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Methacholine Challenge Test

Editor: Jason Widrich Updated: 5/22/2023 10:29:27 PM

Introduction

Asthma has historically been challenging to diagnose due to the non-specific nature of symptoms of the disease. Bronchoprovocation testing is a useful method to evaluate airway hyperresponsiveness and establish an initial diagnosis. Also, bronchoprovocation testing can be used to quantify the severity of airway dysfunction in patients with asthma. Methacholine challenge testing is the most common form of bronchoprovocation testing, utilizing the longer-acting acetylcholine derivative methacholine to induce bronchoconstriction. Direct bronchial challenge testing, chemically triggering airway smooth muscle receptors. The dose or concentration is escalated in small increments while monitoring airway hyperreactivity, via the resultant decreased forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1), recording the provocative dose (PD20) or concentration (PC20) resulting in 20% decrease in FEV1 in a positive test. Methacholine is preferable to other pharmacologic bronchoprovocation agents, such as histamine, due to its limited systemic side effects.[1][2]

Anatomy and Physiology

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Anatomy and Physiology

Methacholine is a non-selective muscarinic receptor agonist that acts directly on airway smooth muscle receptors to induce bronchoconstriction. However, methacholine has also been linked to indirect mechanisms of airway response as well, including stimulation of mucous cell secretion. The mechanism of action of derivative methacholine is longer than acetylcholine, thus it is useful in bronchial challenge testing to allow time for assessment of reactivity.[1]

Indications

Indications for testing include evaluating symptoms clinically suggestive of asthma and response to therapy. It is important to note that although the test is highly sensitive, the positive predictive value has limitations due to the high incidence of false positives results seen in several other conditions, including allergic rhinitis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), bronchitis, and cystic fibrosis. This situation renders the test more useful in terms of exclusion due to high negative predictive value when presenting with clinical symptoms suggestive of asthma, such as in patients with vocal cord dysfunction, central airway obstruction due to tumors or polyps, and certain cases of occupational exposure.[1][3]

Contraindications

In addition to general limitations if unable to tolerate inhalation of the challenge agent, contraindications include:

  • Airflow limitations in FEV1 less than 60% predicted or 1.5 L
  • Inability to consistently reproduce quality spirometry
  • Recent myocardial infarction within the past three months
  • Uncontrolled hypertension
  • Known aortic aneurysm
  • Recent ophthalmologic surgery
  • Patients at risk for intracranial pressure elevation

In younger patients with smaller airway caliber, hypoxemia is a concern. However, testing can safely be performed utilizing pulse oximetry (SaO2) and transcutaneous oxygen pressure. Methacholine is a pregnancy category C drug and it is not known whether it is excreted in breast milk or is associated with fetal abnormalities.[4]

Equipment

Following are the required pieces of equipment for methacholine challenge testing:

  • Spirometry
  • Nebulization apparatus to administer aerosolized methacholine
  • Preparations of varying concentrations of methacholine are required to perform methacholine challenge testing

Personnel

The appropriate personnel plays a critical role in methacholine challenge testing, as patient breathing maneuvers must be coached properly to obtain reliable and accurate results when performing spirometry and measuring FEV1. The patient must be able to reproduce the spirometric maneuvers, otherwise, the quality of the test will not be useful to interpret. Staff trained in the treatment of acute bronchospasm as well as resuscitation equipment should be present with emergency resuscitation equipment and bronchodilators.

Preparation

Before performing the test, the patient must discontinue certain medications that decrease bronchial hyperresponsiveness. Several half-lives may be required for these drugs to be eliminated and not interfere with the testing. These drugs include inhaled bronchodilators (6 to 48 hours or 1 week in long-acting muscarinic antagonists), oral albuterol (12 to 24 hours), inhaled and oral glucocorticoids (two to three weeks), leukotriene modifying agents (48 hours), theophylline (12 to 24 hours), cromolyn (8 hours), and anti-histamines due to their anticholinergic effect. Solutions and nebulizers require preparation in a standardized fashion. Increasing doses or concentrations of methacholine are administered via nebulization with subsequent spirometry performed at each adjustment to reproduce a dose-response curve. Also, advanced cardiopulmonary resuscitation medications and equipment should be available, as well as personnel capable of treating severe bronchospasm and/or cardiac arrest.[1][2]

Technique or Treatment

For this technique, it is essential to define the breathing maneuver, as the duration of "quiet," or tidal volume, breathing must be specified; this duration is typically at least one minute. An alternate method of five vital capacity breaths followed by a breath-hold is another option. However quiet breathing technique has shown higher sensitivity likely due to false negatives due to the protective and bronchodilator effects seen at higher vital capacity breathing. Submaximal inhalation, limiting total lung capacity, can be implemented in the vital capacity method to limit these effects, thereby increasing sensitivity.

