PulmPEEPs

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Pulm PEEPs Pearls: Spontaneous Breathing Trials

February 24

Episode Description

Furf and Monty are back with another Pulm PEEPs Pearls episode. The topic of today’s discussion is an often discussed, but often misunderstood, test; the methacholine challenge. They’ll review when to utilize this test, how it should be performed, and the appropriate interpretation.

Contributors

This episode was prepared with research by Pulm PEEPs Associate Editor George Doumat.

Dustin Latimer, another Pulm PEEPs Associate Editor, assisted with audio and video editing.

Key Learning Points

What the Test Measures

  • Methacholine challenge is a direct bronchial provocation test of airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR), a core physiologic feature of asthma.
  • Anyone will bronchoconstrict at high enough concentrations — the test looks for an abnormal threshold.
  • The key endpoint is the PC20: the methacholine concentration causing a 20% fall in FEV1.
    • Abnormal in adults: PC20 ≤ 8–16 mg/mL

Test Performance

  • Meta-analyses: pooled sensitivity ~60%, specificity ~90%.
  • Real-world cohorts: sensitivity 55–62%, specificity 56–100% (varies by population, protocol, and threshold used).
  • Not a standalone yes/no test — best used as part of a broader diagnostic pathway.

Where It Fits in the Asthma Workup

The test belongs in a stepwise approach:

  1. Step 1: Spirometry + bronchodilator response
  2. Step 2: Add FeNO and/or peak flow variability (if available)
  3. Step 3: If the picture is still unclear → methacholine challenge

It is most useful for symptomatic patients with normal spirometry and no bronchodilator reversibility. Given its cost, mild risk, and discomfort, it should not be a first-line test — most asthma diagnoses do not require it.

Technique and Medication Prep

Technique

  • ERS guidelines favor tidal breathing over deep inspiratory maneuvers.
  • Deep breaths can be bronchoprotective and blunt the response, reducing sensitivity — especially in mild or well-controlled asthma.

Medication Washout (to Avoid False Negatives)

Medication ClassWashout Period
Short-acting beta-agonists (SABA)≥ 6 hours
Long-acting beta-agonists (LABA)~24 hours
Ultra-long-acting beta-agonists~48 hours
Short-acting anticholinergics (e.g., ipratropium)~12 hours
Long-acting muscarinic antagonists (LAMA, e.g., tiotropium)7 days
  • Inhaled corticosteroids, leukotriene blockers, and antihistamines do not significantly affect the test acutely — continue these. Withdrawing ICS also carries its own risk for asthma patients.
  • Practical tip: Spell out exactly what to hold and when — for both the patient and the PFT lab — at the time the test is ordered.

Interpreting Results

Negative Test (PC20 > 16 mg/mL)

  • Very high negative predictive value in symptomatic adults.
  • Makes current asthma quite unlikely (assuming proper test conduct).
  • This is the test’s greatest strength: it is an excellent rule-out test.

Positive Test (PC20 ≤ 8–16 mg/mL)

  • More nuanced — airway hyperresponsiveness is not unique to asthma.
  • Can be positive in: chronic cough, allergic rhinitis, COPD, and even some healthy asymptomatic individuals.
  • A positive result raises probability but must be interpreted alongside the clinical story, variable respiratory symptoms, peak flow variability, FeNO, and ICS response.

Safety and Risks

  • Overall, the test is quite safe; significant adverse effects are rare.
  • Temporary breathing discomfort is expected (bronchoconstriction is being induced).
  • Severe bronchospasm is possible:
    • A trained clinician should be available; SABA inhaler/nebulizer must be immediately on hand; a physician should be reachable in the facility.
  • Contraindications / cautions:
    • Avoid if FEV1 < 70% predicted or < 1–1.5 L (baseline obstruction greatly increases risk).
    • Avoid within 3 months of an acute cardiac event (rare risk of cardiac events with unstable cardiac disease).

Five Pearls — Quick Recap

  1. What it tests: Methacholine challenge is a direct test of AHR with high specificity but variable sensitivity — it belongs inside a diagnostic pathway, not as a standalone asthma test.
  2. When to use it: Most useful for symptomatic patients with normal spirometry and no bronchodilator response, after FeNO and peak flow variability have been considered.
  3. Technique and meds matter: Use tidal breathing protocol; respect washout intervals — especially the 7-day LAMA washout and 24–48 hour LABA window — to avoid false negatives.
  4. Safety: Generally safe, but can induce significant bronchoconstriction. Have a SABA available and avoid the test in patients with FEV1 < 70% predicted.
  5. Interpretation: A negative test (PC20 > 16 mg/mL) strongly argues against current asthma. A positive test raises probability but is not specific — interpret alongside the full clinical picture.

References and Further Reading

  1. 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. Eur Respir J. 2017 May 1;49(5):1601526. doi: 10.1183/13993003.01526-2016. PMID: 28461290.
  2. Lee, J., & Song, J. U. (2021). Diagnostic comparison of methacholine and mannitol bronchial challenge tests for identifying bronchial hyperresponsiveness in asthma: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Journal of Asthma58(7), 883–891. https://doi.org/10.1080/02770903.2020.1739704
  3. Davis BE, Blais CM, Cockcroft DW. Methacholine challenge testing: comparative pharmacology. J Asthma Allergy. 2018 May 14;11:89-99. doi: 10.2147/JAA.S160607. PMID: 29785128; PMCID: PMC5957064.
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