Feasibility of lung clearance index in a clinical setting in pre-school children

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Abstract

Lung function testing in pre-school children in the clinical setting is challenging. Most cannot perform spirometry and many infant lung function tests require sedation. Lung clearance index (LCI) derived from the multiple-breath washout (MBW) test has been shown to be sensitive to early disease changes but may be time consuming and so a shortened test (LCI0.5) may be more feasible in young children. We sought to establish feasibility of MBW in unsedated pre-school children in a clinic setting and hypothesised use of LCI0.5 would increase success rates. 116 pre-school children (28 healthy controls and 88 with respiratory disease), median age 4.0 years (range 2-6 years), underwent MBW tests unsedated in a clinic setting, using sulfur hexafluoride as a tracer gas and an adapted photoacoustic gas analyser. 81 (70%) out of 116 children completed LCI and 72% completed LCI0.5 measurement. Test success increased significantly in patients over 3 years (0% at <2.5 years, 33% at 2.5-3 years and 70% at >3 years, p<0.0001). LCI was elevated in those with respiratory disease compared with healthy controls. MBW is feasible in a clinic setting in unsedated pre-schoolers, particularly in those >3 years old, and LCI is raised in those with respiratory disease. Use of LCI0.5 did not increase success rate in pre-schoolers.

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Downing, B., Irving, S., Bingham, Y., Fleming, L., Bush, A., & Saglani, S. (2016). Feasibility of lung clearance index in a clinical setting in pre-school children. European Respiratory Journal, 48(4), 1074–1080. https://doi.org/10.1183/13993003.00374-2016

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