Methacholine is administered sequentially in increasing concentrations ranging from 0.016 to 16 mg/m, prepared in two to four-fold dilutions. The tester should perform spirometry before establishing a baseline. Then methacholine is given via nebulization starting with the lowest (most diluted) concentration. FEV1 then gets measured at 30, then 90 seconds post aerosol inhalation, during which the patient must be adequately coached to ensure quality measurements. If vocal cord dysfunction is under evaluation, the tester should implement full vital capacity breathing maneuvers with inspiratory and expiratory phase analysis. Otherwise, expiratory time can be decreased from six seconds to about two seconds if FEV1 is measured alone. The dose or concentration is increased in a stepwise fashion until FEV1 drops by more than 20%, or 35 to 40% specific airway conductance (SGaw) is achieved, and PD20 or PC20 is determined.

A test is considered positive if PD20 is less than or equal to 200 mcg or PC20 is less than or equal to 8 mg/mL. If using SGaw, 100 mcg, or 4 mg/mL or less indicates a positive test. A test is considered negative if PD20 is greater than 400 mcg or PC20 is greater than 16 mg/mL.

Furthermore, the degree of bronchial hyperresponsiveness can be categorized based off of PC20 as normal (more than 16 mg/mL), borderline (4.0-16 mg/mL), mild (1.0-4.0 mg/mL), or moderate to severe (less than 1.0 mg/mL).[5][6]

Clinical Significance

Methacholine challenge testing is a form of non-specific bronchoprovocation and is useful in patients with a questionable diagnosis of asthma. Baseline spirometry should be normal, and an atypical history that may be suggestive of asthma should prompt evaluation for testing. The test has high sensitivity and a strong negative predictive value, helpful in excluding a diagnosis of asthma. Positive test results may suggest asthma. However, other conditions that may produce false-positive test results merit consideration. Positive testing in otherwise asymptomatic patients can be seen in up to 7% of the population and is believed to be normal with hyperreactive airways, which may also be indicative of the future development of clinical asthma and requires follow-up. In patients with a clinical history suggestive of asthma, with negative testing, alternate diagnoses should be considered, such as vocal cord dysfunction, occupational asthma, or central airway obstruction (i.e., tumor, polyp, or foreign body) as these conditions may clinically imitate asthma. Full inspiratory and expiratory phase flow volume loop analysis is important when paradoxical vocal cord motion is suspected. In patients with a history suggestive of asthma with positive testing, response to therapy merits close observation. Baseline spirometry that shows a pattern of airway obstruction (i.e. low FEV1/FVC ratio and low FEV1) may be difficult to interpret as hyperresponsiveness strongly correlates to the baseline level of obstruction, and strong bronchodilator response of more than 12% and 200 mL in either FEV1 or FVC likely establishes the diagnosis without the need for methacholine challenge.[3][7]

Enhancing Healthcare Team Outcomes

Proper administration of methacholine challenge testing requires an interprofessional team approach, beginning with the physician prescribing the test based on clinical history with failure to establish or eliminate the diagnosis after careful consideration of contraindications. Optimal performance during testing is reliant upon proper assistance and coaching of patient breathing maneuvers by registered respiratory therapists. Nursing staff may assist in preparing the patient for the test as well as counseling them on what to expect with the respiratory therapist, as dealt with in further detail in the following sections. Additionally, pharmacist preparation of varying concentrations of methacholine is needed to ensure accurate data. Although the test is low risk with the proper exclusion of contraindicated patient populations with diminished baseline FEV1, assessment of vital signs and patient symptoms is also essential to prevent and recognize wheezing or bronchospasm. Health care professionals should assess the need for bronchodilators for the treatment of severe bronchospasm. Resuscitation equipment and personnel should be readily available. Guidelines provided by the American Thoracic Society established in 1999 outline step-by-step protocols, safety measures, patient preparation and procedures, and cohesion between care team members is required to safely and accurately assess patients.[6]

