Literature DB >> 33528864

Clinical evaluation of type 2 disease status in a real-world population of difficult to manage asthma using historic electronic healthcare records of blood eosinophil counts.

Adnan Azim1,2,3, Colin Newell2, Clair Barber1,2, Matthew Harvey2, Deborah Knight2, Anna Freeman1,2,3, Wei Chern Gavin Fong4, Paddy Dennison2,3, Hans Michael Haitchi1,2,3,5, Ratko Djukanovic1,2,3,5, Ramesh Kurukulaaratchy1,2,3,4, Peter Howarth1,2,3,5.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Blood eosinophil measurement is essential for the phenotypic characterization of patients with difficult asthma and in determining eligibility for anti-IL-5/IL-5Rα biological therapies. However, assessing such measures over limited time spans may not reveal the true underlying eosinophilic phenotype, as treatment, including daily oral corticosteroid therapy, suppresses eosinophilic inflammation and asthma is intrinsically variable.
METHODS: We interrogated the electronic healthcare records of patients in the Wessex AsThma CoHort of difficult asthma (WATCH) study (UK). In 501 patients being evaluated in this tertiary care centre for difficult to control asthma, all requested full blood count test results in a 10-year retrospective period from the index WATCH assessment were investigated (n = 11,176).
RESULTS: In 235 biological therapy-naïve participants who had 10 or more measures in this time period, 40.3% were eosinophilic (blood eosinophils ≥300 cells/µl) at WATCH enrolment whilst an additional 43.1%, though not eosinophilic at enrolment, demonstrated eosinophilia at least once in the preceding decade. Persistent eosinophilia was associated with worse post-bronchodilator airway obstruction and higher Fractional exhaled Nitric Oxide (FeNO). In contrast, the 16.6% of patients who never demonstrated eosinophilia at this blood eosinophil threshold showed preserved lung function and lower markers of Type 2 inflammation.
CONCLUSIONS: This highlights the central role that type 2 inflammation, as indicated by blood eosinophilia, has in difficult asthma and suggests that longitudinal electronic healthcare record analysis can be an important tool in clinical asthma phenotyping, providing insight that may help understand disease progression and better guide more specific treatment approaches.
© 2021 The Authors. Clinical & Experimental Allergy published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  asthma; eosinophils; epidemiology

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33528864     DOI: 10.1111/cea.13841

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Exp Allergy        ISSN: 0954-7894            Impact factor:   5.401


  4 in total

1.  Variability of Type 2 inflammatory markers guiding biologic therapy of severe asthma: A 5-year retrospective study from a single tertiary hospital.

Authors:  Hongwen Li; Qing Zhang; Jingru Wang; Shengnan Gao; Chunxiao Li; Jianxin Wang; Shuhua Zhang; Jiangtao Lin
Journal:  World Allergy Organ J       Date:  2021-09-21       Impact factor: 4.084

2.  Validation and further insight into the International Severe Asthma Registry (ISAR) eosinophil gradient algorithm in the Wessex AsThma CoHort of difficult asthma (WATCH) using historical blood eosinophil counts and induced sputum.

Authors:  Clair Barber; Adnan Azim; Colin Newell; Aref Kyyaly; Hitasha Rupani; Hans Michael Haitchi; Peter Howarth; Ramesh Kurukulaaratchy
Journal:  Clin Exp Allergy       Date:  2022-02-21       Impact factor: 5.401

Review 3.  Recent insights in the role of biomarkers in severe asthma management.

Authors:  Evangelia Fouka; Kalliopi Domvri; Foteini Gkakou; Maria Alevizaki; Paschalis Steiropoulos; Despoina Papakosta; Konstantinos Porpodis
Journal:  Front Med (Lausanne)       Date:  2022-09-26

4.  Heterogeneous Response of Airway Eosinophilia to Anti-IL-5 Biologics in Severe Asthma Patients.

Authors:  Maruša Kopač Šokić; Matija Rijavec; Peter Korošec; Urška Bidovec-Stojkovič; Izidor Kern; Romana Vantur; Sabina Škrgat
Journal:  J Pers Med       Date:  2022-01-07
  4 in total

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