REPRODUCIBILITY OF EUCAPNIC VOLUNTARY HYPERVENTILATION FOR
EXERCISE-INDUCED BRONCHOSPASM DIAGNOSIS IN ASTHMATIC CHILDREN AND
ADOLESCENTS.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Exercise-induced respiratory symptoms are frequently
reported by asthmatics and exercise-induced bronchospasm (EIB) is a
frequent cause that requires objective testing for diagnosis. Eucapnic
voluntary hyperventilation (EVH) is recommended as an exercise surrogate
stimulus for this purpose, but its short-term reproducibility is not yet
established in young asthmatics. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the short-term
test-retest agreement and reproducibility of FEV1 changes after EVH in
young asthmatics. METHODS: Asthmatics aged between 10 and 20 years
underwent EVH for EIB diagnosis on two occasions 2-4 days apart at a
specialized university clinic. FEV1 was measured 5, 15 and 30 minutes
after EVH with a target ventilation rate 21 times baseline FEV1. EIB was
diagnosed as a decrease >10% in FEV1 from baseline.
RESULTS: Twenty-six of 62 recruited individuals tested positive for EIB
on both visits (positive group) and 17 on one visit only (divergent
group); and 19 tested negative on both visits (negative group). The
overall agreement was 72.5% (95%CI 61.6%, 83.6%) and positive and
negative agreement was 41.9% and 30.6% respectively. Despite overall
low bias in FEV1 response between test days (0.87%), the limits of
agreement were wide (+20.72%). There were no differences in
pre-challenge FEV1 or achieved ventilation rate, between visits either
between groups (p=0.097 and p=0.461) or within groups, (p=0.828 and
p=0.780). No test was interrupted by symptoms and there were no safety
issues. CONCLUSIONS: More than one EVH test should be performed in young
asthmatics with a negative test to exclude EIB and minimize misdiagnosis
and mistreatment.