2 {15-43}
5, 44, 45
France
92-93
1,750
20-44
14.4
18.5 {16.3-22.8}
35 {28-42}
5, 44, 45
US
92-93
337
20-44
7.1
25.7
18.3
42
5, 44, 45
9.5
10 {9.3-11.6}
26 {24-30}
5, 44, 45
22
5, 44, 45
25
5, 44, 45
46.9
47
47
16.4
24.3
48
Italy
92-93
717
20-44
Iceland
92-93
469
20-44
3.4
18
Greece
92-93
309
20-44
2.9
16
Tristan da Cunha
93
282
3-94
Switzerland
91
9,651
18-60
56
6.9
7.2
Current asthma: airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) + wheeze in the last 12 months; Diagnosed asthma: asthma ever diagnosed;
H: histamine; M: methacholine.
Data are presented as percentage prevalence, with 95% confidence interval in brackets.
16 BURDEN OF ASTHMA
Asthma
Mortality Ratea
Prevalence of
Severe Asthmab
Ratio
Australia
0.86
8.3
0.10
Canada
0.25
8.0
0.03
England and
Wales
0.52
8.7
0.06
Finland
0.21
3.1
0.07
France
0.40
2.8
0.14
Italy
0.23
2.0
0.12
Japan
0.73
2.1
0.35
New Zealand
0.50
8.0
0.06
Sweden
0.12
2.0
0.06
United States
0.47
10.0
0.05
West Germany
0.44
5.0
0.08
the mortality rates are high (as in older adults in Japan and
Germany), the numbers are probably much less accurate
because many patients suffering from chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease may be described as having asthma
on the death certificate.
Studies of asthma mortality since 1960 show that mortality
rates in the US and Canada are lower than in other
countries, although there are wide variations in mortality
rates within the US63. In the 1990s asthma deaths
increased in selected subpopulations in the US, primarily
among blacks in inner-city areas63. In the 1960s there was
an increase in death rates in New Zealand, Australia, and
the UK, and a decade later a second epidemic of deaths
was observed in New Zealand64. The increase in asthma
deaths in New Zealand has primarily been observed
among the Maori64. Death rates in Japan have been
relatively stable since the 1960s. In most countries
asthma deaths occur predominantly outside the hospital.
Several hypotheses in addition to artifacts in methodology
have been proposed to explain the failure of most
countries to decrease asthma mortality below about 0.4 to
0.6 per 100,00065. These include:
Increasing severity of asthma. An overall increase in the
severity of asthma increases the pool of patients at risk
for death.
MORBIDITY
Morbidity refers to the impact of a disease (hospitalization,
etc.) and the degree to which it impairs a persons quality
of life. The factors underlying increased asthma morbidity
may include increased severity of the disease, undertreatment of patients with anti-inflammatory therapy,
over-reliance on bronchodilators, and delay in seeking
medical help during an exacerbation. Poverty in affluent
countries also appears to be a risk factor for increased
morbidity63.
Some data exist concerning the severity of asthma and the
degree to which it affects individuals lifestyle in various
populations. Australian studies have shown that although
8 to 11 percent of children and 6 to 7 percent of adults
have current asthma, about 4 percent of all age groups
have moderate or severe asthma that requires regular
medications42. A comprehensive, multinational survey in
Europe68 and surveys from the US69,70 provide data on the
effects of asthma management and treatment on a variety
of asthma outcomes.
BURDEN OF ASTHMA
17
Quality of Life
More accurate methods of measuring morbidity, such as
measurements of quality of life, are needed. Asthma is a
chronic disorder that can place considerable restrictions on
the physical, emotional, and social aspects of the lives of
patients and may have an impact on their careers. There
may be considerable absence from school or work68,71,72.
The importance of emotional factors and restriction on
social life may be greater when symptoms are not
adequately controlled. The underlying disorder by itself
may cause distress, especially when its natural history is
unpredictable. Inappropriate medical care can increase
these difficulties. Many people with asthma do not
completely appreciate the impact of the disease on their
social life and claim they lead normal lives either
because normality may be based on adjustments and
restrictions that they have already incorporated into their
lifestyles or because they deny their restrictions, wanting
to live like others.
General health status scales such as the Sickness Impact
Profile with 136 items73 have been used in the assessment
of asthma. A compromise between lengthy questionnaires
and single-item measures of health has also been
proposed. The Nottingham Health Profile with 45 items
and the SF-36 (a Measures of Sickness short-form general
health survey) are now widely used and validated. The
SF-36 Health Status Questionnaire is based on 36 items
selected to represent eight health concepts (physical,
social, and role functioning; mental health; health
perceptions; energy/fatigue; pain; and general health)74. A
study was carried out using the SF-36 in patients with
asthma of variable severity, and it was shown that most
items correlated with the severity of asthma75, suggesting
that such scales may be used to compare different
populations. Specific quality-of-life scales include
questions targeted to asthma; many have been employed
in clinical trials76-78. The Tayside Asthma Assessment
Stamp (for patients medical records) can be used in
routine consultations to document morning, night-time, and
exercise symptoms; peak flow; inhaler compliance; and
days lost from work, school, or play due to asthma79,80.
An electronic version of this stamp is displayed at
http://www.srs.org.uk.
Hospital Admissions
The relationships among changes in prevalence, hospitalization rates, and mortality are unclear31,56. Increased
hospital admission rates seen in some countries during the
1980s81,82 do not appear to be due to a change in diagnosis, or to admission of patients with less severe
18 BURDEN OF ASTHMA
Childhood
The predominant feature associated with asthma in
children is allergy. An Australian study, for example,
indicated that sensitivity and exposure to domestic mites
represents the major predictor of asthma92. The role of
viral infections in the etiology of asthma is not clear. In
atopic children, viral infections are clearly important in
asthma exacerbations, but there are few data that suggest
they directly cause the onset of asthma. By age 8, a
proportion of children develop airway hyperresponsiveness
and the associated symptoms of moderate to severe
persistent asthma, while others continue to have mild intermittent asthma93. Many children with asthma also suffer
from allergic rhinitis as documented in the ISAAC Study1.
Lung growth appears to be relatively normal in most
children with asthma, but it can be reduced throughout
childhood and adolescence in those with severe and
persistent symptoms. A longitudinal study of children in
New Zealand concluded that growth as measured by
spirometric tests of lung function was impaired among
those children with airway hyperresponsiveness and/or
allergy to domestic mite or cat allergen94. Similar studies in
Australia showed that airway hyperresponsiveness in
children resulted in reduced lung function as measured by
spirometry at the age of 1895. Whether this reflects a
failure to reach full growth because of asthma or simply
the presence of congenitally small lungs is unknown. It
must be noted that most of the studies performed to date
that have shown reduced lung growth in children with
asthma have measured lung function prior to
bronchodilator therapy, and therefore have simply
measured reversible airways obstruction. Most studies
that have measured post-bronchodilator airway function
have shown very little long-term effect of asthma on
growth of lung function.
The long-term prognosis of childhood asthma is now of
major concern. It has often been suggested that childhood
asthma will disappear when the patient reaches
adulthood. Epidemiological evidence gives less cause for
19
SOCIOECONOMICS
20 BURDEN OF ASTHMA
REFERENCES
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
BURDEN OF ASTHMA
21
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
14.
15.
16.
17.
22 BURDEN OF ASTHMA
30.
43.
31.
44.
32.
45.
33.
46.
34.
47.
48.
49.
50.
51.
52.
53.
35.
36.
37.
38.
39.
40.
41.
42.
BURDEN OF ASTHMA
23
54.
67.
55.
68.
69.
70.
71.
72.
73.
74.
Stewart AL, Hays RD, Ware JE Jr. The MOS shortform general health survey. Reliability and validity in
a patient population. Med Care 1988;26:724-35.
75.
76.
77.
78.
79.
80.
56.
57.
58.
59.
60.
61.
62.
63.
64.
65.
66.
24 BURDEN OF ASTHMA
81.
82.
83.
84.
85.
86.
87.
94.
95.
96.
97.
98.
99.
88.
89.
90.
91.
92.
93.
BURDEN OF ASTHMA
25
26 BURDEN OF ASTHMA
CHAPTER
3
RISK FACTORS
KEY POINTS:
Risk factors for asthma may be classified as host
factors that predispose individuals to or protect them
from developing asthma, and environmental factors
that influence the susceptibility to the development of
asthma in predisposed individuals, precipitate
asthma exacerbations, and/or cause symptoms to
persist.
Host factors include the genetic predisposition to the
development of either asthma or atopy, airway
hyperresponsiveness, gender, and race.
