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How Does Mild Asthma Differ Phenotypically from Difficult-to-Treat Asthma?

Authors :
Naftel, Jennifer
Mistry, Heena
Mitchell, Frances Ann
Belson, Jane
Kyyaly, Mohammed Aref
Barber, Clair
Haitchi, Hans Michael
Dennison, Paddy
Djukanovic, Ratko
Seumois, Gregory
Vijayanand, Pandurangan
Arshad, Syed Hasan
Kurukulaaratchy, Ramesh J
Source :
Journal of Asthma & Allergy; Dec2023, Vol. 16, p1333-1345, 13p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: Despite most of the asthma population having mild disease, the mild asthma phenotype is poorly understood. Here, we aim to address this gap in knowledge by extensively characterising the mild asthma phenotype and comparing this with difficult-to-treat asthma.Methods: We assessed two real-world adult cohorts from the South of England using an identical methodology: the Wessex AsThma CoHort of difficult asthma (WATCH) (n=498) and a mild asthma cohort from the comparator arm of the Epigenetics Of Severe Asthma (EOSA) study (n=67). Data acquisition included detailed clinical, health and disease-related questionnaires, anthropometry, allergy and lung function testing, plus biological samples (blood and sputum) in a subset.Results: Mild asthma is predominantly early-onset and is associated with type-2 (T2) inflammation (atopy, raised fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO), blood/sputum eosinophilia) plus preserved lung function. A high prevalence of comorbidities and multimorbidity was observed in mild asthma, particularly depression (58.2%) and anxiety (56.7%). In comparison to difficult asthma, mild disease showed similar female predominance (> 60%), T2-high inflammation and atopy prevalence, but lower peripheral blood/airway neutrophil counts and preserved lung function. Mild asthma was also associated with a greater prevalence of current smokers (20.9%). A multi-component T2-high inflammatory measure was comparable between the cohorts; T2-high status 88.1% in mild asthma and 93.5% in difficult asthma.Conclusion: Phenotypic characterisation of mild asthma identified early-onset disease with high prevalence of current smokers, T2-high inflammation and significant multimorbidity burden. Early comprehensive assessment of mild asthma patients could help prevent potential later progression to more complex severe disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
11786965
Volume :
16
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Asthma & Allergy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175729497
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2147/JAA.S430183