As one of the country’s most common chronic diseases, chances are that most of us will know someone who lives with asthma.[ii]
Thanks to advances in treatments and care over the years, many are now able to live near-normal lives, but for some the ability to breathe normally remains a daily struggle.
In the words of one patient: “I have to schedule everything around my lungs.”
It is estimated 1 in 13 people in the U.S. have asthma, and of those, 5 to 10 percent have severe asthma, or asthma where a person is still struggling with symptoms and suffering asthma attacks despite taking medication as prescribed.
For many patients with uncontrolled or severe asthma, even simple tasks can become difficult. Many live in fear of their next attack, of not being able to breathe.
Not all asthma is the same
Asthma is a chronic lung disease characterized by inflammation and narrowing of the airways. This can lead to symptoms such as coughing, wheezing, breathlessness and chest tightness. When these symptoms become worse, it can lead to an asthma attack.
Developments in therapy mean that many patients are able to manage their disease with daily treatment. But for some this isn’t enough.
Research has shown that not all asthma is the same. Asthma can have a number of underlying causes and different types of inflammation. For some people, their inflammation may be triggered by environmental allergens, such as dust mites, pollen and molds.
When nature’s natural defenses work against us
All of us have eosinophils in our body. They are a type of white blood cell, produced in our bone marrow, and are an important part of our immune system. Found primarily in the gut, they fight parasites and, together with other cells, they form a complex network that helps protect us and keep us healthy.
But in some people, eosinophils can cause trouble. In around half of people with severe asthma, a raised level of eosinophils in their bloodstream can cause inflammation and swelling in the airways that deliver vital oxygen to the lungs, making it difficult to breathe and increasing the risk of an asthma attack.
Targeting biomarkers
Eosinophils are also a biomarker – this is a characteristic by which a particular disease can be recognized. By understanding how biomarkers work – and the part they play in the body – scientists can identify ways of developing treatment approaches that are tailored to the specific needs of individual patients.