More than a Matter of
Degree: Severe Asthma May Be a Different Form of the Disease
BETHESDA, Md. (Jan. 28, 2008) − A multi-center research
project to investigate severe asthma has found a key physiological
difference between severe and non-severe forms of the disease, a finding
that could help explain why those with severe asthma do not respond well to
treatment.
The study from the Severe Asthma Research Program (SARP)
has found that those with severe asthma are much more likely to show signs
of “air trapping” in the lungs, a condition that prevents a full exhalation.
The study also found that those who have severe asthma are more likely to
have airway obstruction even after maximal treatment. The results suggest
that those who suffer severe asthma have a different form of the disease.
“SARP was formed to look for an underlying cause of
severe asthma, because it is not responding to treatment,” said Ronald
Sorkness, a physiologist at the University of Wisconsin in Madison and the
lead author of the study, “Lung Function in Adults with Stable but Severe
asthma: Air Trapping and Incomplete Reversal of Obstruction with
Bronchodilation.” Understanding the pathophysiology of severe asthma and
improving its treatment is the goal of SARP.
The study, which appears online in the Journal of
Applied Physiology, compared lung function measurements from 287 people
with severe asthma and 382 people with mild and moderate (non-severe) forms
of the disease.
Living with asthma
There is much that is still unknown about asthma. For
example, it is not clear why more women than men have asthma, and why the
reverse is true among children. SARP is an ongoing project that has
collected data and examined various aspects of asthma, including the role
that genes and viruses may play in its onset.
Most asthma cases, 90-95%, can be controlled with
medication. But the remaining 5-10% are the people who suffer a severe form
of the disease that doesn’t respond well to treatment. People who have
severe asthma are likely to have more attacks and are more at risk of a
fatal attack.
During an asthmatic attack, the airways in the lung
narrow and may even close. A person suffering an attack may experience chest
tightness, cough, shortness of breath, and wheezing. The airways in the
lung, which look something like a tree with many branches, become inflamed
and may fill with mucus.
Allergies and infections may cause the inflammation of
the airways, and asthmatic attacks are more likely to occur with a cold or
during allergy season. Inhaled corticosteroids, which reduce airway
inflammation, can reduce the frequency and severity of asthma attacks, and
bronchodilators, which relax the muscles in the airways and allow them to
open, can relieve asthma for most people. Although asthma mortality rates
are low, an attack can cause suffocation and death. There are about 4,200
asthma deaths in the U.S. each year.
Not like the others?
If severe asthma is different from milder forms of the
disease, and those differences can be identified, it might suggest new
treatments. On the other hand, if severe asthma is not different, only a
more extreme version of the same disease, then using current treatments more
aggressively might work.
Sorkness and his fellow SARP researchers used lung
function data collected at 10 research centers that were part of SARP. He
examined four aspects of lung function:
-
Air flow limitation. A longer period of time is
required to exhale a volume of air. This is probably related to airway
narrowing and is a hallmark of asthmatics, whether mild, moderate or
severe.
-
Air trapping. An inability to exhale completely.
Most people can exhale about 70% of their lung volume. Air trapping
occurs when the exhalation is significantly less than that benchmark.
This is related to extreme narrowing and complete closure of airways
during an exhalation.
-
Reversibility. Most asthma, except for severe
cases, is reversible with bronchodilator treatment.
-
Hyperresponsiveness. Irritants such as smoke can
cause muscles in the airways to contract and close. Those who have
asthma are much more sensitive, that is, hyperresponsive to these
irritants.
The study found that air trapping was characteristic of
those who suffered severe asthma, but not of those with non-severe asthma.
Furthermore, as airflow limitation became more pronounced, there was more
air trapping in the severe group, but not among those who suffered moderate
or mild asthma.
Airflow limitation was common among asthma sufferers,
regardless of whether they had mild, moderate or severe forms of the
disease. But there was little air trapping among the non-severe group, even
when there was air flow limitation. Conversely, in the severe group, even
when there was no airflow limitation, they had some degree of air trapping.
“That tells us that something different is going on in
people classified as having severe asthma, either physiologically or in the
airways that are affected,” Sorkness said. It’s likely that airflow
limitation occurs in the larger airways of the lungs, while air trapping is
occurring in the small airways that branch to the outer portions of the
lung.
The researchers also found that those with severe
asthma showed incomplete reversibility with bronchodilator treatment. That
is, the severe group was more likely to have airway obstruction even after
maximal treatment.
There was not much difference between severe asthmatics
and non-severe asthmatics on the measure of hyperresponsiveness. However,
the subjects with the most severe asthma were not included in the airway
challenge portion of the study for fear of setting off a serious attack.
“Air trapping and non-reversibility were most important
factors in defining the severe asthma group,” Sorkness said.
In addition to Sorkness, the researchers were Eugene R.
Bleecker, Wendy C. Moore and Stephen P. Peters (Wake Forest University,
North Carolina), William W. Busse and Nizar N. Jarjour (University of
Wisconsin, Madison), William J. Calhoun (University of Pittsburgh), Mario
Castro (Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri), Kian Fan Chung
(Imperial College, London), Douglas Curran-Everett and Sally E. Wenzel
(National Jewish Medical and Research Center, Denver), Serpil C. Erzurum
(Cleveland Clinic), Benjamin M. Gaston (University of Virginia,
Charlottesville), Elliot Israel (Brigham & Women’s Hospital, Boston) and W.
Gerald Teague (Emory University, Atlanta).
Editor’s Notes: To arrange an interview with Dr.
Sorkness., please contact Christine Guilfoy at
cguilfoy@the-aps.org or (301) 634-7253.
A fuller audio version of this story appears on Life
Lines, the podcast of The American Physiological Society. You can find it at
http://www.the-aps.org/press/sorkness.mp3 or at
www.lifelines.tv.
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