Multimorbidity in difficult asthma: the need for personalised and non-pharmacological approaches to address a difficult breathing syndrome
Multimorbidity in difficult asthma: the need for personalised and non-pharmacological approaches to address a difficult breathing syndrome
Three to ten percent of people living with asthma have difficult-to-treat asthma that remains poorly controlled despite maximum levels of guideline-based pharmacotherapy. This may result from a combination of multiple adverse health issues including aggravating comorbidities, inadequate treatment, suboptimal inhaler technique and/or poor adherence that may individually or collectively contribute to poor asthma control. Many of these are potentially "treatable traits" that can be pulmonary, extrapulmonary, behavioural or environmental factors. Whilst evidence-based guidelines lead clinicians in pharmacological treatment of pulmonary and many extrapulmonary traits, multiple comorbidities increase the burden of polypharmacy for the patient with asthma. Many of the treatable traits can be addressed with non-pharmacological approaches. In the current healthcare model, these are delivered by separate and often disjointed specialist services. This leaves the patients feeling lost in a fragmented healthcare system where clinical outcomes remain suboptimal even with the best current practice applied in each discipline. Our review aims to address this challenge calling for a paradigm change to conceptualise difficult-to-treat asthma as a multimorbid condition of a "Difficult Breathing Syndrome" that consequently needs a holistic personalised care attitude by combining pharmacotherapy with the non-pharmacological approaches. Therefore, we propose a roadmap for an evidence-based multi-disciplinary stepped care model to deliver this.
Haitchi, Hans Michael
68dadb29-305d-4236-884f-e9c93f4d78fe
Varkonyi-Sepp, Judit
888b912b-b35a-4775-827f-bcc618122f7c
Freeman, Anna
b5f45a0d-f9e4-4a91-9af0-40efb6730787
Ainsworth, Ben
b02d78c3-aa8b-462d-a534-31f1bf164f81
31 August 2022
Haitchi, Hans Michael
68dadb29-305d-4236-884f-e9c93f4d78fe
Varkonyi-Sepp, Judit
888b912b-b35a-4775-827f-bcc618122f7c
Freeman, Anna
b5f45a0d-f9e4-4a91-9af0-40efb6730787
Ainsworth, Ben
b02d78c3-aa8b-462d-a534-31f1bf164f81
Haitchi, Hans Michael, Varkonyi-Sepp, Judit, Freeman, Anna and Ainsworth, Ben
(2022)
Multimorbidity in difficult asthma: the need for personalised and non-pharmacological approaches to address a difficult breathing syndrome.
Journal of Personalized Medicine, 12 (9).
(doi:10.3390/jpm12091435).
Abstract
Three to ten percent of people living with asthma have difficult-to-treat asthma that remains poorly controlled despite maximum levels of guideline-based pharmacotherapy. This may result from a combination of multiple adverse health issues including aggravating comorbidities, inadequate treatment, suboptimal inhaler technique and/or poor adherence that may individually or collectively contribute to poor asthma control. Many of these are potentially "treatable traits" that can be pulmonary, extrapulmonary, behavioural or environmental factors. Whilst evidence-based guidelines lead clinicians in pharmacological treatment of pulmonary and many extrapulmonary traits, multiple comorbidities increase the burden of polypharmacy for the patient with asthma. Many of the treatable traits can be addressed with non-pharmacological approaches. In the current healthcare model, these are delivered by separate and often disjointed specialist services. This leaves the patients feeling lost in a fragmented healthcare system where clinical outcomes remain suboptimal even with the best current practice applied in each discipline. Our review aims to address this challenge calling for a paradigm change to conceptualise difficult-to-treat asthma as a multimorbid condition of a "Difficult Breathing Syndrome" that consequently needs a holistic personalised care attitude by combining pharmacotherapy with the non-pharmacological approaches. Therefore, we propose a roadmap for an evidence-based multi-disciplinary stepped care model to deliver this.
Text
jpm-12-01435-v2
- Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 29 August 2022
Published date: 31 August 2022
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 473671
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/473671
ISSN: 2075-4426
PURE UUID: b0e8c3b5-9cb9-46fc-b1b8-b028a09b22e0
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Date deposited: 27 Jan 2023 17:38
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:06
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Author:
Judit Varkonyi-Sepp
Author:
Anna Freeman
Author:
Ben Ainsworth
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