| Literature DB >> 24019751 |
Jason E Lang1, Kathryn V Blake.
Abstract
Asthma is one of the most common chronic diseases affecting children. Despite publicized expert panels on asthma management and the availability of high-potency inhaled corticosteroids, asthma continues to pose an enormous burden on quality of life for children. Research into the genetic and molecular origins of asthma are starting to show how distinct disease entities exist within the syndrome of "asthma". Biomarkers can be used to diagnose underlying molecular mechanisms that can predict the natural course of disease or likely response to drug treatment. The progress of personalized medicine in the care of children with asthma is still in its infancy. We are not yet able to apply stratified asthma treatments based on molecular phenotypes, although that time may be fast approaching. This review discusses some of the recent advances in asthma genetics and the use of current biomarkers that can help guide improved treatment. For example, the fraction of expired nitric oxide and serum Immunoglobulin E (IgE) (including allergen-specific IgE), when evaluated in the context of recurrent asthma symptoms, are general predictors of allergic airway inflammation. Biomarker assays for secondhand tobacco smoke exposure and cysteinyl leukotrienes are both promising areas of study that can help personalize management, not just for pharmacologic management, but also education and prevention efforts.Entities:
Keywords: asthma; biomarkers; children; management
Year: 2013 PMID: 24019751 PMCID: PMC3760446 DOI: 10.2147/PGPM.S30626
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmgenomics Pers Med ISSN: 1178-7066
Common phenotypes of childhood asthma
| Phenotype | Onset | Natural history | Triggers | Biomarker characteristics | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Atopic | Infancy | chronic | Virus, allergen | Elevated IgE, FENO | Chronic: ICS |
| Virus-induced wheezing | Infancy | Resolves by school age | Virus | Normal IgE, FENO | Supportive care, bronchodilators |
| Exercise-induced | School age – adolescence | chronic | Exercise | IgE, eosinophils, | Acute: Pretreat with bronchodilator, Chronic: montelukast, cardiopulmonary conditioning |
| Obesity-related | All ages, but more common in adolescence | May resolve with weight loss | Non-specific | Typically normal IgE, normal FENO | Weight loss; ICS may be less effective among obese; consider LTM |
Abbreviations: IgE, Immunoglobulin E; FENO, fractional exhaled nitric oxide; ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; cysLT, cysteinyl leukotrienes (LTC4, LTD4, and LTE4); LTM, leukotriene modifier.
Genes of particular relevance to childhood asthma risk
| Gene | Locus | Biomarker/function | Population | Technique | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1q31.3 | Expressed on dendritic cells, interacts with TNFa | North American Whites and Blacks | GWAS | Sleiman | |
| 1q32.1 | The protein, YKL-40, is upregulated by 15% among asthmatics. YKL-40 is expressed by macrophages and vascular SMCs and binds to chitins | Hutterites, American Whites, German, Chicago | GWAS | Ober | |
| 2q11.2 | Encodes a protein in the Toll-like receptor superfamily/encodes the IL-18 receptor | Icelanders, Europeans, East Asians | GWAS | Gudbjartsson | |
| 2q14 | IL-1 gene cluster | English and German; American Blacks, African Caribbean | Linkage/positional cloning; GWAS | Allen | |
| 5q12 | Phosphodiesterase 4D is a Regulator of ASM contractility | North American children (CAMP) | Association | Himes | |
| 5q31 | Encodes IL-4 | North American Whites | Association | Basehore | |
| 5q31-q33 | Protocadherin 1 encodes an adhesion molecule on alveolar macrophages and epithelial cells | Dutch; Netherlands, UK, USA | Linkage/positional cloning | Koppelman | |
| 6p21 | MHC class II loci | American Whites | GWAS | Li | |
| 7p | A G-protein coupled receptor | Finnish, Canadian, Australian | Linkage/positional cloning | Daniels | |
| 9p24 | Encodes IL-33, belongs to the IL-1 superfamily of proteins | Europeans | GWAS | Moffatt | |
| 17q21 | Encodes transmembrane proteins anchored in the ER, of unknown function | European, Asian, Hispanics | Association, GWAS | Moffatt | |
| 20p13 | A disintegrin and metallopeptidase domain 33 membrane-bound metalloprotease protein | White sibling pairs from North America and UK | Linkage/positional cloning | Van Eerdewegh |
Abbreviations: TNFa, tumor necrosis factor alpha; GWAS, genome-wide association study; SMC, smooth muscle cell; ASM, airway smooth muscle; CAMP, children’s asthma management program; MHC, major histocompatibility complex; IL, interleukin; ER, endoplasmic reticulum.
Note:
associated with early onset asthma.
