From phenotype to biological treatment of severe asthma

Authors

  • Blaženka Kljaić Bukvić Odjel za pedijatriju OB Dr. Josip Benčević, Ulica Andrije Štampara 42, 35000 Slavonski Brod Fakultet za dentalnu medicinu i zdravstvo, Sveučilišta Josipa Jurja Strossmayera u Osijeku, Crkvena 21, 31 000 Osijek Medicinski fakultet Osijek, Sveučilišta Josipa Jurja Strossmayera u Osijeku, Josipa Huttlera 4, 31 000 Osijek
  • Irena Ivković-Jureković Odjel za pulmologiju, alergologiju, imunologiju i reumatologiju, KDB Zagreb, Klaićeva 16, 10 000 Zagreb Fakultet za dentalnu medicinu i zdravstvo, Sveučilišta Josipa Jurja Strossmayera u Osijeku, Crkvena 21, 31 000 Osijek Medicinski fakultet Sveučilišta u Zagrebu, Šalata 3, 10 000 Zagreb
  • Marta Navratil Odjel za pulmologiju, alergologiju, imunologiju i reumatologiju, KDB Zagreb, Klaićeva 16, 10 000 Zagreb Medicinski fakultet Osijek, Sveučilišta Josipa Jurja Strossmayera u Osijeku, Josipa Huttlera 4, 31 000 Osijek
  • Marijana Rogulj Zavod za pulmologiju s alergologijom i kardiologiju s reumatologijom, Klinika za dječje bolesti, KBC Split, Spinčićeva 5, 21 000 Split, Medicinski fakultet, Sveučilište u Splitu, Šoltanska 2, 21 000 Split
  • Davor Bandić Odjel za pedijatriju NMB Vukovar, Županijska 35, 32 000 Vukovar
  • Jadranka Kelečić Zavod za kliničku imunologiju, respiracijske i alergološke bolesti i reumatologiju, Klinika za pedijatriju, KBC Zagreb, Kišpatićeva 12, 10 000 Zagreb Medicinski fakultet Sveučilišta u Zagrebu, Šalata 3, 10 000 Zagreb
  • Silvije Šegulja Zavod za kardiologiju, pulmologiju, reumatologiju, alergologiju i imunologiju, Klinika za pedijatriju, KBC Rijeka, Istarska 43, 51 000 Rijeka, Fakultet zdravstvenih studija, Sveučilište u Rijeci, Viktora Cara Emina 5, 51 000 Rijeka
  • Darko Richter Poliklinika DermaPlus, Kaptol 25, Zagreb

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.13112/PC.2022.4

Keywords:

ASTHMA, CHILD, PHENOTYPE, v

Abstract

Severe asthma is considered a complex and heterogeneous disease, which includes different phenotypes, defined in terms of both clinical and molecular characteristics and different underlining endotypes. According to different studies, there are several clinical phenotypes of severe asthma in children. Most children are allergic to multiple aeroallergen sensitization (house dust mites, pollen, molds) and have high levels of total and specific IgE, reversible airflow obstruc- tion and early signs of remodelation. A small subgroup of children has persistent airflow limitation (FEV1 <80% predicted). There are two major underlining functional or pathophysiologic mechanisms for different phenotypes of asthma and severe asthma accord- ing to the immune mechanism: Type 2 asthma (Th2-high asthma, eosinophils in serum and sputum, high IgE levels, high FeNO; key cytokines IL-4, IL-5, IL-13) and non-Type 2 asthma (Th2-low asthma, neutrophilic, paucigranulocytic and mixed granulocytic inflam- mation; key cytokines IL-8, IL-17, IL-22). The type 2 asthma endotype is more common in children, while biomarkers involved in the pathogenesis, such as IgE and IL-5 have become targets for biological therapy. The non-type 2 asthma endotype, less frequent in children with severe asthma, has fewer therapeutic options. The effect of azithromycin is still under investigation. Severe asthma, although uncommon, is a complex and high-risk phenotype of childhood asthma. Close monitoring of the patient and precise definition of underlying endotype during evaluation enables identification and use of personalized, endotype-targeted treatment.

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Published

2022-06-30

Issue

Section

Review

How to Cite

Bukvić, B. K., Ivković-Jureković, I., Navratil, M., Rogulj, M., Bandić, D., Kelečić, J., Šegulja, S., & Richter, D. (2022). From phenotype to biological treatment of severe asthma. Paediatria Croatica, 66(1-2), 23-29. https://doi.org/10.13112/PC.2022.4

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