Science and Research

The German severe asthma patient: Baseline characteristics of patients in the German Severe Asthma Registry, and relationship with exacerbations and control

INTRODUCTION: The German Asthma Net Severe Asthma Registry is collecting long-term data from a large cohort of patients aged ≥6 years with severe asthma. This manuscript presents their baseline characteristics, and identifies relationships with exacerbations and/or poor asthma control. METHODS: The registry is collecting routine clinical parameters including: demographics and medical history; disease characteristics (Asthma Control Questionnaire [ACQ]-5, forced expiratory volume in 1 s [FEV(1)]); exacerbations; and biomarkers (eosinophils, immunoglobulin E [IgE], fractional exhaled nitric oxide [FeNO]). RESULTS: These analyses include data from 2011 patients at 72 sites (91.9% adult). Children (6-17 years) were more likely to be male, whereas more adults were female (males: children/adults 62%/41%). Most were receiving inhaled corticosteroid/long-acting β(2)-agonist combinations (78%/81%); 38.0% of adults were receiving systemic steroids. Asthma control was suboptimal in both groups: 21.5%/13.3% were controlled; 10.4%/49.1% were symptomatic; 33.1%/37.2% received emergency asthma treatment in the previous year. Median blood eosinophil (400/238 cells/μL) and IgE levels (494/186 IU/mL) were higher in children; FeNO was lower (19/35 ppb). Patients with ≥2 exacerbations in the previous year had lower FEV(1) (absolute and % predicted) and IgE, and higher ACQ-5, FeNO and blood eosinophil levels (all p < 0.05). There was a weak, negative correlation between ACQ-5 and FEV(1)% predicted in adults (p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: These analyses characterise the typical German patient with severe asthma, and provide information on their overall care. Their planned long-term follow-up will assess whether asthma control can be optimised, how best to do so, and most importantly how such optimisation can benefit patients.
  • Korn, S.
  • Milger, K.
  • Skowasch, D.
  • Timmermann, H.
  • Taube, C.
  • Idzko, M.
  • Voß, H. W.
  • Holtdirk, A.
  • Hamelmann, E.
  • Buhl, R.

Keywords

  • Disease control
  • Exacerbations
  • Observational
  • Registry
  • Severe asthma
Publication details
DOI: 10.1016/j.rmed.2022.106793
Journal: Respir Med
Pages: 106793 
Work Type: Original
Location: CPC-M
Disease Area: AA
Partner / Member: KUM
Access-Number: 35248804

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