| Literature DB >> 31649906 |
Louise Fleming1, Liam Heaney2.
Abstract
Both adults and children with severe asthma represent a small proportion of the asthma population; however, they consume disproportionate resources. For both groups it is important to confirm the diagnosis of severe asthma and ensure that modifiable factors such as adherence have, as far as possible, been addressed. Most children can be controlled on inhaled corticosteroids and long term oral corticosteroid use is rare, in contrast to adults where steroid related morbidity accounts for a large proportion of the costs of severe asthma. Atopic sensitization is very common in children with severe asthma as are other atopic conditions such as allergic rhinitis and hay fever which can impact on asthma control. In adults, the role of allergic driven disease, even in those with co-existent evidence of sensitization, is unclear. There is currently an exciting pipeline of novel biologicals, particularly directed at Type 2 inflammation, which afford the possibility of improved asthma control and reduced treatment side effects for people with asthma. However, not all drugs will work for all patients and accurate phenotyping is essential. In adults the terms T2 high and T2 low asthma have been coined to describe groups of patients based on the presence/absence of eosinophilic inflammation and T-helper 2 (TH2) cytokines. Bronchoscopic studies in children with severe asthma have demonstrated that these children are predominantly eosinophilic but the cytokine patterns do not fit the T2 high paradigm suggesting other steroid resistant pathways are driving the eosinophilic inflammation. It remains to be seen whether treatments developed for adult severe asthma will be effective in children and which biomarkers will predict response.Entities:
Keywords: adherance; adults; asthma; biological therapies; children; type 2 inflammation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31649906 PMCID: PMC6794347 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2019.00389
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Comorbidities in children and adults with severe asthma.
| Obesity | Patients with severe asthma have a higher BMI than healthy controls and up to 40% are obese ( | Children with severe asthma have a higher BMI although few children with severe asthma are clinically obese ( | Weight loss programme; bariatric surgery |
| Depression and anxiety | Anxiety and depression found up to 27% of patients with difficult asthma ( | High levels of anxiety in both children with severe asthma and their caregivers | Psychological support |
| Breathing pattern disorder (BPD); including vocal cord dysfunction (VCD) | BPD common in difficult asthma, 19–52% ( | One study in children found only 6% of children with severe asthma had BPD; this is likely an underestimate ( | Physiotherapy for BPD and EILO; speech and language therapy for VCD; surgery for supraglottic EILO in selected cases |
| Chronic rhinosinusitis and nasal polyps | Approximately 50% of severe asthma patients have chronic rhinosinusitis; and over 30% nasal polyps ( | Rare in children; nasal polyps suggest an alternative diagnosis such as cystic fibrosis or primary ciliary dyskinesia | Sinus rinses, nasal steroids, surgery |
| Allergic rhinitis | Allergic sensitization common in severe asthma (approximately 70–80%; and up to 60% report symptoms of allergic rhinitis (although this is similar in milder asthma) Ref Shaw UBIO | Allergic sensitization and allergic rhinitis common in children (up to 80%) ( | Anti-histamines, nasal steroids |
| Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) | Common in severe asthma, up to 92% in one cohort ( | Reported prevalence of 63% in poorly controlled asthma secondary to adeno-tonsillar hypertrophy ( | CPAP, weight loss, adenotonsillectomy (children) |
| Gastro-esophageal reflux | Common in severe asthma, 17–74% ( | Diagnosed in 20% of children with severe asthma, although unrelated to any measures of asthma severity ( | Proton pump inhibitors; little evidence to suggest an impact on asthma symptoms |
Comparison of phenotypes in adults and children with severe asthma.
| T2 high | High levels TH2 cytokines (IL4, IL5, and IL13); biomarkers include airway and blood eosinophils, FENO, and periostin | More severe disease with higher risk of asthma attacks | Children with severe asthma are predominantly eosinophilic, although TH2 cytokines may not be elevated | Steroid sensitive, anti IgE or anti IL4, IL5, or IL13 |
| T2 low | Low levels of eosinophils, often associated with airway neutrophilia | Patients tend to be older; associated with low FEV1 and air trapping, poor steroid response | Little evidence for T2 low asthma in children; airway neutrophils may be protective; airway neutrophilia associated with infection | Macrolide antibiotics may have some benefit |
| Persistent airflow limitation | Low FEV1 or FEV1/FVC post bronchodilator, post steroid trial | 40–60% with severe asthma, older age, longer asthma duration, smoking ( | 25% of children with severe asthma have PAL; associated with increase in airway smooth muscle ( | Optimize long acting bronchodilators, down titrate steroids to lowest dose to control symptoms |
| Atopic | Sensitisation to aeroallergens and elevated IgE | Associated with early onset asthma persisting into adulthood | Most children are atopic and have co-morbid atopic diseases | Steroid responsive; T2 targeted therapies as above |