AI Article Synopsis

  • This study aimed to identify different asthma phenotypes in school-aged Korean children to improve management and predict outcomes.
  • Researchers analyzed 674 children with asthma, ultimately focusing on 447 for cluster analysis, which revealed four distinct asthma phenotypes based on factors like gender, age of onset, and presence of allergies.
  • The findings highlight the complexity of asthma in this population and suggest that long-term research is necessary to better understand the prognosis and treatment responses associated with each phenotype.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Asthma is a heterogeneous airway disease occurring in children, and it has various clinical phenotypes. A clear differentiation of the clinical phenotypes can provide better asthma management and prediction of asthma prognosis. Little is currently known about asthma phenotypes in Korean children. This study was designed to identify asthma phenotypes in school-aged Korean children.

Methods: This study enrolled 674 children with physician-diagnosed asthma from the Korean childhood Asthma Study (KAS) cohort. The physicians verified the relevant histories of asthma and comorbid diseases, as well as airway lability and hyper-responsiveness from the results of pulmonary function tests and bronchial provocation tests. Questionnaires regarding the participants' baseline characteristics, their environment and self-rating of asthma control were collected at the time of enrollment. Laboratory tests were performed to assess allergy and airway inflammation. Children with asthma were classified by hierarchical cluster analysis.

Results: Of the 674 patients enrolled from the KAS cohort, 447 were included in the cluster analysis. Cluster analysis of these 447 children revealed 4 asthma phenotypes: cluster 1 (n = 216, 48.3%) which was characterized by male-dominant atopic asthma; cluster 2 (n = 79, 17.7%) which was characterized by early-onset atopic asthma with atopic dermatitis; cluster 3 (n = 47, 10.5%) which was characterized by puberty-onset, female-dominant atopic asthma with the low lung function; and cluster 4 (n = 105, 23.5%) which was characterized by early-onset, non-atopic dominant asthma.

Conclusions: The asthma phenotypes among Korean children can be classified into 4 distinct clusters. Long-term follow-up with these phenotypes will be needed to define their prognosis and response to treatment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7680825PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4168/aair.2021.13.1.42DOI Listing

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