Genes important to childhood asthma severity or drug response
| Gene | Locus | Protein | Association effect (pathogenesis, severity, treatment) | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2q33 | Unknown function, expressed in many cell types, involved in ribosomal biogenesis | Association study, Related to bronchodilator responsiveness | Himes | |
| 5q31 | Beta2 adrenoreceptor; Transmembrane domain receptor on ASM and inflammatory cells | Arg16 variant is associated with improved response to Beta2 agonism | Israel | |
| 5q31 | Encodes interleukin-4 | Associated with reduced FEV1, | Burchard | |
| 5q31 | Encodes CD14 receptor for lipopolysaccharide | North American Whites Associated with asthma severity with modification from SHS; associated with severity; Hispanic/Latino, North American Whites, Australian | Choudhry | |
| 6q27 | Encodes a mesodermal developmental transcription factor with DNA binding capability. | Association study, Response to ICS | Tantisira | |
| 7p21.3 | Glucocorticoid inducible gene | Association study, Response to ICS | Tantisira | |
| 10q11.2 | 5-lipoxygenase | Sp1 binding motif repeat polymorphism gentoype associated with improved response to ALOX5 inhibitor; worse lung function and asthma control | Drazen | |
| 17q12-22 | Intronic region of the corticotrophin releasing hormone receptor 1 gene | Association study, Response to ICS | Tantisira | |
| 17q21 | Encodes transmembrane proteins anchored in the ER, of unknown function | Association with exacerbations and poor asthma control on controller medication, Europeans | Bisgaard | |
| 20p13 | A disintegrin and metallopeptidase domain 33 membrane-bound | ADAM33 increased in severe versus mild asthma or no asthma, English | Foley |
Abbreviations: Arg, Arginine; ASM, airway smooth muscle; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 second; SHS, secondhand smoke, ICS, inhaled corticosteroids; LTM, leukotriene modifier.
Uses of FENO in the clinic
| 1. Identifying patients who are likely to respond to inhaled corticosteroids |
| 2. Identifying patients with allergic and eosinophilic airway inflammation |
| 3. Establishing diagnosis of persistent asthma among patients with chronic asthma-like symptoms |
| 4. Guiding asthma medication management in select patients with allergic/eosinophilic asthma demonstrating high pre-treatment FENO levels. FENO may help as supplemental data for determining titration of steroid dosing and adherence |
| 5. Adding supplemental predictive data to toddlers/young school children with asthma symptoms (will child develop persistent asthma?) |
| 1. Determining who currently has asthma and who does not have asthma |
| 2. Detecting poor asthma control |
Abbreviation: FENO, fractional exhaled nitric oxide.
Pharmacogenomic association studies of polymorphisms in the leukotriene pathway
| Gene | Polymorphism | Drug | Associated outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| rs59439148 | Montelukast | Exacerbation rate | Lima | |
| rs59439148 | 5-LO inhibitor | Lung function | Drazen | |
| rs59439148 | Montelukast | Lung function; exacerbation rate; beta agonist use | Telleria | |
| rs2115819 | Montelukast | Lung function | Lima | |
| rs2115819 | Zileuton | Lung function | Tantisira | |
| rs4987105 | Montelukast | Lung function | Klotsman | |
| rs4986832 | Montelukast | Lung function | Klotsman | |
| rs91227 | Montelukast | Lung function | Klotsman | |
| rs912278 | Montelukast | Lung function | Klotsman | |
| A-444C promoter | Montelukast | Lung function | Asano | |
| A-444C promoter | Zafirlukast | Lung function | Sampson | |
| A-444C promoter | Montelukast | FENO | Whelan | |
| rs2660845 | Montelukast | Lung function | Kotani | |
| rs2660845 | Montelukast | Exacerbation rate | Lima | |
| rs119775 | Montelukast | Lung function | Lima | |
| rs119775 | Zileuton | Lung function | Tantisira | |
| rs12422149 | Montelukast | Plasma concentrations; asthma control | Mougey |
Note:
rs59439148 is an Sp1 tandem promoter repeat polymorphism.
Abbreviations: LO, lipoxygenase; FENO, fractional exhaled nitric oxide; Sp1, serum protein 1.
When urinary or serum cotinine may be useful*
| • To assess the effectiveness of home SHS reduction measures (detection of third hand smoke |
| • To assist motivated caregivers in their tobacco cessation efforts |
| • To determine if SHS may be present in the context of poor asthma control |
| ○ To assess if children are being exposed during visitations |
| ○ To assess if children are being exposed in automobiles |
Notes:
Detection of secondhand smoke exposure in the proper clinical context may assist the clinician and caregiver to have a better idea of how much intermittent exposure may be playing a role in poor asthma control. Knowledge gained from testing needs to be considered carefully against perceived issues of privacy.
Abbreviation: SHS, secondhand smoke.