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Clinical Science (1992) 83, 227-232 (Printed in Great Britain) 227 Circulating histamine and eosinophil cationic protein levels in nocturnal asthma Michael F. FITZPATRICK', Thomas MACKAY', Carol WALTERS, Po-Chun TAP', Martin K. CHURCH', Stephen T. HOLGATEl and Neil J. DOUGLAS' 'Respiratory Medicine Unit, Department of Medicine (RIE), City Hospital, Edinburgh, U.K., ZDepartmentsof Medicine and Pharmacology, University of Southampton, Southampton General Hospital, Southampton, U.K., and 3Cardiovascular Immunology Research Group, University of London, St George's Hospital Medical School, London, U.K. (Received 16 April 1992; accepted I May 1992) 1. To investigate the role of mast cells and eosinophils in the pathogenesis of nocturnal asthma, the plasma methylhistamine concentration, serum eosinophi1 cationic protein level and peak expiratory flow rate were measured 2-hourly for 24h in 10 patients with nocturnal asthma and in 10 healthy control subjects. Nocturnal asthma was defined as at least one nocturnal awakening per week due to cough, wheeze or breathlessness with an average overnight fall in peak expiratory flow rate of a t least 15% during a 2-week run-in period. 2. The lowest peak expiratory flow rate occurred at 02.00-04.00 hours in the group with nocturnal asthma, whose overnight fall in peak expiratory flow rate was 29+5% in comparison with 5+1% (means +SEM) in the normal subjects. 3. Plasma methylhistamine levels at night (0.28004.00 hours) were lower than during the day (10.00-20.00 hours) in both asthmatic patients and normal subjects (asthmatic patients: day, median 0.22 ng/ml, 95% confidence intervals 0.18-0.34 ng/ml; night, 0.17 ng/ml, 0.13-0.24 ng/ml; P< 0.01; normal subjects: day, 0.31 ng/ml, 0.24-0.41 ng/ml; night, 0.24 ng/ml, 0.21-0.33 ng/ml; P< 0.01). 4. The serum eosinophil cationic protein level was higher by day (30ng/ml, 8-47ng/ml) than by night (21 ng/ml, 5-34nglml; P<O.O4) in the group with nocturnal asthma, but did not change significantly with the time of day in the normal subjects (day: 8 ng/ml, 4-14 ng/ml; night: 8 ng/ml, 5-21 nglml). 5. Peripheral blood eosinophil counts fell in the early morning in the patients with nocturnal asthma (day: 0.52 x 109/1, 0.14-0.76 x 109/l; night: 0.29 x 109/1, 0.13-0.57 x 109/l;P= 0.03), but did not change significantly in the normal subjects. 6. This study indicates that a rise in plasma histamine concentration is not a prerequisite for nocturnal asthma. INTRODUCTION Asthma tends to be most severe in the early hours of the morning, with around 90% of asthmatic patients being affected by nocturnal asthma symptoms [l, 21. The pathogenesis of this nocturnal airway narrowing is poorly understood. Increased parasympathetic tone contributes to overnight airway narrowing [3, 41, but is insufficient to account for all of the observed nocturnal bronchoconstriction 13, 41. Other factors which may contribute to nocturnal airway narrowing include increased release of bronchoconstricting mediators and increased bronchial reactivity to such mediators. It has been reported that plasma histamine levels rise at night, and this finding was equated with mast cell involvement in nocturnal bronchoconstriction [ S ] . However, the plasma levels of histamine reported in the latter study are higher than those that would normally be accepted as physiological [6], suggesting either basophil contamination or technical limitations in the assay [7]. To clarify the relationship between nocturnal asthma and plasma levels of circulating mediators we have measured circadian changes in plasma histamine and serum eosinophil cationic protein (ECP) [8] levels in patients with nocturnal asthma and in normal control subjects. METHODS Patients and control subjects We studied 10 clinically stable patients with nocturnal asthma (three were atopic with positive skin tests to house dust mite, pollens or animal dander; four males, six females; mean age 43 years, range 18-60 years) and 10 normal subjects (five males, five females, mean age 35 years, range 24-54 years). Key words: asthma, circadian rhythm, mediators. Abbreviations: ECP, eosinophil cationic protein; PEFR, peak expiratory flow rate. 