Childhood cough variant asthma and its relationship to classic asthma

Authors: Todokoro, Makoto; Mochizuki, Hiroyuki; Tokuyama, Kenichi; Morikawa, Akihiro

Source: Annals of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology, Volume 90, Number 6, June 2003 , pp. 652-659(8)

Publisher: American College of Allergy, Asthma, & Immunology

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Abstract:

Background: In pediatrics, some patients with chronic cough who have no evidence of a causative disease are diagnosed as having cough variant asthma (CVA). The precise prognosis of infants and children with CVA, however, is still unclear.

Objective: To evaluate the relationship between CVA and classic asthma in childhood.

Methods: To diagnose CVA, we performed a methacholine inhalation challenge with use of a transcutaneous oxygen pressure (tcPo2) monitoring system in 100 children with chronic cough, and 75 children (45 boys and 30 girls; mean age, 5.7 years) were diagnosed as having CVA. These patients underwent follow-up monitoring for more than 3 years to ascertain whether classic asthma developed. For comparison, 53 age-matched children with classic asthma (30 boys and 23 girls; mean age, 5.6 years) and 30 age-matched control subjects (12 boys and 18 girls; mean age, 5.5 years) also participated in this study. Consecutive doses of methacholine were doubled until a 10% decrease in tcPo2 from the baseline was reached. The cumulative dose of methacholine at the inflection point of tcPo2 (Dmin-Po2) was considered to represent the sensitivity of tcPo2 to inhaled methacholine.

Results: After 3 years or more of follow-up assessments, 52 of the 75 patients answered our questionnaire. Of the responding patients, 28 had been diagnosed as having classic asthma. A significant difference was noted in the age at onset of CVA between the children in whom classic asthma developed (the asthma-developed group) and those in whom classic asthma did not develop (the asthma-free group). No statistically significant differences in Dmin-Po2 between the asthma-developed group and the asthma-free group or between the girls and the boys, however, were found.

Conclusions: This study showed that 75% of children with chronic cough had CVA, that classic asthma developed in 54% of the children with CVA, and that it is not the severity of bronchial hyperresponsiveness in CVA but the age at onset of CVA that is a risk factor for the development of classic asthma in childhood CVA.

Document Type: Original article

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