Asthmatics with concordant eosinophilic disease classified according to their serum IgE status
Sara Gerday, Florence Schleich, Monique Henket, Françoise Guissard, Virginie Paulus, Renaud Louis
Respiratory Medicine and Research · 2020-11
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Eosinophilic inflammation has long been associated with asthma. Looking at systemic and airway eosinophilia, we have recently identified a group of patients exhibiting diffuse eosinophilic inflammation. Among the mechanisms governing eosinophilic inflammation, IgE-mediated mast cell activation is a key event leading to eosinophilia in atopic asthmatics. METHODS: . IgE-high atopic phenotype was characterized by the presence of at least one positive specific IgE (>0.35kU/L) to common aeroallergens and a raised total serum IgE (≥113kU/L). RESULTS: The largest group of asthmatics displaying concordant eosinophilic phenotype had a raised total serum IgE and atopy (45%). IgE-low non-atopic concordant eosinophilic asthma was a predominantly late onset disease, exhibited a more intense airway eosinophilic inflammation (P<0.05), required more often maintenance treatment with oral corticosteroids (P<0.05) but, surprisingly, had a reduced level of bronchial hyperresponsiveness to methacholine (P<0.05) despite similar baseline airway calibre impairment. CONCLUSION: The more severe airway eosinophilic inflammation in IgE-low non-atopic asthmatics despite similar treatment with ICS and a higher burden of OCS points to a certain corticosteroid resistance in this asthma phenotype.
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- Immunology
- Eosinophil
- Eosinophilia
- Atopy
- Asthma
- Eosinophilic
- Immunoglobulin E
- Sputum
- Eosinophil cationic protein
- Allergy
- Methacholine
- Interleukin 5