'Deceased. Correspondence: Dr Neil 1. Douglas, Respiratory Medicine Unit, Department of Medicine (RIE), City Hospital, Greenbank Drive, Edinburgh El0 SSB, U.K. 228 M. F. Fitzpatrick et al. None of the patients or normal subjects smoked. Nocturnal asthma was defined as at least one awakening from asthma per week in association with an average overnight fall in peak expiratory flow rate (PEFR) of at least 15% over a 2-week runin period. Cromoglycate was stopped in the two patients on this medication for 5 days before the study. Oral 8,-adrenoceptor agonists and theophylline were withheld for at least 48 h and inhaled 8-adrenoceptor agonists were withheld for 6 h before the study. Inhaled ipratropium was provided as ‘rescue’ medication throughout the study period and patients’ other usual maintenance therapy (morning once daily oral steroids <7.5mg/day in four patients, twice daily inhaled steroids in 10 patients) was continued unchanged through the study. Normal subjects were selected from respondents to a newspaper advertisement on the basis of a screening questionnaire to exclude those with a history of current illness or allergy or those taking medication. Each patient and normal subject gave their written informed consent to participation in the study, which had the approval of the Local Ethical Advisory Committee. Immediately after the run-in period, each subject attended our laboratory for one 24h period commencing at 09.00 hours. All measured their PEFR in triplicate every 2 h throughout the study from 10.00 hours on day 1 to 08.00 hours on day 2. The highest of three PEFR recordings at each time point was used. Sleep times were standardized for all subjects by fixed ‘lights out’ (23.00 hours) and final awakening (06.00 hours) times. Blood sampling A blood sample was taken every 2h, from 10.00 hours on day 1 until 08.00 hours on day 2 of the study, through an indwelling (teflon 18 G) forearm venous catheter, kept patent by flushing with saline (150mmol/l NaCl) containing 1 unit of heparin/ml after each sample. The first 3ml of blood at each sample time was discarded and a further 10ml was aspirated into a pre-cooled plastic syringe. Eight millilitres of blood were placed in a polypropylene tube containing crystalline EDTA (potassium salt; BDH Chemicals Ltd, Poole, Dorset, U.K.) and were centrifuged at 4°C and 2000g for 5min. The top 1ml of the supernatant plasma was then pipetted off carefully, so as not to disturb the buffy coat, and was stored in a plain polypropylene tube at -70°C. The remaining 2 ml of blood was placed in a plain polypropylene tube and was allowed to clot for 45 min at room temperature before being centrifuged at 2000g for 5min. The resulting serum was transferred to a plain 5ml tube for storage at -70°C. In all patients and control subjects measurements of plasma histamine concentrations were made over the 24h period, and in eight patients and eight control subjects the serum ECP level was also determined. Eosinophil counts Full blood counts were performed and fresh blood films were prepared at 14.00, 16.00, 02.00 and 04.00 hours. The slides were fixed and were stained immediately using the ‘Quikdiff methods [Baxter Dade AG, Dudingen, Switzerland; the fixative is a solution of Fast Green in methanol (0.002g/l); stain 1 contained 1.22g of eosin G/1 and stain 2 l . l g of thiazine dye/l]. A differential leucocyte count on 500 leucocytes was carried out under oil immersion microscopy, at a magnification of 100, at each time point. The total leucocyte count at each time point was measured by an automated blood analyser (Fismex NE 8000; TOA Medical Electronics Company Ltd, Kobe, Japan). Methylhistamine assay Histamine was measured as its primary methylated metabolite, N-methylhistamine, using a commercial r i a . kit (Pharmacia, Milton Keynes, Bucks, U.K.) with a 80% selectivity for N-methylhistamine over histamine. Methylhistamine was measured in preference to histamine because of its longer half-life in biological fluids. In four subjects the levels of native histamine were also measured using a commercial r i a . kit specific for histamine (Serotec, Oxford, U.K.). Standard curves were constructed for both assays with linear portions between 0.1 and 10ng/ml for the N-methylhistamine assay and 0.0515ng/ml for the histamine assay. The assays were tested with two spiked plasma samples of known histamine concentration. With the 0.44 ng/ml sample, the N-methylhistamine assay gave a mean concentration of 0.43 ng/ml