Environmental factors. Exposure to allergens and
occupational sensitizers, viral and bacterial
infections, diet, tobacco smoke, socioeconomic
status, and family size are the main environmental
factors that influence the susceptibility to the
development of asthma in predisposed individuals.
Exposure to allergens and respiratory (viral)
infections are the main factors responsible for
causing exacerbations of asthma and/or the
persistence of symptoms.
28 RISK FACTORS
HOST FACTORS
Genetic Predisposition to the Development of Asthma
There is good evidence to indicate that asthma is a
heritable disease. A number of studies have shown an
increased prevalence of asthma and the phenotype
associated with asthma among the offspring of subjects
with asthma compared to the offspring of subjects without
asthma1-4. The phenotype associated with asthma can be
defined by subjective measures (e.g., symptoms),
objective measures (e.g., airway hyperresponsiveness or
serum IgE level), or both. Because of the complex clinical
presentation of asthma, the genetic basis of the disease is
Figure 3-2. Summary of Genetic Linkage and Association Studies for Asthma, Allergic Rhinitis,
Atopic Dermatitis, and Atopy 6
Locus*
Candidate genes
Asthma^
Allergic rhinitis
Atopic dermatitis
Atopy
2 pter
2q33
3p24.2-p22
4q35
5p15
5q23-q33
Unknown
8
8
CD28, IGBP5
9
CCR4
10
IRF2
11
11
Unknown
9
IL-3, IL-4, IL-5, IL-13,
9
14
15
IL-9, CSF 2, GRL1,
10
16
ADRB2, CD14
12, 13
13, 17, 18, 19
6p21.1-p23
HLAD, TNFA
8, 9
8, 11, 19, 20
7p15.2
TCRG, IL-6
11
11
7q35
TCRB
13
9q31.1
TMOD
8
8
11p15
Unknown
9
11q13
FCER1B,
11
21
11
CC16/CC10
16, 20
15, 16, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26
12q14STAT 6, IFNG,
8
27
8
q24.33
SCF,
27
28
IGF1, LTA4H,
28
NFYB, BTG1
9, 10, 29
13q14.3-qter
TPT1
9, 30
11, 19, 31
14q11.2-q13
TCRA/D, MCC
9
32
33, 34
14q32
IgHG
35
16p12.1
IL4R
36
16q22.1-q24.2
Unknown
11
11
17p11.1-q11.2
C-C chemokine cluster
9
19q13
CD22
9, 10
21q21
Unknown
9, 10
Xq28/Yq28
IL9R
37
12q
NOS1
38
5q31
2-agonist receptor
39
11q13
GSTP1
40
CD, Cell differentation antigen; IGBP, insulin-like growth factor-binding protein; CCR, C-C chemokine receptor; IRF, interferon regulatory factor; CSF,
colony-stimulating factor; GRL, glucocorticoid receptor; ADR, adrenergic receptor; TCR, T-cell receptor; TMOD, tropomyosin-binding protein; STAT6,
signal transducer and activator of transcription 6; SCF, stem-cell factor; IGF, insulin-like growth factor; LTA4H, leukotriene A4 hydrolase; NFYB, the
subunit of nuclear factor-Y; BTG, B-cell translocation gene; TPT1, tumor protein, translationally controlled 1; IgHG, immunoglobulin heavy chain G.
*Includes the full regions for which evidence of linkage has been observed.
^In general, asthma was defined as a qualitative (yes/no) trait in most studies; the definition of asthma included airway hyperresponsivness as either a
qualitative or a quantitative trait (e.g., log e slope).
The definition of atopy includes individual measurements or a composite measurement of total IgE, spIgE (RAST or skin-prick test). The study by
Hizawa et al. reported novel evidence for linkage of spIgE response to Der p to 2 novel regions, 2q21-q23 and 8p23-p21; however, these findings have
not been replicated by others.
Reprinted with permission from the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.
29
30 RISK FACTORS
Figure 3-3. Prevalence of Skin-Prick-Test Positivity and Asthma in Population-Based Studies Comparing
Different Populations or the Same Population Over Time
Reference
Population origin
Number of subjects
Age
4,008
1,055
4,451
2,335
321
471
647
1,339
904
770
850
926
794
805
1,159
731
861
2,194
319
337
18-65
18-65
9-11
9-11
16
14
16
8-11
8-11
8-11
8-11
8-11
8-11
8-11
20-44
20-44
5-70+
5-70+
20-44
20-44
28*
10*
37
18
64
58
49
42
42
40
40
39
37
35
36
30
12*
4*
26*
17*
4
2
9
7
3
7
2
24
28
31
29
38
30
31
2
1
1
4
7
4
553
1,028
718
873
769
795
1,492
2,311
18-55
18-55
8-10
8-10
8-10
8-10
9-11
9-11
39
41
28
29
30
35
19
27
9
16
9
38
13
30
4
4
Airway Hyperresponsiveness
Gender and Asthma
Airway hyperresponsiveness, a state in which the airways
narrow too easily and too much in response to provoking
stimuli, is a risk factor for asthma. The condition has a
heritable component and is closely related to serum IgE
levels and airway inflammation. A tendency to produce an
elevated level of total serum IgE is co-inherited with airway
hyperresponsiveness, and a gene governing airway
hyperresponsiveness is located near a major locus that
regulates serum IgE levels on chromosome 5q29.
Asymptomatic airway hyperresponsiveness to histamine is
a risk factor for asthma30. However, it is not yet clear
whether the development of airway hyperresponsiveness
precedes, coincides with, or follows the development of
symptoms of asthma. Interestingly, asymptomatic airway
31
32 RISK FACTORS
33
34 RISK FACTORS
Occupational Sensitizers
An extensive list of occupational sensitizing agents has
been reported94; Figure 3-4 provides an abbreviated
listing. A continuously updated list on the Asmanet
website (http://asmanet.com) currently includes at least
361 occupational agents shown to be involved in
occupational asthma.
Occupational sensitizers are usually classified according to
molecular weight. The mechanism of action of lowmolecular-weight sensitizers remains largely unknown95.
Agent
Animal proteins
Bakers
Food processing
Farmers
Shipping workers
Laxative manufacturing
Sawmill workers, carpenters
Electric soldering
Nurses
Refinery workers
Plating
Diamond polishing
Manufacturing
Beauticians
Welding
Manufacturing
Hospital workers
Anesthesiology
Poultry workers
Fur dyeing
Rubber processing
Plastics industry
Automobile painting
Foundry workers
Ethanolamine, diisocyanates
Reaction product of furan binder
RISK FACTORS
35
36 RISK FACTORS
Figure 3-5. Respiratory Viruses and Respiratory Conditions Associated With Them
Virus type
Rhinovirus
Coronavirus
Influenza
Parainfluenza
Serotypes
1-100 (plus)
229E and OC43
A, B, and C
1, 2, 3, and 4
Common cold
+++
++
+
+
Asthma exacerbation
+++
++
+
+
Respiratory
syncytial virus
Adenovirus
A and B
1-43
Pneumonia
Bronchiolitis
+
Bronchitis
+
+
++
(Laryngotracheobronchitis)
+
++
++
+
+++
RISK FACTORS
37
38 RISK FACTORS
Family Size
Obesity
Studies have indicated an inverse relationship between
asthma and family size: having no siblings or one sibling is
associated with an increased risk of asthma compared
with having more than one sibling140,141. Many authors have
shown that the number of siblings is also inversely related
to the prevalence of inhalant allergy142, hay fever143, and
asthma, suggesting that exposure of young children to
older children at home protects against the development of
asthma and frequent wheezing later in childhood127.
39
40 RISK FACTORS
1.
2.
41
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
42 RISK FACTORS
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
Peat JK, van den Berg RH, Green WF, Mellis CM,
Leeder SR, Woolcock AJ. Changing prevalence of
asthma in Australian children. BMJ 1994;308:15916.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
43.
44.
45.
46.
47.
48.
34.
35.
36.
49.
50.
51.
52.
53.
54.
37.
38.
39.
40.
41.
42.
RISK FACTORS
43
55.
67.
68.
56.
69.
57.
Tsai LC, Chao PL, Hung MW, Sun YC, Kuo IC,
Chua KY, et al. Protein sequence analysis and
mapping of IgE and IgG epitopes of an allergenic
98-kDa Dermatophagoides farinae paramyosin, Der
f 11. Allergy 2000;55:141-7.
70.
58.
59.
71.
60.
72.
61.
73.
74.
75.
76.
77.
78.
62.
63.
64.
65.
66.
44 RISK FACTORS
79.
92.
80.
