Researchers looked at a new way to check for asthma symptoms at home. They studied fifty-one adults suspected of having asthma by their doctor. Participants used special devices to measure breathing and airway inflammation at home for two weeks. They compared these home results with standard tests done in a medical clinic setting.
The study found that most people could use the devices correctly. About two-thirds followed the breathing tests, and nearly four-fifths followed the airway tests. The home tests showed high accuracy in identifying asthma when compared to expert reviews. This approach might reduce the need for more invasive challenge testing by over half of patients.
However, this was a small feasibility study, not a large trial proving the treatment works. Safety issues were not reported, and the study was not designed to confirm effectiveness for everyone. It supports the idea that home testing is possible, but it needs more work to be sure.
Patients should not change their care based on this alone. This early data suggests a potential path forward for diagnosis, but doctors must still use established methods. More research is required to see if this becomes a standard option for patients in the future.