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Eosinophilic and Noneosinophilic Asthma

Authors :
James Zangrilli
Liam G Heaney
Paul E Pfeffer
John Busby
Vibeke Backer
Takashi Iwanaga
Isha Chaudhry
Marjan Kerkhof
Celeste Porsbjerg
Enrico Heffler
Trung N. Tran
Mark Hew
Lakmini Bulathsinhala
Guy Brusselle
Marianna Alacqua
Todor A. Popov
Sverre Lehmann
Nikolaos G. Papadopoulos
Lauri Lehtimäki
Chris A. Price
Victoria Carter
Roland Buhl
Matthew J. Peters
Leif Bjermer
Alan Altraja
David A. Jackson
Yuji Tohda
Luis Pérez de Llano
Arnaud Bourdin
Chin Kook Rhee
Christian Taube
J. Mark FitzGerald
Mariko Siyue Koh
Unnur S. Bjornsdottir
Neva Eleangovan
Giorgio Walter Canonica
Andriana I. Papaioannou
David Price
Naeimeh Hosseini
Camille Taillé
Borja G. Cosío
Michael E. Wechsler
Mona Al-Ahmad
Mohsen Sadatsafavi
Andrew Menzies-Gow
Ruth Murray
George Christoff
Richard W. Costello
Eileen Wang
Source :
Chest. 160:814-830
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Background Phenotypic characteristics of patients with eosinophilic and noneosinophilic asthma are not well characterized in global, real-life severe asthma cohorts. Research Question What is the prevalence of eosinophilic and noneosinophilic phenotypes in the population with severe asthma, and can these phenotypes be differentiated by clinical and biomarker variables? Study Design and Methods This was an historical registry study. Adult patients with severe asthma and available blood eosinophil count (BEC) from 11 countries enrolled in the International Severe Asthma Registry (January 1, 2015-September 30, 2019) were categorized according to likelihood of eosinophilic phenotype using a predefined gradient eosinophilic algorithm based on highest BEC, long-term oral corticosteroid use, elevated fractional exhaled nitric oxide, nasal polyps, and adult-onset asthma. Demographic and clinical characteristics were defined at baseline (ie, 1 year before or closest to date of BEC). Results One thousand seven hundred sixteen patients with prospective data were included; 83.8% were identified as most likely (grade 3), 8.3% were identified as likely (grade 2), and 6.3% identified as least likely (grade 1) to have an eosinophilic phenotype, and 1.6% of patients showed a noneosinophilic phenotype (grade 0). Eosinophilic phenotype patients (ie, grades 2 or 3) showed later asthma onset (29.1 years vs 6.7 years; P Interpretation According to this multicomponent, consensus-driven, and evidence-based eosinophil gradient algorithm (using variables readily accessible in real life), the severe asthma eosinophilic phenotype was more prevalent than previously identified and was phenotypically distinct. This pragmatic gradient algorithm uses variables readily accessible in primary and specialist care, addressing inherent issues of phenotype heterogeneity and phenotype instability. Identification of treatable traits across phenotypes should improve therapeutic precision.

Details

ISSN :
00123692
Volume :
160
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chest
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........362b45fda24889570208ce0d2ca6b975