93.
81.
94.
82.
95.
96.
97.
98.
99.
83.
84.
85.
86.
87.
88.
89.
90.
91.
45
46 RISK FACTORS
RISK FACTORS
47
48 RISK FACTORS
CHAPTER
4
MECHANISMS OF
ASTHMA
KEY POINTS:
Asthma is a chronic inflammatory disorder of the
airways with recurrent exacerbations.
Chronic airway inflammation is invariably associated
with injury and repair of the bronchial epithelium,
which results in structural and functional changes
known as remodeling.
Inflammation, remodeling, and altered neural control
of the airways are responsible for both recurrent
exacerbations of asthma and more permanent
airflow obstruction.
The potential to develop excessive airway narrowing
is the major functional abnormality in asthma.
Excessive airway narrowing is caused by altered
smooth muscle behavior, in close interaction with
airway wall swelling, parenchymal retractile forces,
and intraluminal secretions.
Exacerbations of asthma are associated with an
increase in airway inflammation and, in susceptible
individuals, can be induced by respiratory infections,
allergen exposure, or exposure to occupational
sensitizers.
Respiratory failure in asthma is a consequence of
airway closure, ventilation/perfusion mismatch, and
respiratory muscle exhaustion.
INTRODUCTION
The current concept of asthma pathogenesis is that a
characteristic chronic inflammatory process involving the
airway wall causes the development of airflow limitation
and increased airway responsiveness, the latter of which
predisposes the airways to narrow in response to a variety
of stimuli (Figure 1-9 and Figure 4-1). Characteristic
features of the airway inflammation are increased numbers
of activated eosinophils, mast cells, macrophages, and T
lymphocytes in the airway mucosa and lumen. These
changes may be present even when asthma is
asymptomatic, and their extent appears to be broadly
related to the clinical severity of the disease1,2. In parallel
with the chronic inflammatory process, injury of the
bronchial epithelium stimulates processes of repair that
result in structural and functional changes referred to as
remodeling3. The recurrent episodes of symptoms and
reversible airflow limitation that characterize asthma
50 MECHANISMS OF ASTHMA
Acute Inflammation
51
52 MECHANISMS OF ASTHMA
53
54 MECHANISMS OF ASTHMA
AIRWAY REMODELING
Airway remodeling is a heterogeneous process leading
to changes in connective tissue deposition and to
altered airways structure through a dynamic process of
de-differentiation, migration, differentiation, and maturation
of structural cells 3 (Figure 4-2). Several structural features
are characteristically involved in airway remodeling in asthma.
In the bronchi the subepithelial basement membrane is of
normal thickness, but thickening and an increase in the
density of the lamina reticularis typically occur early in the
disease process. This thickening is brought about by a
plexiform deposition of interstitial collagens I, III, and V and
fibronectin87 produced by activated myofibroblasts, which
themselves derive from the attenuated fibroblast sheath
lying immediately beneath the epithelium45. The observation
that increased collagen deposition in the lamina reticularis
occurs only in asthma suggests that this change is a
fundamental abnormality linked to pathogenesis of the
disease.
The combination of epithelial damage, prolonged epithelial
repair, overproduction of profibrotic growth factors (e.g.,
TGF-), and proliferation and differentiation of fibroblasts
into myofibroblasts is thought to be central to the
remodeling process. Activated myofibroblasts produce a
range of growth factors, chemokines, and cytokines that
promote proliferation of airway smooth muscle cells and
increases in microvascular permeability and neural
networks. Since these changes have been observed in
children before the onset of asthma, it has been suggested
that activation or reactivation of the epithelial
mesenchymal trophic unit, in addition to inflammation, is
fundamental to asthma and differentiates the human
disease from the relatively acute allergen-induced
inflammation observed in many animal models of the
disease. Increased deposition of matrix molecules,
including complex proteoglycans, deeper in the airway wall
has been observed in patients who have died of asthma,
and its extent is directly related to disease duration.
The ECM is a dynamic structure, characterized under
normal circumstances by an equilibrium between
synthesis and controlled degradation of ECM components.
Matrix metalloproteases (MMPs) that selectively degrade
ECM components (MMP-2 and MMP-9) are of special
significance in this process, as are their respective
inhibitors, tissue inhibitor of metalloprotease (TIMP)-1 and
TIMP-2. MMPs have also been implicated in angiogenesis
and smooth muscle hyperplasia through their release of
active forms of growth factors, and they also play a crucial
role in the trafficking of inflammatory and structural cells.
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OF ASTHMA
Airways Obstruction
Inflammatory changes in the airways of people with
asthma are thought to underlie the disorder's defining
pattern of disturbances in function: airways obstruction
causing airflow limitation that varies spontaneously or as a
result of treatment. These functional changes are
associated with the characteristic symptoms of asthma
cough, chest tightness, and wheezingand with airway
hyperresponsiveness to bronchoconstrictor stimuli. Cough
is probably caused by stimulation of sensory nerves in the
airways by inflammatory mediators, and recurrent cough
may be the only symptom of asthma, especially in children
(cough variant asthma)101-103. Inflammatory mediators
may also affect the perception of breathlessness through
their effects on afferent nerves. At one extreme, afferent
nerve stimulation may contribute, sometimes with
hypercapnia or hypoxemia, to the disproportionately great
drive to breathing that accounts for the alveolar hyperventilation and possibly also for some of the distress of acute
asthma attacks. At the other extreme, changes in afferent
MECHANISMS OF ASTHMA
55
56 MECHANISMS OF ASTHMA
57
58 MECHANISMS OF ASTHMA
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
2.
14.
3.
15.
4.
16.
5.
17.
MECHANISMS OF ASTHMA
59
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
35.
36.
37.
38.
39.
40.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
60 MECHANISMS OF ASTHMA
41.
54.
42.
55.
43.
Low RB. Modulation of myofibroblast and smoothmuscle phenotypes in the lung. Curr Top Pathol
1999;93:19-26.
44.
56.
45.
57.
58.
Broide DH, Paine MM, Firestein GS. Eosinophils express interleukin 5 and granulocyte-macrophagecolony-stimulating factor mRNA at sites of allergic
inflammation in asthmatics. J Clin Invest
1992;90:1414-24.
59.
60.
61.
62.
63.
64.
46.
47.
48.
49.
50.
51.
52.
53.
MECHANISMS OF ASTHMA
61
65.
66.
67.
68.
69.
70.
71.
72.
73.
74.
75.
62 MECHANISMS OF ASTHMA
76.
77.
78.
79.
80.
81.
82.
83.
84.
85.
86.
Kharitonov SA, Yates D, Robbins RA, LoganSinclair R, Shinebourne EA, Barnes PJ. Increased
nitric oxide in exhaled air of asthmatic patients.
Lancet 1994;343:133-5.
87.
88.
89.
90.
91.
92.
93.
94.
95.
96.
97.
98.
99.
100. Pare PD, Bai TR, Roberts CR. The structural and
functional consequences of chronic allergic
inflammation of the airways. Ciba Found Symp
1997;206:71-86.
MECHANISMS OF ASTHMA
63
64 MECHANISMS OF ASTHMA
MECHANISMS OF ASTHMA
65
66 MECHANISMS OF ASTHMA
CHAPTER
5
DIAGNOSIS
AND
CLASSIFICATION
KEY POINTS:
CLINICAL DIAGNOSIS
Physical Examination
Because asthma symptoms are variable, the physical
examination of the respiratory system may be normal. The
most usual abnormal physical finding is wheezing on
auscultation. However, some people with asthma may
Figure 5-1. Questions to Consider in
Diagnosis of Asthma
Has the patient had an attack or recurrent attacks of
wheezing?
Does the patient have a troublesome cough at night?
Does the patient have a wheeze or cough after exercise?
Does the patient have wheeze, chest tightness, or cough after
exposure to airborne allergens or pollutants?
Do the patients colds go to the chest or take more than 10
days to clear up?
Are symptoms improved by appropriate anti-asthma
treatment?
69
PEF (L/min)
800
700
600
500
Morning PEF
Evening PEF
14
Days
(Minimum
570/670==85%)
85%)
(Minimummorning
morningPEF
PEF(%
(%recent
recent best)
best)== 570/670
71
PARTICULARLY DIFFICULT
DIAGNOSTIC GROUPS
In this section emphasis is given to the difficult problems in
diagnosing asthma in children, in the elderly, in relation to
occupational exposure to risk factors, in seasonal asthma,
and in cough variant asthma. For these patient groups
measurements of airflow limitation and variability are
extremely useful for establishing a diagnosis of asthma.
