Airway hyperresponsiveness to mannitol improves in both type 2 high and type 2 low asthma after specialist management

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Airway hyperresponsiveness to mannitol improves in both type 2 high and type 2 low asthma after specialist management. / Hvidtfeldt, Morten; Sverrild, Asger; Backer, Vibeke; Porsbjerg, Celeste.

In: Journal of Asthma, Vol. 58, No. 9, 2021, p. 1221-1228.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hvidtfeldt, M, Sverrild, A, Backer, V & Porsbjerg, C 2021, 'Airway hyperresponsiveness to mannitol improves in both type 2 high and type 2 low asthma after specialist management', Journal of Asthma, vol. 58, no. 9, pp. 1221-1228. https://doi.org/10.1080/02770903.2020.1780255

APA

Hvidtfeldt, M., Sverrild, A., Backer, V., & Porsbjerg, C. (2021). Airway hyperresponsiveness to mannitol improves in both type 2 high and type 2 low asthma after specialist management. Journal of Asthma, 58(9), 1221-1228. https://doi.org/10.1080/02770903.2020.1780255

Vancouver

Hvidtfeldt M, Sverrild A, Backer V, Porsbjerg C. Airway hyperresponsiveness to mannitol improves in both type 2 high and type 2 low asthma after specialist management. Journal of Asthma. 2021;58(9):1221-1228. https://doi.org/10.1080/02770903.2020.1780255

Author

Hvidtfeldt, Morten ; Sverrild, Asger ; Backer, Vibeke ; Porsbjerg, Celeste. / Airway hyperresponsiveness to mannitol improves in both type 2 high and type 2 low asthma after specialist management. In: Journal of Asthma. 2021 ; Vol. 58, No. 9. pp. 1221-1228.

Bibtex

@article{bc9df5239b784afe9fb293052efe3720,
title = "Airway hyperresponsiveness to mannitol improves in both type 2 high and type 2 low asthma after specialist management",
abstract = "Objectives: Type 2 low (T2-low) asthma is reported to respond less to anti-inflammatory treatment compared with Type 2 high (T2-high) asthma. Airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) to mannitol, a marker of airway mast cell activation, may be indicative of response to treatment in patients with T2-low disease. We investigated whether AHR to mannitol improves in patients with T2-low asthma after specialist management.Methods: Patients with asthma or suspected asthma, referred to our specialist outpatient clinic, were enrolled consecutively and assessed with FeNO, asthma control, blood eosinophils, mannitol and methacholine tests and induced sputum. T2-low asthma was defined in patients with FeNO < 25ppb and sputum eosinophils < 3% and blood eosinophils < 300µl-1 at inclusion. Patients with asthma and AHR to mannitol (PD15 ≤ 635 mg) were followed and reassessed after 12 months of specialist management.Results: Thirty-two patients (Females: 56%, age: 22 years (15-59)) were followed. Fourteen (44%) with T2-high and 18 (56%) with T2-low asthma. Baseline AHR to mannitol was comparable: Gmean PD15: 150 mg (95% CI 61-368) and 214 mg (95% CI 106-432) for T2-high and T2-low asthma respectively (P = 0.51). Both groups improved equally: Gmean PD15: 488 mg (95% CI 311-767) and 507 mg (95% CI 345-746); corresponding to a doubling-dose of: 3.00 (95% CI 1.58-5.74, P = 0.003) and 2.28 (95% CI 1.47-3.53, P = 0.001) respectively. There were no concomitant improvements in AHR to methacholine.Conclusion: Patients with asthma and AHR to mannitol improve similarly in responsiveness to mannitol after 12 months of specialist management regardless of Type 2 inflammatory biomarker levels. Mechanisms driving AHR in T2-low asthma need to be further elucidated.",
author = "Morten Hvidtfeldt and Asger Sverrild and Vibeke Backer and Celeste Porsbjerg",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1080/02770903.2020.1780255",
language = "English",
volume = "58",
pages = "1221--1228",
journal = "Journal of Asthma",
issn = "0277-0903",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",
number = "9",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Airway hyperresponsiveness to mannitol improves in both type 2 high and type 2 low asthma after specialist management

