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    Considering biomarkers in asthma disease severity

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    Author
    Siddiqui, Salman
    Keyword
    Feno
    Severe asthma
    T2 asthma
    Allergic sensitization
    Eosinophils
    Immune responses
    Microbial dysbiosis
    Date
    2021-12-20
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    DOI
    10.1016/j.jaci.2021.11.021
    Publisher's URL
    https://www.jacionline.org/article/S0091-6749(21)02663-4/fulltext
    Abstract
    Among patients with asthma, reliance on the type/dose of prescribed medication and symptom control does not adequately capture those at risk of adverse outcomes, and we need biomarkers for risk and treatment stratification that are consistently accurate, readily quantifiable, and reproducible. Most patients with severe asthma, regardless of age, have predominant type-2 inflammation-mediated disease, making airway/blood eosinophils, fractional exhaled nitric oxide, periostin, and/or allergic sensitization potentially important biomarkers for severe disease. In both adult and pediatric asthma, there is scope to improve prediction of severe attacks by using a composite type-2 biomarker of blood eosinophils and fractional exhaled nitric oxide. Technological advances in component-resolved diagnostics microarray technologies coupled with the development of interpretation software offer a possibility to use component-resolved diagnostics as biomarkers of asthma severity among sensitized patients with asthma. Genetic predisposition and polygenic risk scores of relevant traits (eg, lung function, host immune responses, biomarkers of exposure from the indoor and outdoor environment, infection, and microbial dysbiosis) may also contribute to prediction algorithms. We challenge the idea that asthma can be accurately defined in an individual patient by a discrete and static "endotype" (eg, type-2-high asthma). As we traverse the new era of molecular endotyping in asthma, we need to understand how relevant mechanisms impact patient outcomes, and in parallel develop new tools and approaches to stratify therapies and define individual patient trajectories.
    Citation
    Custovic, A., Siddiqui, S., & Saglani, S. (2022). Considering biomarkers in asthma disease severity. The Journal of allergy and clinical immunology, 149(2), 480–487. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaci.2021.11.021
    Type
    Article
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12904/16197
    Collections
    Respiratory Services

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