All these factors combine to demonstrate that the methacholine challenge test is most effective when part of an interprofessional healthcare team approach, where multiple disciplines (clinicians, specialists, nursing, respiratory therapists) collaborate to administer testing and use the results to direct patient management most effectively. [Level 5]

Nursing, Allied Health, and Interprofessional Team Interventions

The methacholine challenge should take place with assistance from a nurse. The nurse should ensure that the patient understands the procedure and that the consent is signed and also ensure that resuscitative equipment is in the room prior to the procedure. Additionally, the nurse should closely monitor the vital signs of the patient during and post-procedurally.  Bronchodilators must be available in the room at all times.

Nursing, Allied Health, and Interprofessional Team Monitoring

Besides monitoring the patient's vital signs and oxygenation, the nurse should document the test; when it started, what was injected, and when the test was terminated. Also, the respiratory status of the patient during and after the test requires full documentation by the nurse.

References


[1]

Lee MK, Yoon HK, Kim SW, Kim TH, Park SJ, Lee YM. Nonspecific Bronchoprovocation Test. Tuberculosis and respiratory diseases. 2017 Oct:80(4):344-350. doi: 10.4046/trd.2017.0051. Epub 2017 Sep 1     [PubMed PMID: 28905530]


[2]

Davis BE, Blais CM, Cockcroft DW. Methacholine challenge testing: comparative pharmacology. Journal of asthma and allergy. 2018:11():89-99. doi: 10.2147/JAA.S160607. Epub 2018 May 14     [PubMed PMID: 29785128]

Level 2 (mid-level) evidence

[3]

Bohadana AB, Rokach A, Wild P, Izbicki G. Asthma-like symptoms induced by the methacholine challenge test: do they predict a negative-to-positive switch in the test result?-case report. Journal of thoracic disease. 2018 Oct:10(10):E716-E720. doi: 10.21037/jtd.2018.09.63. Epub     [PubMed PMID: 30505509]

Level 3 (low-level) evidence

[4]

Wang J, Mochizuki H, Muramatsu R, Arakawa H, Tokuyama K, Morikawa A. Evaluation of bronchial hyperresponsiveness by monitoring of transcutaneous oxygen tension and arterial oxygen saturation during methacholine challenge in asthmatic children. The Journal of asthma : official journal of the Association for the Care of Asthma. 2006 Mar:43(2):145-9     [PubMed PMID: 16517431]


[5]

Coates AL, Wanger J, Cockcroft DW, Culver BH, Bronchoprovocation Testing Task Force: Kai-Håkon Carlsen, Diamant Z, Gauvreau G, Hall GL, Hallstrand TS, Horvath I, de Jongh FHC, Joos G, Kaminsky DA, Laube BL, Leuppi JD, Sterk PJ. ERS technical standard on bronchial challenge testing: general considerations and performance of methacholine challenge tests. The European respiratory journal. 2017 May:49(5):. pii: 1601526. doi: 10.1183/13993003.01526-2016. Epub 2017 May 1     [PubMed PMID: 28461290]


[6]

Hallstrand TS, Leuppi JD, Joos G, Hall GL, Carlsen KH, Kaminsky DA, Coates AL, Cockcroft DW, Culver BH, Diamant Z, Gauvreau GM, Horvath I, de Jongh FHC, Laube BL, Sterk PJ, Wanger J, American Thoracic Society (ATS)/European Respiratory Society (ERS) Bronchoprovocation Testing Task Force. ERS technical standard on bronchial challenge testing: pathophysiology and methodology of indirect airway challenge testing. The European respiratory journal. 2018 Nov:52(5):. pii: 1801033. doi: 10.1183/13993003.01033-2018. Epub 2018 Nov 15     [PubMed PMID: 30361249]


[7]

Cockcroft DW, Berscheid BA, Murdock KY. Unimodal distribution of bronchial responsiveness to inhaled histamine in a random human population. Chest. 1983 May:83(5):751-4     [PubMed PMID: 6839815]