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Title: Type-2 airway inflammation in mild asthma patients with high blood eosinophils and high fractional exhaled nitric oxide. Author: Southworth T, Van Geest M, Singh D. Journal: Clin Transl Sci; 2021 Jul; 14(4):1259-1264. PubMed ID: 34106513. Abstract: Type-2 (T2) inflammation is a characteristic feature of asthma. Biological therapies have been developed to target T2-inflammation in asthma. IL-13 is a key component of T2-inflammation in asthma, driving mucus hypersecretion, IgE-induction, and smooth muscle contraction. Early phase clinical trials for treatments that target T2-inflammation require biomarkers to assess pharmacological effects. The aim of this study was to examine levels of IL-13 inducible biomarkers in the airway epithelium of patients with mild asthma compared to healthy controls. Ten patients with mild asthma with high blood eosinophil and high fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) were recruited, and six healthy subjects. Blood eosinophil and FeNO reproducibility was assessed prior to bronchoscopy. Epithelial brushings were collected and assessed for IL-13 inducible gene expression. Blood eosinophil and FeNO levels remained consistent in both patients with asthma and healthy subjects. Of the 11 genes assessed, expression levels of 15LOX1, POSTN, CLCA1, SERPINB2, CCL26, and NOS2 were significantly higher in patients with asthma compared to healthy controls. These six genes, present in patients with mild asthma with T2 inflammation, have the potential to be used in translational early phase asthma clinical trials of novel therapies as bronchial epithelial biomarkers.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]