with an inter-day coefficient of variation of 8% (n= 16), and the histamine assay gave a mean level of 0.43ng/ml and an interday coefficient of variation of 12% (n=16). A 0.25 ng/ml sample was tested using the N-methylhistamine assay to give a mean concentration of 0.22 ng/ml with an inter-day coefficient of variation of 5% (n=31). The intra-day result with the 0.25 mg/ml sample using the N-methylhistamine assay gave a mean concentration of 0.24ng/ml and a coefficient of variation of 17% (n=8). The mean values obtained for methylhistamine and histamine respectively in the four subjects in whom both assays were performed in all samples were 0.17 f0.03 ng/ml and 0.20 f0.02 ng/ml (means +SEM). These values were not significantly different. ECP assay Serum ECP level was measured by an e.1.i.s.a. based on the method of Tai et al. [9]. The method used immobilized monoclonal antibody EG1 to capture ECP on to the surface of 96-well e.1.i.s.a. plates. The quantity of bound ECP was then assayed using an alkaline-phosphatase-linked anti- 229 Circulating histamine and eosinophil cationic protein in nocturnal asthma Table I. Characteristics of the asthmatic patients. Abbreviations: B, inhaled 8-adrenoceptor agonirt; I, inhaled ipratropium; C, inhaled cromoglycate; S, inhaled steroid, followed by daily dose in pg; OB, oral padrenoceptor agonist, T, oral theophylline, P, oral prednirolone,followed by daily dose in mg. Patient no. Sex Usual medications Maximum PEFR (% of predicted) Diurnal change in PEFR (%) B, S loo0 B, S 1600, OB, T B, S 200 B, S 1oo0, OB, T, P 5 B, I, S 1600, C, T. P 7.5 B, I, S 1600, T, P 7.5 B, S 200, OB, T B, S 1600, C, T B, I, S 1600, OB, T B, S 1600, OB, T, P 5 95 89 78 56 25 31 31 64 90 68 40 I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 F F F F M M M M F F 52 38 18 39 42 56 60 46 32 43 38 85 97 61 4 2 300 200 I 100 I 33 48 33 65 56 body to ECP (antibody EG2) which binds to a second determinant on ECP. Unknown samples were assayed at four concentrations in duplicate. Controls with known concentrations of ECP were assayed at the same time. The absorbance at 405nm of the reaction product developed from the alkaline phosphatase substrate nitrophenyl phosphate was plotted against log [ECP]. Calculations of ECP concentrations in ng/ml were made, with corrections, from the linear part of the graph. The sensitivity of the ECP assay was 5ng/ml, and the coefficient of variation of repeated assays was 7%. Statistical analysis Results are expressed as meansfSEM for normally distributed data, and as the median and 95% confidence interval for non-normally distributed data. The Mann-Whitney U-test was used to compare results between normal subjects and asthmatic patients. Wilcoxon signed ranks tests were used to examine changes within each group. The appropriate Bonferroni correction factor was applied where multiple comparisons were made. RESULTS One patient, a 38-year-old female, was withdrawn on the evening of the study because she required nebulized P,-adrenoceptor agonists for relief of asthmatic symptoms. Thus, her daytime data only were included in the analysis below. 1 10.w 14.w 18.w nw m.w 06.w 10.w Time of day (hours) , , , , , , , I0.W 14.00 18.00 2LW Ol.WO6.W I0.W Time of day (hours) Fig. I. PEFR (top), plasma methylhistamine concentration (middle) and serum ECP concentration (bottom) over the 24h period in normal subjects (left) and patients with nocturnal asthma (right). Data are displayed as means SEM. in the asthmatic group (29+5%) than in the normal group ( 5 f 1%, P<O.OOl). The minimum overnight PEFR in the asthmatic patients (47+5% of predicted) occurred at 02.00-04.00 hours (in seven out of nine patients). Thus, results obtained at 02.0004.00 hours are used to illustrate changes at the time of maximal airway narrowing in the asthmatic patients. Plasma methylhistamine levels The daytime plasma methylhistamine level in the asthmatic patients did not differ significantly from that in the normal subjects (P=O.lO, Table 2, Fig. 24, but the mean night-time plasma methylhistamine level was lower in the asthmatic patients than in the normal subjects (P<0.04). The mean 02.0&04.00 hours plasma methylhistamine levels were lower than the daytime values in both groups ( P 0.01), with similar percentage falls from the daytime values (asthmatic patients, 21 +6%; normal subjects, 24 f5%; P =0.60). -= PEFR measurements Both asthmatic patients and normal subjects had significant overnight drops in PEFR (Table 1, Fig. l), with the percentage overnight fall in PEFR [(PEFR at 22.00 hours-lowest recorded PEFR overnight) x 100/(PEFR at 22.00 hours] being larger Serum ECP levels Mean serum ECP levels were not significantly different in the asthmatic patients and normal subjects either by day (P=O.O8, Table 2, Fig. 2b) or by night (P=0.22). The absolute serum ECP levels at M. F. Fitzpatrick et al. 230 Table 2. PEFR, plasma methylhistamine concentration, serum ECP concentration and eosinophil count in normal subjects and asthmatic patients during day-time and night-time. Values are means with 95% confidence intervals. Statistical significance: *P<0.05, **P<0.01 compared with normal subjects at the same time; tP<O.OS, ttP<O.OI compared with daytime in the same eroup. Normal subjects PEFR (% of predicted) Plasma methylhistamine concn. (ng/ml) Serum ECP concn. (nglml) x Eosinophil count (I-') Asthmatic patients Daytime Night-time Daytime Night-time 113 (105-119) 0.31 (0.24-0.41) 8 (414) 0.12 (0.05429) 106 (98-1 13) 0.24 (0.21433) 8 (5-21) 0.14 (0.1-0.26) 73 (56-83)** 0.22 (0.18-0.34) 30 (8-47) 0.52 (0.16-0.76) 54 (29-57)**ft 0.17 (O.IM.24)*t 21 (5-34)t 0.29 (0. I M . 5 7 ) t 90 70 E I B = 0.2 0.1 Day Night Asthmatic patients 20 I Day Night Normal subjects Day Night Asthmatic patients 0 Day Night Asthmatic patients Day Night Normal subjects Day Night Normal subjects Fig. 2. Results in individual asthmatic patients and normal subjects for plasma methylhistamine concentration (a), serum ECP concentration (6) and hours) peripheral blood eosinophil count (c) by day (1O.W-20.00 hours) and by night (02.W.00 02.00-04.00 hours were significantly lower than the daytime baseline levels in the asthmatic patients, but not in the normal subjects (P=O.36), with a greater percentage fall in serum ECP levels at 02.00-04.00 hours, from the daytime baseline, in the asthmatic patients (43 & 10%) than in the normal subjects (6&9%; Pc0.01). Eosinophil counts Eosinophil counts were higher in the asthmatic patients than in the normal subjects during the afternoon and early morning (Table 2, Fig. 2c). There was a fall in eosinophil count in the early morning in the asthmatic patients ( P = 0.03), but not in the normal subjects ( P = 0.60). DISCUSSION Our results show that plasma histamine levels fall during early-morning airway narrowing in both normal subjects and patients with nocturnal asthma, and that there is no difference in the percentage change in plasma histamine levels at night between normal subjects and asthmatic patients, despite a much more profound fall in PEFR in the asthmatic group. We have also demonstrated lower serum ECP levels in the early morning in patients with nocturnal asthma than in normal subjects, a fall in Circulating histamine and eosinophil cationic protein in nocturnal asthma serum ECP level during early-morning bronchoconstriction in the asthmatic patients but not in normal subjects, and a significant fall in peripheral eosinophil numbers at the time of maximal bronchoconstriction in the asthmatic patients. Our findings conflict with those of an earlier study which demonstrated a rise in plasma histamine concentration coincident with maximal bronchoconstriction at night in patients with nocturnal asthma [S]. However, there are inconsistencies which must be addressed when interpreting data from the latter study. Free plasma histamine levels greater than lng/ml are accompanied by facial flushing, increased skin temperature, a fall in diastolic blood pressure and tachycardia in both asthmatic patients and normal subjects [6,7]. Similar findings were not documented by Barnes et al. [S], despite reported plasma histamine levels well in excess of 1ng/ml in their patients with nocturnal asthma. Their reliance on an enzymic (histamine methyltransferase) assay, which is less reliable than r.i.a. techniques for the measurement of histamine [lo, 111, may have led to inaccuracies. Also, only about 0.5% of the histamine present in blood exists as free histamine, the rest being stored in basophils. Therefore, any basophil contamination of plasma samples will lead to artificially high estimates of plasma histamine levels. This may have been an additional source of error in the estimates of plasma histamine