Childhood Asthma
Diagnosis of asthma in children can present a particularly
difficult problem, largely because episodic wheezing and
cough are among the most common symptoms
encountered in childhood illnesses, particularly in children
under 3 years old3. Although health care professionals are
increasingly encouraged to make a positive diagnosis of
asthma whenever recurrent wheezing, breathlessness,
and cough occur (particularly if these symptoms occur at
night and in the early morning), the disorders underlying
process may be different in infants than in older children
and adults36. The use of the label asthma to describe
such children has important clinical consequences. It
implies a syndrome in which there is airway inflammation
and for which there is a specific protocol of management.
The younger the child, the greater the likelihood that an
alternative diagnosis may explain recurrent wheeze.
Alternative causes of recurrent wheezing in infancy
include cystic fibrosis, recurrent milk inhalation, primary
ciliary dyskinesia syndrome, primary immune deficiency,
congenital heart disease, congenital malformation
causing narrowing of the intrathoracic airways, and
foreign body aspiration. Features such as a neonatal
onset of symptoms, associated failure to thrive, vomitingassociated symptoms, and focal lung or cardiovascular
signs all suggest an alternative diagnosis and indicate the
need for further investigations, such as a sweat test to
exclude cystic fibrosis, measurements of immune function,
and reflux studies. Chest radiography is an important
diagnostic test to exclude such alternative causes of
wheezing.
Among those children in whom an alternative diagnosis
has been excluded, there is the possibility that recurrent
73
and
OBSTRUCTIVE DISEASES
RESTRICTIVE DISORDERS
Localized
Vocal cord paresis
Laryngeal carcinoma
Tracheal carcinoma
Bronchial carcinoma
Foreign bodies
Bronchopulmonary dysplasia
Lung disease
Extrinsic allergic alveolitis
Sarcoidosis
Fibrosing alveolitis
Asbestosis
Eosinophilic pneumonia
Generalized
Chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease
Asthma
Obliterative bronchiolitis
Cystic fibrosis
Bronchiectasis
Pleural disease
Pleural effusion
Pneumothorax
Chest wall deformity
Kyphoscoliosis
Respiratory muscle weakness
Subdiaphragmatic problems
Obesity
Ascites
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
Asthma is one of the most common causes of respiratory
symptoms, but it is only one cause of lung disease (Figure
5-4). An important step in ensuring diagnosis of asthma is
the demonstration of reversible and variable airflow
limitation, preferably by spirometry.
Although in children both asthma and acute respiratory
infections produce wheezing as a consequence of
widespread airway obstruction, respiratory symptoms may
also arise from localized airway obstruction and inhaled
foreign bodies57, possibilities that must always be
considered in the differential diagnosis (Figure 5-5).
Another diagnosis to consider in both children and adults
is pseudo-asthma, most often caused by vocal cord
dysfunction58. In adults, asthma superimposed on COPD
is a common problem in past or present smokers.
Seasonal Asthma
CLASSIFICATION OF ASTHMA
Etiology
Many attempts have been made to classify asthma
according to etiology, particularly with regard to
environmental sensitizing agents. Such a classification is,
however, limited by the existence of patients in whom no
environmental cause can be identified. Despite this, an
effort to identify a specific environmental cause for asthma
in an individual patient should be part of the initial clinical
assessment, because it enables the use of avoidance
strategies in asthma management.
Severity
75
Figure 5-7. Classification of Asthma Severity by Daily Medication Regimen and Response to Treatment
Current Treatment Step*
Step 1: Intermittent
Step 1: Intermittent
Symptoms less than once a week
Brief exacerbations
Nocturnal symptoms not more than twice a month
Normal lung function between episodes
Step 2: Mild Persistent
Symptoms more than once a week but less than once a day
Nocturnal symptoms more than twice a month but less
than once a week
Normal lung function between episodes
Step 3: Moderate Persistent
Symptoms daily
Exacerbations may affect activity and sleep
Nocturnal symptoms at least once a week
60% < FEV1 < 80% predicted OR
60% < PEF < 80% of personal best
Step 4: Severe Persistent
Symptoms daily
Frequent exacerbations
Frequent nocturnal asthma symptoms
FEV1 60% predicted OR
PEF 60% of personal best
Level of Severity
Intermittent
Mild Persistent
Moderate Persistent
Mild Persistent
Moderate Persistent
Severe Persistent
Moderate Persistent
Severe Persistent
Severe Persistent
Severe Persistent
Severe Persistent
Severe Persistent
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79
CHAPTER
6
EDUCATION
AND THE
DELIVERY OF
CARE
KEY POINTS:
Good asthma care requires sufficient numbers of
well-educated health professionals organized so that
they are available to the maximum number of
patients. Guidelines on asthma management should
be available but adapted and adopted for local use
by local asthma planning teams consisting of both
primary and secondary care health professionals
(Evidence D).
Implementation of guidelines is most likely to
be effective and result in alteration of health
professional behavior where there is practicebased education regarding the asthma guidelines,
within-consultation prompting of behavior, and
feedback to health care professionals regarding
their management (Evidence B).
Patient education involves a partnership between
the patient and health care professional(s) with
frequent revision and reinforcement. The aim is
guided self-managementthat is, giving patients
the ability to control their own condition with
guidance from the health care professionals.
Interventions including the use of written selfmanagement (action) plans have been shown to
reduce morbidity in both adults (Evidence A) and
children (Evidence B).
Clear communication between health care
professionals and asthma patients to meet patients
information needs is a key to enhancing compliance
(Evidence B).
This chapter is concerned with the organization of health
care professionals, the implementation of guidelines,
patient education and self-management, and the
education of family members, coaches, employers, and
others who may come in contact with people who have
asthma. It includes a number of tools that may be helpful
in the education of both patients and health professionals.
The following conditions are essential to effective asthma
care delivery:
Sufficient numbers of well-educated health professionals
should be organized effectively so that they are available
to the maximum number of patients.
Asthma should be correctly diagnosed, its severity
assessed, and appropriate treatments prescribed.
Adequate finances should be available to governments or
individuals to ensure that asthma treatments are
available (and means of providing less expensive
medications need to be explored).
Pharmacists
Allergists
Nurses
Health educational specialists
Patient support groups
83
PATIENT EDUCATION
The aim of patient education, which is a continual process,
is to provide the patient with asthma and the patients
family with suitable information and training so that the
patient can keep well and adjust treatment according to a
medication plan developed in advance with the health care
professional. The emphasis must be on the development
of an ongoing partnership among health care professionals,
the patient, and the patients family.
Patient education should aim to:
Increase understanding
Increase skills
Increase satisfaction
Increase confidence, and thereby to
Increase compliance and self-management.
Basic education should be provided over several
consultations or visits. Education should be provided to
patients of all ages. Although the focus of education for
small children will be on the parents, children as young as
3 years of age can be taught simple asthma management
skills. Teenagers may have some unique difficulties
regarding compliance that may be helped through peer
support group education in addition to education provided
by the health care professional. Revision and
reinforcement are essential components of education
provided by the health care professional. Figure 6-5
outlines the basic features of a patient education program,
85
Improving Compliance
Drug factors
Difficulties with inhaler devices
Forgetfulness or complacency
Religious issues
87
The aim then is for patients to be offered training in selfmanagement techniques. A recent systematic review by
the Cochrane Airways group34 of 22 studies involving
patient education compared with usual care showed
significant benefits in the intervention groups in terms of
reduced morbidity and reduced use of health services.
The effects were greatest where the intervention involved
the issuing of written self-management action plans
(Evidence A).
Guided Self-Management and
Personal Asthma Action Plans
In guided self-management or asthma self-management,
individual asthma patients make changes to their
treatment in response to changes in the severity of their
asthma, in accordance with predetermined guidelines22,35.
The process involves the integration of assessment and
treatment, and incorporates written guidelines for both
long-term treatment of asthma and treatment of
exacerbations. Follow-up and supervision by the health
care provider is also an important contributor to the
success of this strategy.
The concept of guided self-management arose as
clinicians realized that delays in recognizing asthma
exacerbations and initiating appropriate therapy are
important factors contributing to asthma morbidity and
mortality10,36,37. Moreover, they knew that the majority of
89
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
4.
18.
5.
Coutts JA, Gibson NA, Paton JY. Measuring compliance with inhaled medication in asthma. Arch Dis
Child 1992;67:332-3.
19.
SOURCES OF FURTHER
EDUCATIONAL MATERIALS
Sources of further educational materials, including links to
several asthma websites, can be found at
http://www.ginasthma.com.
REFERENCES
1.
2.
3.
20.
