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Título
Omalizumab Is Equally Effective in Persistent Allergic Oral Corticosteroid-Dependent Asthma Caused by Either Seasonal or Perennial Allergens: A Pilot Study
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Severe allergic asthma
Seasonal
Perennial
Omalizumab
Pathophysiology
Fecha de publicación
2017
Citación
Domingo, C., Pomares, X., Navarro, A., Rudi, N., Sogo, A., Dávila, I., & Mirapeix, R. (2017). Omalizumab Is Equally Effective in Persistent Allergic Oral Corticosteroid-Dependent Asthma Caused by Either Seasonal or Perennial Allergens: A Pilot Study. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 18(3), 521. MDPI AG. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms18030521
Resumen
[EN] Omalizumab is marketed for chronic severe asthma patients who are allergic to perennial
allergens. Our purpose was to investigate whether omalizumab is also effective in persistent severe
asthma due to seasonal allergens. Thirty patients with oral corticosteroid-dependent asthma were
treated with Omalizumab according to the dosing table. For each patient with asthma due to
seasonal allergens, we recruited the next two consecutive patients with asthma due to perennial
allergens. The dose of oral methyl prednisolone (MP) was tapered at a rate of 2 mg every two
weeks after the start of treatment with omalizumab depending on tolerance. At each monthly visit,
a forced spirometry and fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) measurement were performed and the
accumulated monthly MP dose was calculated. At entry, there were no differences between groups in
terms of gender, body mass index or obesity, year exacerbation rate, monthly dose of MP, FeNO and
blood immunoglobuline E (IgE) values, or spirometry (perennial: FVC: 76%; FEV1: 62%; seasonal:
FVC: 79%; FEV1: 70%). The follow-up lasted 76 weeks. One patient in each group was considered
a non-responder. Spirometry did not worsen in either group. There was a significant intragroup
reduction in annual exacerbation rate and MP consumption but no differences were detected in the
intergroup comparison. Omalizumab offered the same clinical benefits in the two cohorts regardless
of whether the asthma was caused by a seasonal or a perennial allergen. These results strongly
suggest that allergens are the trigger in chronic asthma but that it is the persistent exposure to IgE
that causes the chronicity.
URI
DOI
10.3390/ijms18030521
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