Chronic Stress and Glucocorticoid Receptor Resistance in Asthma.

Clin Ther

Instituto de Investigaciones Biomédicas (UCA-CONICET), Buenos Aires, Argentina; Departamento de Farmacología, Facultad de Medicina, UBA Paraguay, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Electronic address:

Published: June 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Chronic stress can worsen asthma symptoms and decrease the effectiveness of glucocorticoids (GCs), the primary treatment for asthma, leading to a major clinical challenge of GC resistance in patients.
  • Psychological and physiological stress triggers increased cortisol levels, which can interfere with the action of synthetic GCs and exacerbate inflammatory responses in asthma.
  • Research indicates that new therapeutic strategies and drugs are being developed to overcome GC resistance, including highly potent GCs and other anti-inflammatory agents, though they may come with significant side effects.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Chronic and persistent exposure to negative stress can lead to adverse consequences on health. Particularly, psychosocial factors were found to increase the risk and outcome of respiratory diseases like asthma. Glucocorticoids (GCs) are the most efficient anti-inflammatory therapy for asthma. However, a significant proportion of patients don't respond adequately to GC administration. GC sensitivity is modulated by genetic and acquired disease-related factors. Additionally, it was proposed that endogenous corticosteroids may limit certain actions of synthetic GCs, contributing to insensitivity. Psychological and physiological stresses activate the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, increasing cortisol levels. Here, we review the mechanism involved in altered GC sensitivity in asthmatic patients under stressful situations. Strategies for modulation GC sensitivity and improving GC therapy are discussed.

Methods: PubMed was searched for publications on psychological chronic stress and asthma, GC resistance in asthma, biological mechanisms for GC resistance, and drugs for steroid-resistant asthma, including highly potent GCs.

Findings: GC resistance in patients with severe disease remains a major clinical problem. In asthma, experimental and clinical evidence suggests that chronic stress induces inflammatory changes, contributing to a worse GC response. GC resistant patients can be treated with other broad-spectrum anti-inflammatory drugs, but these generally have major side effects. Different mechanisms of GC resistance have been described and might be useful for developing new therapeutic strategies against it. Novel drugs, such as highly potent GCs, phosphoinositide 3-kinase-delta inhibitors that reestablish histone deacetylase-2 function, decrease of GC receptor phosphorylation by p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase inhibitors, or phosphatase activators, are currently in clinical development and might be combined with GC therapy in the future. Furthermore, microRNAs (small noncoding RNA molecules) operate as posttranscriptional regulators, providing another level of control of GC receptor levels. Empirical results allow postulating that the detection and study of microRNAs might be a promising approach to better characterize and treat asthmatic patients.

Implications: Many molecular and cellular pathobiological mechanisms are responsible of GC resistance. Therefore detecting specific biomarkers to help identify patients who would benefit from new therapies is crucial. Stress consitutes a negative aspect of current lifestyles that increase asthma morbidity and mortality. Adequate stress management could be an important and positive intervention.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.clinthera.2020.03.002DOI Listing

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