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Analysis of Bronchial Remodeling Using Resonance Magnetic Imaging in Severe Asthmatic childrEn

Recruiting
6 - 17 years of age
Both
Phase N/A

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Overview

This study is a diagnostic imaging pilot study evaluating performance of 3D-Ultrashort Time Echo (3D-UTE) Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) for the diagnosis of bronchial remodeling in children with severe asthma. The primary objective is to compare bronchial parameters measured by 3D-UTE MRI according to the presence or the absence of bronchial remodeling determined on bronchial biopsies using immunohistochemistry, in severe asthmatic children.

Description

Background: Asthma is the most frequent chronic disease in childhood. Severe asthma accounts for only 5% of patients but more than half of the costs of the disease. It is characterized by bronchial remodeling, including an increase in bronchial smooth muscle (BSM) mass associated with an increase in bronchial smooth muscle cell proliferation. This increased cell proliferation has been related with an abnormal calcium homeostasis and an enhanced mitochondrial biogenesis. Moreover, the release of growth factors by inflammatory cells and bronchial epithelial cells reinforces BSM cell proliferation. BSM remodeling is correlated with the severity and poor control of the disease. In children, bronchial remodeling could be assessed by performing endobronchial biopsies during bronchoscopy. However, this method is invasive and cannot be repeated to follow the remodeling. Non-invasive quantification of proximal bronchial thickness by computed tomography (CT) has been demonstrated. However, CT was unable to differentiate bronchial inflammation from remodeling on the one hand, and, on the other hand, CT is a radiating examination, and the repetition of X-ray exposures can be a source of cancer. Recently, the team evaluated at the university hospital of Bordeaux new MRI sequences to obtain 3D high-resolution images (3D-UTE), close to that of CT. This 3D-UTE has the advantage of being performed without any injection or inhalation of contrast medium and non-irradiating. Moreover, MRI provides additional data on signal intensity or bronchial inflammation that is not accessible on CT imaging. However, to the best of our knowledge, the use of 3D -UTE high resolution MRI has not been demonstrated in a pediatric population with severe asthma.

Purpose: To compare bronchial parameters measured in 3D-UTE MRI according to the presence or not of bronchial remodeling measured by immunohistochemistry on bronchial biopsies obtained from severe asthmatic children.

Methods: The investigator's team therefore wishes to carry out pulmonary MRI without anesthesia, nor injection nor inhalation of contrast product in severe asthmatic children. Two sequences in axial cuts will be performed for a total duration of 12 minutes (6 minutes by sequence). Bronchial quantitative data obtained by MRI will be compared to those obtained from immunohistochemical analysis of bronchial biopsies performed during bronchoscopy. Severe asthmatic children requiring bronchoscopy will be identified during consultation or hospitalization relative of the disease. The inclusion visit (V1) will be performed during a consultation for asthma of the usual care of the child. Then, the second visit (V2) will correspond to the anesthesia consultation of the usual care of the child to check the absence of contraindications to anesthesia and bronchoscopy. The third visit (V3) will correspond to the pulmonary MRI and flexible bronchoscopy. According to the classic procedure, bronchoscopy will be performed during a hospitalization. The pulmonary MRI, as well as blood tests and lung function testing, will be performed at the beginning of the hospitalization, the day before the bronchoscopy. Children will be monitored 24 hours in hospitalization after the bronchoscopy.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Child from 6 to 17 years old
  • Having informed consent signed by the holders of parental authority.
  • Having a diagnosis of severe asthma according to the Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) 2020;
    • Asthma: chronic inflammatory disease of the airways, defined mainly by respiratory symptoms such as wheezing, dyspnea, chest tightness and / or cough, which may vary in time and intensity associated with a limitation also varying in the time of expiratory flow.
    • Severe asthma: asthma which requires treatment with inhaled corticosteroids in high doses plus a second long-acting bronchodilator type controller, to maintain control of symptoms and / or whose control worsens if this treatment is reduced and / or which remains uncontrolled despite this treatment.
  • Having to carry out as part of the current care a functional respiratory exploration;
  • Should require as part of the routine care of a bronchial fibroscopy.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Patient without affiliation or not benefiting from a social security scheme;
  • Patient being in a period of relative exclusion from another protocol;
  • Patient born before 36 weeks of amenorrhea;
  • Patient with a documented history of pulmonary fibrosis, primary pulmonary arterial hypertension, cystic fibrosis, pulmonary malformation or chronic viral infections (hepatitis, HIV);
  • Patient presenting with an exacerbation of asthma requiring systemic corticosteroids within the previous 4 weeks;
  • Patient with any dental, nasopharyngeal or bronchial infection with fever (> 39 ° C) requiring systemic antibiotics within the previous 4 weeks
  • Patient with a contraindication to MRI:
    • Abdominal perimeter greater than 200 cm;
    • Claustrophobia or inability to lie still for 12 minutes;
    • Have a pacemaker or implantable defibrillator, intraocular metallic foreign body, intracranial metal clip, a pre-6000 Starr-Edwards type heart valve prosthesis, or a biomedical device such as an insulin pump or neurostimulator, cochlear implant and metal patch.
  • Patient with a contraindication to anesthesia;
  • Patient with a contraindication to bronchial fibroscopy following:
    • Abnormal hemostasis assessment;
    • Subject with cardiac pathology.

Study details

Asthma in Children

NCT05419622

University Hospital, Bordeaux

25 January 2024

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