Treatable traits, combination inhaler therapy and the future of asthma management

Author:

Gibson Peter G.12ORCID,McDonald Vanessa M.12ORCID,Thomas Dennis1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre of Excellence in Treatable Traits, College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing University of Newcastle, Hunter Medical Research Institute Asthma and Breathing Program Newcastle New South Wales Australia

2. Department of Respiratory and Sleep Medicine John Hunter Hospital Newcastle New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractThe landscape of asthma has considerably changed in the last decade. Effective medications and inhaler devices have been developed and integrated into the asthma pharmacopoeia, but unfortunately, the proportion of uncontrolled patients remains unacceptably high. This is now recognized to be mainly due to the inappropriate use of medications or inhaler devices, heterogeneity of the disease or other factors contributing to the disease. Currently, inhaled corticosteroids (ICS), with or without long‐acting beta agonists (LABA), are the cornerstone of asthma management, and recently international guidelines recognized the importance of combination inhaler therapy (ICS/LABA) even in mild asthma. In future, ultra‐long‐acting personalized medications and smart inhalers will complement combination inhaler therapy in order to effectively addresses issues such as adherence, inhaler technique and polypharmacy (both of drugs and devices). Asthma is now acknowledged as a multifaceted cluster of disorders and the treatment model has evolved from one‐size‐fits‐all to precision medicine approaches such as treatable traits (TTs, defined as measurable and treatable clinically important factors) which encourages the quality use of medications and identification and management of all underlying behavioural and biological treatable risk factors. TT requires research and validation in a clinical context and the implementation strategies and efficacy in various settings (primary/secondary/tertiary care, low‐middle income countries) and populations (mild/moderate/severe asthma) are currently evolving. Combination inhaler therapy and the TTs approach are complementary treatment approaches. This review examines the current status of personalized medicine and combination inhaler therapy, and describes futuristic views for these two strategies.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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1. Treatable traits models of care;Respirology;2023-12-12

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