Background: Asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease of the airways, caused by inflammatory cells and mediators, associated with smooth muscle dysfunction, causing variable airflow obstruction. With high, low and mixed type 2 immunoinflammatory mechanisms (endotypes). Severe asthma is that which requires step 4 or 5 of treatment (GINA 2023). The TH2 High phenotype, non-allergic with eosinophilia and FENO, is the second most common. It affects 300 million people around the world.
Objetive: Describe asthma biomarkers after the use of antiinterleukin 5, Benralizumab, in adults with severe asthma.
Methods: Case report, descriptive study. Patients with severe eosinophilic asthma and chronic polyposis rhinosinusitis under treatment with anti-IL5 were included, evaluating inflammatory biomarkers.
Results: Serum eosinophils, FENO, ACT, spirometry, and exacerbations were measured in 8 patients at baseline and 6 months after treatment. The FEV1-FVC was 51% with improvement up to 95% later. 5 patients had FENO > 45 ppm subsequently only 3 continued to be inflamed. Eosinophilia 150 cells and subsequently only 1 patient persisted with eosinophilia 200 cells. Initial ACT < 19 in 7 patients Final ACT >19 in 7 patients. Exacerbations 8 patients with 2 or more exacerba- tions subsequently only 1 patient presented exacerbation.
Conclusion: The use of anti-interleukin 5 (benralizumab) does reduce inflammatory markers, improves control and number of exacerbations in the short term. Monoclonal antibodies (Anti IL-5), if they improve inflammatory biomarkers, if clinical characteristics and inflammatory biomarkers are taken into account, it favors adequate asthma control.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.29262/ram.v70i3.1269 | DOI Listing |
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