Stewart MA. Effective physician-patient communication and health outcomes: a review. CMAJ
1995;152:1423-33.
21.
22.
23.
32.
33.
34.
35.
36.
24.
25.
26.
37.
38.
39.
40.
41.
42.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
91
43.
44.
45.
46.
47.
48.
49.
50.
51.
52.
53.
CHAPTER
7
A SIX-PART ASTHMA
MANAGEMENT
PROGRAM
INTRODUCTION
Asthma is a chronic disorder with significant impact on
individuals, their families, and society. Although there is no
cure for asthma, appropriate management most often
leads to control of the disorder.
The goals for successful management of asthma are to:
Achieve and maintain control of symptoms
Prevent asthma exacerbations
Maintain pulmonary function as close to normal levels as
possible
Maintain normal activity levels, including exercise
Avoid adverse effects from asthma medications
Prevent development of irreversible airflow limitation
Prevent asthma mortality.
These goals for therapy reflect an understanding of asthma
as a chronic disorder with progressively developing
chronic airway inflammation leading to recurrent episodes
of such airway responses as airflow limitation, mucus
production, and cough. Numerous clinical studies have
shown that any asthma more severe than mild, intermittent
asthma is more effectively controlled by intervening to
suppress and reverse the inflammation rather than by only
treating the bronchoconstriction and related symptoms1-3.
Furthermore, early intervention to stop exposure to the risk
factors that sensitized the airway should result in optimal
control of the disease4, although the long-term results of
specific avoidance measures are not yet known. It is noteworthy that experience in occupational asthma indicates
that longstanding exposure to sensitizing agents may lead
to irreversible disease 5.
94
MEASUREMENTS OF SYMPTOMS
Structured questionnaires to be filled in by the patient or by
the health care professional can be used to quantify or
score patients reports of their different asthma symptoms
over a period of time. Many such questionnaires have
been developed, but few have as yet been validated
against other objective measurements of asthma severity.
However, carefully administered serial questionnaires can
be a sensitive method for detecting a deterioration of
asthma6. The specific questions about symptoms should
depend on the objectives of the questionnaire and the
cultural setting. Particularly important questions in
monitoring the patient's asthma and the patient's response
95
96
97
PRIMARY PREVENTION
It is clear from the development of immune
responsiveness that future strategies for primary
prevention of asthma will concentrate on the prenatal and
perinatal periods. A number of factors have been shown
to either increase or decrease the likelihood of fetal sensitization to allergens, but the influence of these factors is
complex and varies with gestational age. Primary
prevention of asthma is not yet possible, but promising
leads are being actively investigated.
Potential Measures to be Applied Prenatally
In the second trimester of pregnancy, when antigenpresenting-cell and T-cell maturity is sufficient for allergen
sensitization to occur, the most likely route of fetal
sensitization is via the gut, although the concentration of
allergen able to penetrate the amnion may be critical.
Paradoxically, low-dose allergen exposure may be more
likely to result in sensitization than high-dose exposure25.
Thus, there is considerable concern that there is
insufficient information on the critical doses and timing
of exposure that might be associated with the development
of either sensitization or tolerance. Indeed, there is
even limited evidence to suggest that high-dose exposure
will induce IgG antibody production in the mother and
thereby reduce the possibility of allergy developing in the
offspring. High cord blood IgG concentrations of
antibodies to cat dander and the major allergen of birch
pollen have been associated with fewer allergic symptoms
in children during the first 8 years of life26. One study
has shown reduced allergic sensitization in children of
mothers who received specific immunotherapy during
pregnancy 27.
Prescription of a food-allergen-avoidance diet to a highrisk woman during pregnancy is unlikely to reduce
substantially her risk of giving birth to an atopic child 28.
Moreover, such a diet may have an adverse effect on
maternal and/or fetal nutrition.
In summary, there are no measures applied prenatally
that can be recommended at this time for primary
prevention.
98
SECONDARY PREVENTION
Once allergic sensitization has occurred, there are
additional opportunities to prevent the actual development
of asthma. Two studies have suggested that
pharmacologic intervention with H1 antihistamines may
reduce the onset of wheezing in young children who
present initially with atopic dermatitis52,53. However, these
studies need confirmation before it can be proposed that
this class of compounds can prevent the onset of asthma.
An older study found that allergen-specific immunotherapy
may reduce the onset of asthma54. The Preventive Allergy
Treatment (PAT) Study is ongoing and the results will be
important in addressing the preventive role of
immunotherapy.
Observations of occupational allergy suggest that early
cessation of exposure to an offending allergen, after there
is evidence of sensitization and symptoms, is more likely
to lead to a total resolution of symptoms than if the
exposure continues.
TERTIARY PREVENTION
Asthma exacerbations may be caused by a variety of
triggers including allergens, pollutants, foods, and drugs.
Tertiary prevention aims to reduce the exposure to these
triggers to improve the control of asthma and reduce
medication needs.
Avoidance of Indoor Allergens
The occurrence and severity of asthma symptoms are
related to environmental allergens55. Thus, indoor
environmental control measures to reduce exposure to
allergens might be important, although it is difficult to
achieve complete control, and there is conflicting evidence
about whether such control measures are effective at
reducing asthma symptoms56,57. The majority of single
interventions have failed to achieve a sufficient reduction
in allergen load to lead to a clinical improvement. It is
likely that no single intervention will achieve sufficient
benefits to be cost effective. However, properly powered
and designed studies of combined allergen-reduction
strategies in large groups of patients are urgently
required58.
The effectiveness of allergen reduction in the treatment of
asthma was first suggested by studies in which patients
were removed from their homes to a low-allergen
environment at high altitude59,60. However, the real
challenge is to create a low-allergen environment in
patients homes. Effective control strategies should be
A SIX-PART ASTHMA MANAGEMENT PROGRAM
99
Keep the pet out of the main living areas and bedrooms78.
Install HEPA air cleaners in the main living areas and bedrooms.
Have the pet washed twice a week79, although some studies report this
to be ineffective80.
73
100
101
102
THE MEDICATIONS
Medications for asthma are used to reverse and prevent
symptoms and airflow limitation and include controllers
and relievers.
Controllers are medications taken daily on a long-term
basis that are useful in getting and keeping persistent
asthma under control. Controllers have been variably
labeled as prophylactic, preventive, or maintenance
medications and include anti-inflammatory agents and
long-acting bronchodilators. Of all single medications,
inhaled glucocorticosteroids are at present the most
effective controllers. The so-called anti-allergic agents
may also be controllers, although there are insufficient
data about their efficacy in the long-term management of
asthma. It must be stressed that few clinical studies have
addressed the question of how effective any of the antiasthma medications are in getting asthma under complete
control and in preventing symptoms and exacerbations.
Most studies have examined the effect of medications on
one or more of the parameters of asthma control, for
example, on reduction in the frequency of exacerbations,
reduction in chronic symptoms, improvement in lung
function, decreases in airway hyperresponsiveness, and
improvement in the patients quality of life. Inhaled
glucocorticosteroids suppress airway inflammation, reduce
airway hyperresponsiveness, and control and prevent
asthma symptoms1,89-91. Bronchodilators act principally to
dilate the airways by relaxing airway smooth muscle. They
reverse and/or inhibit bronchoconstriction and related
103
104
Low Dose
200-500 g
200-400 g
500-1,000 g
100-250 g
400-1,000 g
Medium Dose
500-1,000 g
400-800 g
1,000-2,000 g
250-500 g
1,000-2,000 g
High Dose
>1,000 g
>800 g
>2,000 g
>500 g
>2,000 g
Low Dose
100-400 g
100-200 g
500-750 g
100-200 g
400-800 g
Medium Dose
400-800 g
200-400 g
1,000-1,250 g
200-500 g
800-1,200 g
High Dose
>800 g
>400 g
>1,250 g
>500 g
>1,200 g
Children
Drug
Beclomethasone dipropionate
Budesonide
Flunisolide
Fluticasone
Triamcinolone acetonide
Notes
The most important determinant of appropriate dosing is the clinicians judgment of the patients response to therapy. The clinician must monitor the
patients response in terms of several clinical parameters and adjust the dose accordingly. The stepwise approach to therapy emphasizes that once
control of asthma is achieved, the dose of medication should be carefully titrated to the minimum dose required to maintain control, thus reducing the
potential for adverse effects.
Some dosages may be outside package labeling.
Metered-dose inhaler (MDI) dosages are expressed as the amount of drug leaving the valve, not all of which is available to the patient. Dry powder
inhaler (DPI) doses are expressed as the amount of drug in the inhaler following activation.
