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An international consortium of respiratory scientists, including researchers from the Nuffield Department of Medicine’s Experimental Medicine Division, have shed light on the role of inflammation in asthma. Through their findings, they have provided a new way of predicting and preventing asthma attacks.

Woman using asthma inhaler

The ORACLE2 consortium study, published in The Lancet Respiratory Medicinewas led by research clinician Simon Couillard from the Université de Sherbrooke in Canada, who is affiliated with the University of Oxford and has received support from the National Institute of Health and Care Research Oxford Biomedical Research Centre.

The research found that among the key factors associated with asthma attacks were high levels of certain biomarkers – specifically blood eosinophils and fractional exhaled nitric oxide. The ORACLE2 team propose that these markers should be used in clinical settings to better predict and manage asthma attacks.

Asthma is a major public health issue that can have major consequences, including: significant loss of quality of life, side effects from systemic corticosteroid treatments, permanently impaired respiratory function from bronchial remodelling and scarring, and increased medical consultations and hospital admissions.

Currently, a patient’s risk of attacks is assessed based on symptoms and the signs of respiratory damage, such as wheezing and bronchial narrowing. In this study, the research team explored the predisposing factors of asthma to better predict and prevent attacks.

The paper presents the results of a large-scale meta-analysis that overturns the traditional risk assessment models for asthma attacks.

Professor Ian Pavord from the Respiratory Medicine Unit in the Experimental Medicine Division was a part of the team who analysed data from more than 6,500 patients in 22 randomised clinical trials and demonstrated that two types of inflammation biomarkers—blood eosinophils and fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO)—are powerful and synergistic predictors of asthma attacks.

 

Read the full story on the Nuffield Department of Medicine website.

This story is also featured on the NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre website.