Asthma may be a disease with one name. But experts
say that unbeknown to most people who have it, it is not just one disease, nor
is there a “one-size-fits-all” treatment for it.
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Rather, as detailed in a new 54-page set of guidelines
developed by an expert panel, in the 13 years since the last guidelines were
issued, tremendous progress has been made in understanding the causes and
physiological effects of various kinds of asthma and the different approaches
needed to treat them and minimize flare-ups in children and adults. The
guidelines were published in December in the
Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.
“In recent years, we’ve recognized that everyone’s asthma is
a little different, with different underlying mechanisms, and the paradigm for
treating it has changed completely,” said Dr Michael Wechsler, an asthma
specialist at National Jewish Health in Denver.
Asthma is now recognized as a far more complex condition
than experts realized in 1991 when the first comprehensive guidelines were
issued. It is now considered a syndrome with many different characteristics, or
phenotypes, that result from the interaction between a person’s genetics and
environment.
Also, though not discussed in detail in the updated guidelines,
the newest treatment with what are known as biologics is heralding new forms of
personalized therapy for patients with severe asthma that is not
well-controlled by other, albeit cheaper, remedies. Biologics are drugs made
from modified molecules from the cells of live organisms designed to target
specific disease pathways that culminate in asthma symptoms.
“The last 13 years have seen an explosion of new strategies,
new concepts, new understanding of mechanism, new drugs and new treatments,” Dr
Wechsler said in an interview. “In just the last five years, five new drugs
have been approved for treating asthma.”
The new guidelines can be especially helpful for people
being treated for asthma, mild or severe, that is now not adequately
controlled. More than half of asthma patients are treated by primary care
doctors, with referrals to specialists like pulmonologists or allergists when
their condition is severe or doesn’t respond well to treatment, said Dr
Michelle M. Cloutier, professor emerita at the University of Connecticut School
of Medicine who chaired the expert panel.
Asthma afflicts about 25 million people in the United
States, including 5.5 million children. It is not an infection, although the
body reacts as if an enemy had attacked it. Rather, asthma is a chronic
respiratory disease in people whose airways become inflamed in response to
various triggering substances or behaviors. The inflamed airways swell and
narrow and the muscles surrounding them tighten, causing a bronchospasm. Unless
the bronchospasm is quickly reversed, it can become very difficult to breathe
and result in hospitalization or death.
Although people with asthma always have some degree of
airway inflammation, they are particularly sensitive to certain factors that
can make the inflammation much worse and result in labored breathing. Thus,
some people with asthma have environmental allergies, for example, to pollen,
animal dander, dust mites, rodents or cockroaches, that when encountered can
trigger an asthmatic attack. Others are sensitive to irritants in the air, like
tobacco smoke, air pollutants, or substances with strong odors.
For example, Wechsler said, “Even what is used to clean can
be irritating to a person with asthma.”
For some people with asthma, a viral infection, like the flu
or common cold, or use of a medication like aspirin, an
NSAID or beta-blocker,
can enhance inflammation in the airways and result in labored breathing. Still
others experience constricted airways when they exercise, especially in cold
weather.
Even strong emotions, like fear, anger, excitement or
laughter, and sudden changes in the weather are problems for some people with
asthma.
Although several people I know with asthma feared they would
be especially susceptible to contracting COVID-19 and becoming severely ill,
the evidence has not shown an increased risk either in contracting the
coronavirus or developing a worse infection if they did, Wechsler said. In
fact, he added, “treating asthma may even protect against COVID.”
Researchers now recognize that the triggering event of an
asthma attack can have different manifestations within the airways and
therefore respond better to different treatments. As Cloutier explained, in
allergic asthma, inflammatory cells called eosinophils collect in the airways,
but when a viral infection triggers the inflammation, cells called neutrophils
are released, warranting a different treatment.
The new guidelines highlight the value of a measurement
called FENO that stands for fractional exhaled nitric oxide, a biomarker
described as useful in correctly diagnosing and adequately treating asthma in
different patients. For children aged 5 and older, a nitric oxide measurement
can help confirm the diagnosis of asthma and evaluate the effectiveness of
treatment.
Although the guidelines do not provide hard-and-fast rules,
they offer valuable treatment suggestions when currently used remedies do not
result in the best relief possible. For example, the panel stated unequivocally
that encasing mattresses and pillows in allergy-protective covers is not in
itself an adequate remedy for someone allergic to dust mites.
“Single-component interventions often do not work” in
efforts to control indoor allergens, the panel wrote. Among the combined
approaches suggested were using pesticides against house-dust mites on carpets,
mattresses and furniture; air-filtration systems and air purifiers, including
those with HEPA filters; removal of wall-to-wall carpets and area rugs, at
least in the allergic person’s bedroom; and mold mitigation.
The report also cautioned against relying on a negative
result from an allergy test if the person reports worsening symptoms when exposed
to the allergen tested. On the other hand, some patients who test positive on
an allergy test may not react to that substance in real life. Some may have
developed a tolerance to the allergen that could be undone by attempts to
reduce the patient’s exposure to it.
In sync with current trends in medicine toward shared
decision-making, the panel emphasized the value of doctors and patients
collaborating to come up with the most practical and effective approach to
treat asthma in different individuals. For example, the panel wrote, “allergen
mitigation interventions may be expensive or difficult for patients to use or
maintain.” Doctors were urged to take into account the severity of the
patient’s symptoms and life circumstances before recommending remedies that
could be too challenging for the patient.
Patients should be engaged in treatment decisions, Cloutier
said. Those with mild disease, for example, might prefer to take a single
medication every day and use a “rescue” medication occasionally if they develop
symptoms, while others would rather use the same two medications but only when
needed.
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