Objective
To determine asthma outcomes in children undergoing adenotonsillectomy (T&A) for treatment of sleep‐disordered breathing (SDB).
Hypothesis
Asthmatic children will demonstrate improvement in asthma control after T&A compared to asthmatic children not undergoing surgical treatment.
Study Design
Prospective cohort.
Patient‐Subject Selection
80 children with diagnosed asthma, aged 4‐11, undergoing T&A and 62 controls matched to the T&A subjects by age, sex, and asthma severity classification.
Methodology
Parents and children completed the Childhood Asthma Control Test (C‐ACT) and the Pediatric Sleep Questionnaire (PSQ). Parents were queried regarding the number of asthma exacerbations, the frequency of the use of systemic steroids, the number of emergency room visits and the number of hospitalizations in the prior 6 months. The identical questionnaires and interviews were completed 6 months after entry.
Results
The adjusted mean (95% CI) C‐ACT score was 21.86 (20.94‐22.68) at entry and 25.15 (24.55‐25.71) at follow‐up for the T&A group compared with 22.42 (21.46‐23.28) and 23.59 (22.77‐24.33) for the control group. There was a significant group by time interaction (P < 0.001). Simple effects analysis showed that group means did not differ at entry (P = 1.00) but did differ at follow‐up (P = 0.006). Baseline PSQ was a significant predictor of improvement in C‐ACT scores. Statistical modeling did not demonstrate significant group by time interactions for any of the asthma clinical outcomes, although these outcomes were very infrequent in both groups.
Conclusion
Treatment of SDB improves asthma outcomes as measured by the C‐ACT.
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