105
106
107
Rapid
Duration of Action
Short
Fenoterol
Pirbuterol
Procaterol
Salbutamol (Albuterol)
Terbutaline
Slow
Long
Formoterol
Salmeterol
108
109
110
111
Side effects - Therapy with rapid-acting inhaled 2agonists causes fewer adverse systemic effectssuch as
cardiovascular stimulation, skeletal muscle tremor, and
hypokalemiathan oral therapy.
Systemic glucocorticosteroids.
Mode of administration - Oral (ingested) or parenteral.
Mechanisms of action - See the section on systemic
glucocorticosteroids in Controller Medications above.
Role in therapy - Although onset of action of these
medications is 4 to 6 hours, they are important in the
treatment of severe acute exacerbations because they
prevent progression of the asthma exacerbation,
decrease the need for emergency department visits or
hospitalizations, prevent early relapse after emergency
treatment, and reduce the morbidity of the illness. Oral
therapy is preferred and is as effective as intravenous
hydro-cortisone220,221 (Evidence B). Prednisone,
prednisolone, and methyprednisolone are generally
continued for 3 to 10 days following initial treatment of the
exacerbation. A typical short course of oral glucocorticosteroids for an exacerbation is 30 mg prednisolone given
daily for 5 to 10 days depending on the severity of the
exacerbation. When the symptoms have subsided and
the lung function has approached the personal best value,
the oral glucocorticosteroids can be stopped or tapered,
provided that treatment with inhaled glucocorticosteroids
continues.
Side effects - Potential adverse effects of high-dose
short-term systemic therapy include reversible
abnormalities in glucose metabolism, increased appetite,
fluid retention, weight gain, rounding of the face, mood
alteration, hypertension, peptic ulcer, and aseptic necrosis
of the femur. These side effects are generally not
observed during a short course of oral or parenteral therapy.
Anticholinergics.
Mode of administration - Inhaled.
Mechanisms of action - Inhaled anticholinergic agents
(ipratropium bromide, oxitropium bromide) are bronchodilators that block the effect of acetylcholine released
from cholinergic nerves in the airways. When inhaled,
these agents produce bronchodilation by reducing intrinsic
vagal cholinergic tone to the airways. They also block
reflex bronchoconstriction caused by inhaled irritants.
They do not diminish the early and late allergic reactions
and have no effect on airway inflammation. In asthma,
inhaled anticholinergics are less potent bronchodilators
112
113
114
A STEPWISE APPROACH TO
PHARMACOLOGIC THERAPY
Although no cure for asthma has yet been found, it is
reasonable to expect that in most patients with asthma
control of the disease can and should be achieved and
maintained. Control of asthma is defined as:
Minimal (ideally no) chronic symptoms, including
nocturnal symptoms
Minimal (infrequent) exacerbations
No emergency visits
Minimal (ideally no) use of p.r.n. (as-needed) 2-agonist
No limitations on activities, including exercise
PEF circadian variation of less than 20 percent
(Near) normal PEF
Minimal (or no) adverse effects from medicine.
Choice of Therapy
The selection of pharmacologic treatment options is made
on the basis of asthma severity, the patient's current
treatment, the pharmacological properties and availability
of anti-asthma treatment, and economic considerations.
Because asthma is a dynamic as well as chronic condition,
medication plans need to accommodate variability among
patients as well as within individual patients over time. An
essential aspect of any treatment plan is the need for
monitoring the effect of the treatment (including use of
measurements of lung function and symptoms) and
adapting the treatment to the variability of the asthma.
An approach to pharmacologic therapy that correlates with
asthma severity permits this flexibility. As discussed
previously, the classification of asthma severity should
include symptom and medical history evaluation, current
treatment, clinical examination, and measurements of lung
function where possible.
An appropriate approach to therapy recommends that the
number (type), dose, and eventually the frequency of
medications are increased with increasing asthma
severity. The aim is to accomplish the goals of therapy
with the least possible medication. Thus in developing an
asthma management plan, the health care professional
must judge whether to give maximum treatment at the
Step 1
Intermittent Asthma****
None necessary
Step 2
Mild Persistent Asthma
Inhaled glucocorticosteroid
( 500 g BDP or equivalent)
Sustained-release theophylline, or
Cromone, or
Leukotriene modifier
Step 3
Moderate Persistent Asthma
Inhaled glucocorticosteroid
(200 - 1,000 g BDP or equivalent)
plus long-acting inhaled 2-agonist
Inhaled glucocorticosteroid
(500 - 1,000 g BDP or equivalent)
plus sustained-release theophylline, or
Inhaled glucocorticosteroid
(500 - 1,000 g BDP or equivalent)
plus long-acting oral 2-agonist, or
Inhaled glucocorticosteroid at
higher doses (> 1,000 g BDP or
equivalent), or
Inhaled glucocorticosteroid
(500 - 1,000 g BDP or equivalent)
plus leukotriene modifier
Step 4
Severe Persistent Asthma
Inhaled glucocorticosteroid
(> 1,000 g BDP or equivalent) plus
long-acting inhaled 2-agonist, plus
one or more of the following, if needed:
Sustained-release theophylline
Leukotriene modifier
Long-acting oral 2-agonist
Oral glucocorticosteroid
All Steps: Once control of asthma is achieved and maintained for at least 3 months, a gradual reduction of the maintenance
therapy should be tried in order to identify the minimum therapy required to maintain control.
*
**
***
****
Other options for reliever medication are (in increasing order of cost) inhaled anticholinergic, short-acting oral 2-agonist, and short-acting theophylline.
See Figure 5-6 and Figure 5-7 for classification of severity.
Other treatment options listed in order of increasing cost. Relative medication costs may vary from country to country.
Those with intermittent asthma but severe exacerbations should be treated as having moderate persistent asthma (Evidence D).
115
116
117
118
Seasonal Asthma
A patient has seasonal asthma when he or she has
asthma symptoms due to seasonal exposure to allergen.
This may be intermittent in patients who are otherwise
entirely asymptomatic with normal PEF values between
seasons, or it may occur as a seasonal worsening of
persistent asthma. The severity varies from patient to
119
THE MEDICATIONS
Medications for the management of pediatric asthma
include both controllers and relievers. Controllers are
medications taken daily on a long-term basis to achieve
and maintain control of asthma. Relievers act quickly to
relieve bronchoconstriction and its accompanying acute
symptoms such as wheezing, chest tightness, and cough.
Many asthma medications (e.g., glucocorticosteroids,
2-agonists, theophylline) are metabolized faster in
children than in adults, and young children tend to
metabolize drugs faster than older children. Although this
rapid metabolism to inactive drug is advantageous from a
safety perspective, it also means that when medication is
administered orally, higher doses should be given to young
children than to adults or older children. In this section, a
summary of pharmacokinetic information is provided
where such information is available.
Route of Administration
Medications for asthma can be administered via different
ways, including inhaled, oral (ingested), and parenteral
(subcutaneous, intramuscular, or intravenous). The major
advantage of delivering drugs directly into the airways via
inhalation is that high concentrations can be delivered
more effectively to the airways, and systemic side effects
are avoided or minimized. Some of the drugs that are
effective in asthma can only be used via inhalation
because they are not absorbed when given orally (e.g.,
anticholinergics and cromones). The onset of action of
bronchodilators is substantially quicker when they are
given via inhalation than when these drugs are
administered orally100,101. The choice of inhaler device
should emphasize the efficacy of drug delivery, cost
effectiveness, safety, and convenience244.
Information about lung dose for a particular drug
formulation is seldom available for children. Differences
between devices do not alter the potential maximum effect
of a given drug, but they do result in different potencies for
the same nominal dose of the drug given by different
120
Alternate Device
Pressurized metered-dose
inhaler plus dedicated spacer
with face mask
4 - 6 years
Pressurized metered-dose
inhaler plus dedicated spacer
with mouthpiece
121
122
123
124
125
Methylxanthines.
The role of theophylline in the long-term treatment of
children with asthma is limited, but the low cost of this
treatment may justify more frequent use in some countries.
126
127
128
Reliever Medications
2-agonists.
Rapid-acting inhaled 2-agonists have been the mainstay
of asthma treatment in children for many years. These
drugs are by far the most effective bronchodilators
available and therefore the preferred treatment for acute
asthma (Evidence A).
Mode of administration - Inhaled, oral, and intravenous.
Role in therapy - Rapid-acting 2-agonists should
preferably be given by inhalation since this allows
bronchodilation to be achieved more rapidly, at a lower
dose, and with fewer side effects than occurs with either
oral or intravenous administration447,448. Furthermore,
inhalation offers significant protection against exerciseinduced asthma449, which is not seen after systemic
administration450. Generally quite low doses (25 percent
of the normal dose in the inhaler) produce marked
bronchodilation, while higher doses are required to
protect effectively against various challenges258.