levels by Barnes et al. [S]. We were careful to avoid this problem by observing a strict protocol while handling the blood samples. Two studies performed simultaneously with the present study have also examined histamine levels in nocturnal asthma. Van Aalderen et al. [12] found that nine children with nocturnal asthma had higher 24 h urinary N-methylhistamine levels than nine patients without nocturnal asthma, with a trend to higher histamine levels occurring at night in the patients with nocturnal asthma. However, it is not clear whether this trend was statistically significant. Szefler et al. [13] recently found no significant change in the plasma histamine level at 04.00 hours compared with at 16.00 hours in normal subjects or in patients with nocturnal asthma, although again there was a trend to higher plasma histamine levels at night. Our study involved a larger number of patients with nocturnal asthma and found significant decreases in plasma histamine levels in the early morning. In addition, in contrast with the study by Szefler et al. [13], we measured plasma histamine levels 2-hourly throughout the day and not just at two time points. Another difference is that all of our patients were on inhaled steroids and four were on oral steroids. Steroids modify the inflammatory response in the airway [14], with a reduction in mast cell and eosinophil populations in bronchial biopsies, and this may conceivably have affected our results. Indeed, this could have allowed dissociation of the temporally, but not causally, related circadian changes in plasma histamine level 231 and PEFR reported in other studies. However, the circadian pattern of plasma histamine levels in our normal subjects who were not on steroids was identical with that in the asthmatic patients. An increase in plasma histamine level is seen after antigen challenge in asthmatic patients coincident with the early asthmatic response, suggesting the involvement of mast cells in this response [lS, 161. Our study does not exclude the possibility that small amounts of histamine released into the airway could still contribute to nocturnal bronchoconstriction. However, the similarity of plasma histamine levels in our asthmatic patients and normal subjects suggests that nocturnal bronchoconstriction is not an early asthmatic reaction. This is supported by the observation that cromoglycate is ineffective in treating nocturnal asthma [17, 181. ECP is the most potent tissue-damaging protein released by eosinophils and is a measure of eosinophil activation [S]. ECP levels are raised in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid of patients with chronic asthma [19] and rise further during late asthmatic responses [20]. Serum ECP levels tend to be similar in patients with asthma and normal subjects [21, 221, but fall during the late asthmatic response [22, 231 in association with the transient fall in peripheral blood eosinophil counts [23, 241. Thus, the falls in both serum ECP level and eosinophil count in the present study are compatible with, but by no means prove, the involvement of a late asthmatic reaction in the pathogenesis of nocturnal asthma. Alternatively, the overnight fall in serum ECP level in the asthmatic patients might not be causally related to nocturnal asthma and could reflect hormonal changes or therapy. The potential importance of inflammation in the pathogenesis of nocturnal asthma has been strengthened by the recent observations that asthmatic patients exhibit late asthmatic reactions more commonly and more markedly at night than during the day [24], and that the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid obtained from patients with nocturnal asthma at 04.00 hours has increased numbers of inflammatory cells, including eosinophils, as compared with samples taken at 16.00 hours from the same patients [25, 261. Nevertheless, there is strong evidence that nocturnal airway narrowing is associated with increased parasympathetic [4, 271 and decreased non-adrenergic, non-cholinergic [28] nervous activity at night. This was not designed to be a study of untreated nocturnal asthma, which anyway would have been ethically dubious as all our patients had troublesome nocturnal symptoms. All of the patients were on inhaled steroids and four were on oral prednisolone. 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