| Literature DB >> 33173175 |
Laura A Conrad1, Michael D Cabana1, Deepa Rastogi2.
Abstract
Asthma is the most common chronic pediatric lung disease that has traditionally been defined as a syndrome of airway inflammation characterized by clinical symptoms of cough and wheeze. Highlighting the complex and heterogeneous nature of asthma, this review summarizes recent advances in asthma classification that are based on pathobiology, and thereby directly addresses limitations of existent definitions of asthma. By reviewing and contrasting clinical and mechanistic features of adult and childhood asthma, the review summarizes key biomarkers that distinguish childhood asthma subtypes. While atopy and its severity are important features of childhood asthma, there is evidence to support the existence of a childhood asthma endotype distinct from the atopic endotype. Although biomarkers of non-atopic asthma are an area of future research, we summarize a clinical approach that includes existing measures of airway-specific and systemic measures of atopy, co-existing morbidities, and disease severity and control, in the definition of childhood asthma, to empower health care providers to better characterize asthma disease burden in children. Identification of biomarkers of non-atopic asthma and the contribution of genetics and epigenetics to pediatric asthma burden remains a research need, which can potentially allow delivery of precision medicine to pediatric asthma. IMPACT: This review highlights asthma as a complex and heterogeneous disease and discusses recent advances in the understanding of the pathobiology of asthma to demonstrate the need for a more nuanced definitions of asthma. We review current knowledge of asthma phenotypes and endotypes and put forth an approach to endotyping asthma that may be useful for defining asthma for clinical care as well as for future research studies in the realm of personalized medicine for asthma.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33173175 PMCID: PMC8107196 DOI: 10.1038/s41390-020-01231-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Res ISSN: 0031-3998 Impact factor: 3.756
Clinical Characteristics of Asthma Clusters in Adults*
| Cluster | Summary of Clinical Characteristics |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Younger individuals | |
| Predominantly Females | |
| Childhood onset/atopic asthma | |
| Cluster 1 | Normal lung function |
| Few exacerbations | |
| Frequent symptoms and rescue bronchodilator use | |
|
| |
| Older Individuals | |
| Predominantly females | |
| Cluster 2 | Childhood onset/atopic asthma |
| Normal lung function | |
| More controller medications | |
|
| |
| Older individuals | |
| Predominantly females | |
| Cluster 3 | Late-onset asthma |
| High Body mass index (BMI) | |
| Baseline lung function deficits | |
| Multiple controller medications | |
| Frequent symptoms and oral corticosteroid use | |
|
| |
| Males and Females | |
| Childhood onset/atopic asthma | |
| Cluster 4 | Severe Asthma |
| Severe lung function deficits | |
|
| |
| Males and Females | |
| Late-onset asthma | |
| Cluster 5 | Severe Asthma |
| Lowest lung function, least reversibility | |
| Multiple controller medications | |
| Frequent symptoms and oral corticosteroid use | |
Summarized from Reference 25 (Moore W. C., et al. Identification of asthma phenotypes using cluster analysis in the Severe Asthma Research Program. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 181, 315-323 (2010))
Severe Asthma Biomarkers
| Biomarker | Endotype | Scientific Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Elevated Eosinophils | T2-hi | (Teach et al. ( |
| High Total IgE | T2-hi | (Zoratti et al. ( |
| Presence of specific IgE or allergy skin prick testing to assess inhalant allergen sensitization | T2-hi | (Zoratti et al. ( |
| Elevated Fractional exhaled nitric oxide | T2-hi | (van der Valk et al. ( |
| (FeNO) | Vliet et al. ( | |
| Elevated Neutrophils | T2-hi/T2-lo | (Teague et al. ( |
| Elevated Periostin | T2-hi | (Izuhara et al. ( |
Clinical Characteristics of Asthma Clusters in Children*
| Cluster | Summary of Clinical Characteristics |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Minimally symptomatic asthma and rhinitis | |
| Cluster A | Lowest levels of allergy and allergic inflammation |
| Normal pulmonary physiology | |
|
| |
| Cluster B | Highly symptomatic asthma (high step-level controller therapy) |
| Lower levels of allergy and allergic inflammation | |
| Mildly impaired pulmonary physiology | |
|
| |
| Minimally symptomatic asthma and rhinitis | |
| Cluster C | Intermediate levels of allergy and allergic inflammation |
| Mildly impaired pulmonary physiology | |
|
| |
| Minimally symptomatic asthma (intermediate step-level controller therapy) | |
| Cluster D | Symptomatic rhinitis |
| Higher levels of allergy and allergic inflammation | |
| Intermediately impaired pulmonary physiology | |
|
| |
| Cluster E | Highest levels of symptomatic asthma and rhinitis (high-level step treatment) |
| Highest levels of allergy and allergic inflammation | |
| Most impaired pulmonary physiology | |
Summarized from Reference 30. (Zoratti E. M., et al. Asthma phenotypes in inner-city children. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 138, 1016-1029 (2016).)
Figure 1.Approach for defining asthma for children.
We propose the use of the following approach for defining asthma in children. Health care providers have the tools at hand to define asthma severity (red box) and control (green box), as per the NHLBI guidelines, based on symptom frequency and medication use. In addition, the providers should identify presence of comorbidities (yellow box) that have been associated with asthma burden, define the atopic status of the patient (blue box), and the pattern of pulmonary function testing (purple box). Together, these details can be funneled into personalized definition of asthma for any given patient. Examples of asthma definitions for individual patients using this approach are included in grey text within the funnel.