Short-acting oral 2-agonists have low systemic
absorption and a high first-pass metabolism in the wall of
the gastrointestinal tract and in the liver. Thus, the
systemic bioavailability of these drugs after oral dosing is
only about 10 to 15 percent when plain tablets are used.
This figure is around 30 percent lower after administration
of a slow-release product. Therefore, somewhat higher
doses should be used when 2-agonist therapy is
changed from plain to slow-release tablets. Concomitant
intake of food further reduces gastrointestinal bioavailability
by about one-third451. Clearance of 2-agonists is higher
in children than in adults452,453.
There is a significant correlation between plasma drug
levels and bronchodilatory effect after systemic administration of 2-agonists in children, although considerable
inter-individual variations in this relationship exist454,455.
Therefore, effective therapy cannot be assured by
standardized dosing. Rather, dosing should be individualized, with monitoring of the therapeutic response
and the occurrence of side effects to determine the proper
dose453. A rational approach is to start oral treatment at
around 0.15 mg/kg/day and then gradually increase the
dose until a sufficient clinical effect or systemic side
effects are seen. Oral doses of about 0.5 mg/kg/day are
often required to produce optimal clinical effects450,455.
School children. Rapid-acting inhaled 2-agonists have
repeatedly proven superior to other drugs in the
treatment of acute episodes of wheeze456,457 (Evidence
129
Step 1
Intermittent Asthma****
None necessary
Step 2
Mild Persistent Asthma
Inhaled glucocorticosteroid
(100-400 g budesonide or
equivalent)
Sustained-release theophylline, or
Cromone, or
Leukotriene modifier
Step 3
Moderate Persistent Asthma
Inhaled glucocorticosteroid
(400-800 g budesonide or equivalent)
Inhaled glucocorticosteroid
(< 800 g budesonide or equivalent)
plus sustained-release theophylline, or
Inhaled glucocorticosteroid
(< 800 g budesonide or equivalent)
plus long-acting inhaled 2-agonist,
or
Inhaled glucocorticosteroid at
higher doses (> 800 g budesonide or
equivalent), or
Inhaled glucocorticosteroid
(< 800 g budesonide or equivalent)
plus leukotriene modifier
Step 4
Severe Persistent Asthma
Inhaled glucocorticosteroid
(> 800 g budesonide or
equivalent ) plus one or more of the
following, if needed:
Sustained-release theophylline
Long-acting inhaled 2-agonist
Leukotriene modifier
Oral glucocorticosteroid
All Steps: Once control of asthma is achieved and maintained for at least 3 months, a gradual reduction of the maintenance therapy
should be tried in order to identify the minimum therapy required to maintain control.
*Other options for reliever medication are (in increasing order of cost) inhaled anticholinergic, short-acting oral 2-agonist, and short-acting theophylline.
**See Figure 5-6 and Figure 5-7 for classification of severity.
***Other treatment options listed in order of increasing cost. Relative medication costs may vary from country to country.
****Children with intermittent asthma but severe exacerbations should be treated as having moderate persistent asthma (Evidence D).
A STEPWISE APPROACH TO
PHARMACOLOGIC THERAPY
The stepwise treatment paradigm emphasizes that asthma
at any age, even from early childhood, is a disease in which
chronic airway inflammation underlies recurrent symptoms.
Evidence suggests that any asthma more severe than
intermittent is more effectively controlled by interventions
that suppress and reverse this inflammation than by those
that only treat the episodic bronchoconstriction and related
symptoms.
The selection of pharmacologic treatment options is
made on the basis of an individual patient's asthma
severity, the patient's current treatment, the pharm-
130
acological properties and availability of various antiasthma treatments, and economic considerations.
Because asthma is a dynamic as well as a chronic
condition, medication plans must accommodate variability
among patients as well as the variability of an individual
patient's disease over time. An essential aspect of any
treatment plan is monitoring of the effect of the treatment
(including measurements of lung function and symptoms)
and adaptation of the treatment to the variability of the
asthma.
An approach to pharmacologic therapy in which treatment
is correlated with asthma severity permits this flexibility.
The classification of asthma severity should be made by
means of evaluating the patient's symptoms, medical
history, and current treatment, a clinical examination, and
measurements of lung function where possible (Figure 5-6
and Figure 5-7).
131
132
133
Breathless
Talks in
Alertness
Respiratory rate
Accessory muscles
and suprasternal
retractions
Wheeze
Pulse/min.
Pulsus paradoxus
PEF
after initial
bronchodilator
% predicted or
% personal best
PaO2 (on air)
and/or
PaCO2
SaO2% (on air)
Mild
Moderate
Severe
Walking
Talking
Infantsofter
shorter cry;
difficulty feeding
At rest
Infant stops feeding
Approx. 60-80%
Normal
Test not usually
necessary
> 60 mm Hg
< 45 mm Hg
< 45 mm Hg
Hunched forward
Words
Usually agitated
Often > 30/min
Normal rate
< 60/min
< 50/min
< 40/min
< 30/min
Usually
Respiratory arrest
imminent
Drowsy or confused
Usually loud
Absence of wheeze
>120
Bradycardia
< 160/min
< 120/min
< 110/min
Often present
> 25 mm Hg (adult)
20-40 mm Hg (child)
< 60% predicted or
personal best
(< 100 L/min adults)
or
response lasts <2hrs
< 60 mm Hg
Absence suggests
respiratory muscle
fatigue
Possible cyanosis
> 45 mm Hg;
Possible respiratory
failure (see text)
> 95%
91-95%
< 90%
Hypercapnea (hypoventilation) develops more readily in young children than in
adults and adolescents.
*Note: The presence of several parameters, but not necessarily all, indicates the general classification of the exacerbation.
Note: Kilopascals are also used internationally; conversion would be appropriate in this regard.
134
Assess Severity
Persistent PEF < 80% personal best or predicted (on two
successive days) or > 70% if no response to bronchodilator.
Clinical features: cough, breathlessness, wheeze,chest
tightness, use of accessory muscles, and suprasternal
retractions
Initial Treatment
Inhaled rapid-acting 2-agonist
up to three treatments in 1 hour
Poor Response
Incomplete Response
Severe Episode
Moderate Episode
Mild Episode
Good Response
To emergency department
* Patients at high risk of asthma-related death (see text) should contact clinician promptly after initial treatment.
Additional therapy may be required.
A SIX-PART ASTHMA MANAGEMENT PROGRAM
135
HOME MANAGEMENT OF
EXACERBATIONS
136
HOSPITAL-BASED MANAGEMENT
OF EXACERBATIONS
Severe exacerbations of asthma are life-threatening
medical emergencies. Care must be expeditious, and
treatment is often most safely undertaken in a hospital or a
hospital-based emergency department. Figure 7-11
illustrates the approach to hospital-based management of
exacerbations that is discussed here.
Assessment
A brief history and physical examination pertinent to the
exacerbation should be conducted concurrently with the
Initial Treatment
Inhaled rapid-acting 2-agonist, usually by nebulization, one dose every 20 minutes for 1 hour
Oxygen to achieve O2 saturation 90% (95% in children)
Systemic glucocorticosteroids if no immediate response, or if patient recently took oral glucocorticosteroid,
or if episode is severe
Sedation is contraindicated in the treatment of exacerbations.
Repeat Assessment
PE, PEF, O2 saturation,
other tests as needed
Severe Episode
PEF < 60% predicted/personal best
Physical exam: severe symptoms at rest, chest
retraction
Hx: high-risk patient
No improvement after initial treatment
Inhaled 2-agonist and inhaled anticholinergic
Oxygen
Systemic glucocorticosteroid
Consider subcutaneous, intramuscular, or
intravenous 2-agonist
Consider intravenous methylxanthines
Consider intravenous magnesium
Moderate Episode
PEF 60-80% predicted/personal best
Physical exam: moderate symptoms, accessory
muscle use
Inhaled 2-agonist and inhaled anticholinergic every 60 minutes
Consider glucocorticosteroids
Continue treatment 1-3 hours, provided there is improvement
Admit to Hospital
Inhaled 2-agonist inhaled
anticholinergic
Systemic glucocorticosteroid
Oxygen
Consider intravenous
methylxanthines
Monitor PEF, O2 saturation, pulse,
theophylline
Discharge Home
Continue treatment with inhaled
2-agonist
Consider, in most cases, oral
glucocorticosteroid
Patient education:
Take medicine correctly
Review action plan
Close medical follow-up
Improve
Not Improve
Discharge Home
If PEF > 60% predicted/
personal best and sustained
on oral/inhaled medication
Good Response
Response sustained 60 minutes
after last treatment
Physical exam: normal
PEF > 70%
No distress
O2 saturation > 90% (95% children)
*Note: Preferred treatments are inhaled 2-agonists in high doses and systemic glucocorticosteroids.
