Journal of Personalized Medicine (Mar 2022)

Reducing Tolerance for SABA and OCS towards the Extreme Ends of Asthma Severity

  • Petros Bakakos,
  • Konstantinos Kostikas,
  • Stelios Loukides,
  • Michael Makris,
  • Nikolaos G. Papadopoulos,
  • Paschalis Steiropoulos,
  • Stavros Tryfon,
  • Eleftherios Zervas

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm12030504
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
p. 504

Abstract

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Asthma is a heterogeneous chronic inflammatory airway disease that imposes a great burden on public health worldwide. In the past two years, fundamental changes have been addressed in the Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) recommendations focusing mainly on the management of mild and severe asthma. The use of as-needed treatment containing inhaled corticosteroids plus fast-acting bronchodilators (either short or long-acting formoterol) in mild asthma has dominated the field, and both randomized and real-world studies favor such an approach and associate it with fewer exacerbations and good asthma control. At the same time, the effort to diminish the use of oral steroids (OCS) as maintenance treatment in severe asthma was substantially accomplished with the initiation of treatment with biologics. Still, these options are available at the moment only for severe asthmatics with a T2-high endotype, and relevant studies on biologics have yielded, as a primary outcome, the reduction or even cessation of OCS. Accordingly, OCS should be considered as a temporary option, mainly for the treatment of asthma exacerbations, and as a maintenance treatment only for a minority of patients with severe asthma, after ensuring good inhaler technique, modification of all possible contributory factors and comorbidities, and optimized pharmacotherapy using all other add-on treatments including biologics in the armamentarium of anti-asthma medication.

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