AU - Hvidtfeldt, Morten

AU - Sverrild, Asger

AU - Backer, Vibeke

AU - Porsbjerg, Celeste

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Objectives: Type 2 low (T2-low) asthma is reported to respond less to anti-inflammatory treatment compared with Type 2 high (T2-high) asthma. Airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) to mannitol, a marker of airway mast cell activation, may be indicative of response to treatment in patients with T2-low disease. We investigated whether AHR to mannitol improves in patients with T2-low asthma after specialist management.Methods: Patients with asthma or suspected asthma, referred to our specialist outpatient clinic, were enrolled consecutively and assessed with FeNO, asthma control, blood eosinophils, mannitol and methacholine tests and induced sputum. T2-low asthma was defined in patients with FeNO < 25ppb and sputum eosinophils < 3% and blood eosinophils < 300µl-1 at inclusion. Patients with asthma and AHR to mannitol (PD15 ≤ 635 mg) were followed and reassessed after 12 months of specialist management.Results: Thirty-two patients (Females: 56%, age: 22 years (15-59)) were followed. Fourteen (44%) with T2-high and 18 (56%) with T2-low asthma. Baseline AHR to mannitol was comparable: Gmean PD15: 150 mg (95% CI 61-368) and 214 mg (95% CI 106-432) for T2-high and T2-low asthma respectively (P = 0.51). Both groups improved equally: Gmean PD15: 488 mg (95% CI 311-767) and 507 mg (95% CI 345-746); corresponding to a doubling-dose of: 3.00 (95% CI 1.58-5.74, P = 0.003) and 2.28 (95% CI 1.47-3.53, P = 0.001) respectively. There were no concomitant improvements in AHR to methacholine.Conclusion: Patients with asthma and AHR to mannitol improve similarly in responsiveness to mannitol after 12 months of specialist management regardless of Type 2 inflammatory biomarker levels. Mechanisms driving AHR in T2-low asthma need to be further elucidated.

AB - Objectives: Type 2 low (T2-low) asthma is reported to respond less to anti-inflammatory treatment compared with Type 2 high (T2-high) asthma. Airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) to mannitol, a marker of airway mast cell activation, may be indicative of response to treatment in patients with T2-low disease. We investigated whether AHR to mannitol improves in patients with T2-low asthma after specialist management.Methods: Patients with asthma or suspected asthma, referred to our specialist outpatient clinic, were enrolled consecutively and assessed with FeNO, asthma control, blood eosinophils, mannitol and methacholine tests and induced sputum. T2-low asthma was defined in patients with FeNO < 25ppb and sputum eosinophils < 3% and blood eosinophils < 300µl-1 at inclusion. Patients with asthma and AHR to mannitol (PD15 ≤ 635 mg) were followed and reassessed after 12 months of specialist management.Results: Thirty-two patients (Females: 56%, age: 22 years (15-59)) were followed. Fourteen (44%) with T2-high and 18 (56%) with T2-low asthma. Baseline AHR to mannitol was comparable: Gmean PD15: 150 mg (95% CI 61-368) and 214 mg (95% CI 106-432) for T2-high and T2-low asthma respectively (P = 0.51). Both groups improved equally: Gmean PD15: 488 mg (95% CI 311-767) and 507 mg (95% CI 345-746); corresponding to a doubling-dose of: 3.00 (95% CI 1.58-5.74, P = 0.003) and 2.28 (95% CI 1.47-3.53, P = 0.001) respectively. There were no concomitant improvements in AHR to methacholine.Conclusion: Patients with asthma and AHR to mannitol improve similarly in responsiveness to mannitol after 12 months of specialist management regardless of Type 2 inflammatory biomarker levels. Mechanisms driving AHR in T2-low asthma need to be further elucidated.

U2 - 10.1080/02770903.2020.1780255

DO - 10.1080/02770903.2020.1780255

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 32519918

VL - 58

SP - 1221

EP - 1228

JO - Journal of Asthma

JF - Journal of Asthma

SN - 0277-0903

IS - 9

ER -

ID: 259056062