If inhaled 2-agonists are not available, consider intravenous aminophylline; see text.
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SPECIAL CONSIDERATIONS
Special considerations are required in managing asthma
in relation to pregnancy; surgery; physical activity; rhinitis,
sinusitis, and nasal polyps; occupational asthma;
respiratory infections; gastroesophageal reflux; and
aspirin-induced asthma.
PREGNANCY
During pregnancy the severity of asthma often changes
and patients may require close follow-up and adjustment
of medications. Retrospective and prospective studies
have suggested that during pregnancy in approximately
one-third of women asthma becomes worse; in one-third
asthma becomes less severe; and in the other one-third it
remains unchanged547-549.
Although concern exists with the use of medications in
pregnancy, poorly controlled asthma can have an adverse
effect on the fetus, resulting in increased perinatal
mortality, increased prematurity, and low birth weight548,549.
The overall perinatal prognosis for children born to women
with well-managed asthma during pregnancy is
comparable to that for children born to women without
asthma550. For this reason, using medications to obtain
optimal control of asthma is justified even when their
safety in pregnancy has not been unequivocally proven.
For most drugs used to treat asthma and rhinitiswith the
exception of alpha-adrenergic compounds, brompheniramine,
and epinephrinethere is little to suggest an increased risk
to the fetus. Appropriately monitored theophylline, sodium
cromoglycate, inhaled beclomethasone dipropionate, and
inhaled 2-agonists are not associated with an increased
incidence of fetal abnormalities. Inhaled steroids have
been shown to prevent exacerbations of asthma specifically
in pregnancy551, 552 (Evidence B). Acute exacerbations
should be treated aggressively in order to avoid fetal
hypoxia. Treatment should include nebulized rapid-acting
2-agonists and oxygen; systemic glucocorticosteroids
should be instituted when necessary. As in other situations,
the focus of asthma treatment must remain on control of
symptoms and maintenance of normal lung function.
All patients require adequate opportunity to discuss the
safety of their medication, but this is especially important
for women who plan to become pregnant and expectant
mothers. Pregnant patients with asthma should be advised
that the greater risk to their baby lies with poorly controlled
asthma, and the safety of most modern asthma treatments
should be stressed. Even with a good patient/health care
professional relationship, independent printed material will
provide important additional reassurance547,553.
SURGERY
Airway hyperresponsiveness, airflow limitation, and mucus
hypersecretion predispose patients with asthma to
intraoperative and postoperative respiratory complications.
The likelihood of these complications depends on many
factors, including the severity of asthma at the time of
surgery, the type of surgery (thoracic and upper abdominal
pose the greatest risks), and the type of anesthesia
(general anesthesia with endotracheal intubation carries
the greatest risk). These variables need to be assessed
prior to surgery by history, physical examination, and
especially measurement of pulmonary function. If
possible, this evaluation should be undertaken several
days before the surgery to allow time for additional treatment.
In particular, if FEV1 values are less than 80 percent of the
patients personal best, a brief course of glucocorticosteroids
is required to reduce airflow limitation554,555 (Evidence C).
Furthermore, patients who have received systemic
glucocorticosteroids within the past 6 months should have
systemic coverage during the surgical period (i.e., 100 mg
hydrocortisone every 8 hours intravenously) and rapidly reduced within 24 hours following surgery. Prolonged
glucocorticosteroid therapy may inhibit wound healing556
(Evidence C).
PHYSICAL ACTIVITY
For a majority of patients with asthma, physical activity is
an important trigger of asthma exacerbations. For some
patients, it is the only trigger. This condition, in which
postexertional airflow limitation resolves spontaneously
within 30 to 45 minutes following physical activity, is
referred to as exercise-induced asthma (EIA). Some
forms of exercise, such as running, are more potent
triggers557. EIA may occur in any climatic condition, but it
increases substantially in breathing dry, cold air and is less
common in hot, humid climates558.
EIA is one expression of airway hyperresponsiveness, not
a special form of asthma. EIA often indicates that the
patient's asthma is not properly controlled; therefore,
appropriate anti-inflammatory therapy generally results in
the reduction of exercise-related symptoms. For those
patients who still experience exercise-induced asthma
despite appropriate therapy and for those in whom
exercise-induced asthma is the only manifestation of
asthma, the inhalation of rapid-acting 2-agonist before
exercising is the most effective treatment for preventing
asthma exacerbations. Many other compounds (sodium
cromoglycate, nedocromil, anticholinergic agents,
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OCCUPATIONAL ASTHMA
Asthma is the most common occupational respiratory
disorder in industrialized countries576. Occupational
asthma is defined as asthma caused by exposure to an
agent encountered in the work environment. Over 300
specific occupational agents are associated with
asthma577,578-580. It has been estimated that occupational
factors are associated with about 1 in 10 cases of adult
asthma, including new-onset disease and aggravation of
pre-existing asthma576. Occupations associated with a high
risk for occupational asthma include farming and
agricultural work, painting (including spray painting),
cleaning and janitorial work, and plastic manufacturing577.
Two types of occupational asthma are recognized:
immunologically mediated and non-immunologically
mediated. Immunologically mediated occupational
asthma is more common and has a latency period of
months to years after the onset of exposure581-583. The
mechanisms by which a variety of occupational agents
induce sensitization and asthma are largely unknown,
but IgE-mediated allergic reactions, and possibly cellmediated allergic reactions or both, are involved584, 585.
Non-immunologically mediated occupational asthma, or
irritant-induced asthma, has no latency. Reactive airway
dysfunction syndrome (RADS) is the best example of
irritant-induced asthma. Typically asthma symptoms
associated with airflow obstruction and/or airway
hyperresponsiveness occur within 24 hours following
accidental exposure to a high concentration of an irritant
gas, fume, or chemical in a previously healthy subject and
last for at least 3 months586.
A diagnosis of occupational asthma should be considered
in every adult patient with new or worsening asthma.
Detection of asthma of occupational origin requires a
systematic inquiry about the patients occupation and
exposures as part of the clinical history. Improvement of
symptoms away from work and worsening of symptoms on
returning to work suggest an occupational relationship.
Since the management of occupational asthma frequently
requires the patient to change his or her job, the diagnosis
RESPIRATORY INFECTIONS
Respiratory infections have an important relationship to
asthma as they provoke wheezing and increased
symptoms in many patients. Epidemiological studies
have found that respiratory viruses594, possibly chlamydia,
but seldom bacteria595, are the infectious microorganisms
associated with increased asthma symptoms. The
respiratory virus that most commonly causes wheezing in
infancy is respiratory syncytial virus50, while rhinoviruses,
which cause the common cold, are the principal triggers of
wheezing and worsening of asthma in older children and
adults596. Other respiratory viruses, such as parainfluenza,
influenza, adenovirus, and coronavirus, are also
associated with increased wheezing and asthma
symptoms597.
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GASTROESOPHAGEAL REFLUX
The relationship of increased asthma symptoms,
particularly at night, to gastroesophageal reflux remains an
issue of debate, although this condition is nearly 3 times
as prevalent in all patients with asthma600-603. Most of these
patients also have a hiatal hernia; furthermore, the use of
methylxanthines may increase the likelihood of symptoms
by relaxing the lower esophageal ring.
Diagnosis can best be made by simultaneously monitoring
esophageal pH and lung function. Medical management
should be given for the relief of reflux symptoms as it is
often effective and includes eating smaller, more frequent
meals; avoiding food or drink between meals and especially
at bedtime; avoiding fatty meals, alcohol, theophylline, and
oral 2-agonists; using H2-antagonists or proton pump
inhibitors; using drugs that increase lower esophageal
pressure; and elevating the head of the bed. Surgery is
reserved for the severely symptomatic patient with welldocumented esophagitis and failure of medical
management; it is not successful for everyone. It should
be demonstrated that the reflux causes asthma symptoms
before surgery is advised for patients with asthma602,603.
The role of anti-reflux treatment in asthma control is
unclear as it does not consistently improve lung function,
asthma symptoms, nocturnal asthma, or the use of
asthma medications in subjects with asthma but without
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CHAPTER
8
RESEARCH
RECOMMENDATIONS
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