Man testing breathing function by spirometry - stock photo

A lung function test used to help diagnose asthma works better in the morning, becoming less reliable throughout the day, Cambridge researchers have found.

Throughout the day, the levels of different hormones in our bodies go up and down and our immune systems perform differently. Any of these factors might affect how people respond to the lung function test

Akhilesh Jha

Using real world data from 1,600 patients, available through a database created for speeding up research and innovation, the team also found that its reliability differs significantly in winter compared to autumn.

Asthma is a common lung condition that can cause wheezing and shortness of breath, occasionally severe. Around 6.5% of people over six years old in the UK are affected by the condition. Treatments include the use of inhalers or nebulisers to carry medication into the lungs.

探花直播majority of asthma attacks occur at nighttime or early in the morning. Although this may in part be due to cooler nighttime air and exposure to dust mites and allergens, it also suggests that circadian rhythms 鈥 our 鈥榖ody clocks鈥 鈥 likely play a role.

Researchers at the Victor Phillip Dahdaleh Heart and Lung Research Institute, a collaboration between the 探花直播 of Cambridge and Royal Papworth Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (RPH), wanted to explore whether these circadian rhythms may also have an impact on our ability to diagnose asthma, using routinely performed clinical testing.

Typically, people with suspected asthma will be offered a spirometry test, which involves taking a deep breath in, then breathing out hard and fast for as long as possible into a tube to assess lung function. They will then be administered the drug salbutamol via an inhaler or nebuliser, and shortly afterwards retake the spirometry test.

Salbutamol works by opening up the airways, so a positive test result 鈥 that is, a difference in readings between the initial and follow-up spirometry tests 鈥 means that the airways must have been narrower or obstructed to begin with, suggesting that the patient could have asthma.

Cambridge 探花直播 Hospitals听NHS Foundation Trust (CUH) has recently set up the Electronic Patient Record Research and Innovation (ERIN) database so that researchers can access patient data in a secure environment to help in their research and speed up improvements in patient care.

Using this resource, the Cambridge team analysed data from 1,600 patients referred to CUH between 2016 and 2023, adjusted for factors such as age, sex, body mass index (BMI), smoking history, and the severity of the initial impairment in lung function.

In findings published today in Thorax, the researchers found that starting at 8.30am, with every hour that passed during the working day, the chances of a positive response to the test 鈥 in other words, the patient鈥檚 lungs responding to treatment, suggesting that they could have asthma 鈥 decreased by 8%.

Dr Ben Knox-Brown, Lead Research Respiratory Physiologist at RPH, said: 鈥淕iven what we know about how the risk of an asthma attack changes between night and day, we expected to find a difference in how people responded to the lung function test, but even so, we were surprised by the size of the effect.

鈥淭his has potentially important implications. Doing the test in the morning would give a more reliable representation of a patient's response to the medication than doing it in the afternoon, which is important when confirming a diagnosis such as asthma.鈥

探花直播researchers also discovered that individuals were 33% less likely to have a positive result if tested during autumn when compared to those tested during winter.

Dr听Akhilesh Jha, a Medical Research Council Clinician Scientist at the 探花直播 of Cambridge and Honorary Consultant in Respiratory Medicine at CUH, said that there may be a combination of factors behind this difference.

鈥淥ur bodies have natural rhythms 鈥 our body clocks,鈥 Jha said. 鈥淭hroughout the day, the levels of different hormones in our bodies go up and down and our immune systems perform differently, for example. Any of these factors might affect how people respond to the lung function test.

鈥 探花直播idea that the time of day, or the season of the year, affects our health and how we respond to treatments is something we鈥檙e seeing increasing evidence of. We know, for example, that people respond differently to vaccinations depending on whether they鈥檙e administered in the morning or afternoon. 探花直播findings of our study further support this idea and may need to be taken into account when interpreting the results of these commonly performed tests.鈥

Reference
Knox-Brown, B et al. Thorax; 12 March 2025; DOI: 10.1136/thorax-2024-222773



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