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The Canadian Severe Asthma Network (CSAN) was developed to gain a better understanding of the clinical, environmental, socio-economic, work-related, and biological characteristics of severe asthmatics (SA) that may account for poor response to clinically available therapies for asthma.
This network of clinical and basic researchers will be a means by which Canadian investigators can develop and conduct research in this small patient group, which could lead to better clinical management of SA.
Patient information will be entered into the CSAN database (created by PI Dr. Vethanayagam in connection with Mr. Jack Yeung) and will help researchers and doctors from multiple hospitals and universities across Canada to understand this subpopulation of asthmatics better. It will help to answer questions regarding SA epidemiology, asthma education, inflammatory monitoring, risks of near fatal asthma (NFA), symptom perception, changes in lung structure and function, co-morbidities, and the effectiveness of developing regional severe asthma clinics. Two of the early projects the investigators will be working on are psychosocial co-morbidities in asthma and medication coverage related to asthma.
There will also be biobanking of sputum samples and/or bronchoscopy samples (such as BALs & lung washings) that are being obtained for clinical purposes. Also, for those consented for biobanking blood and urine will be collected, separate from clinical care, and stored in the biobank. The Canadian Biosample Repository (CBSR) will be storing our biobanked samples. The investigators will be following the CBSR policies for storage and security. Tissue research will be conducted in the future, and separate ethics approval will be obtained for each project.
Full description
5-10% of adult asthmatics have difficult to control asthma or severe asthma (SA), some of whom require systemic steroids to control their disease ("steroid dependent asthmatics"). Very little is understood about this population (Chanez, et al. JACI June 07)
Networks to study severe asthma have emerged in Europe (ENFUMOSA) and the United States (US Severe Asthma Research Program) to understand this small group of patients who account for the majority of costs related to asthma care (>50%). We would like to establish a network in Canada of well characterized asthmatics with severe asthma (and mild-moderate asthmatics as controls).
Sputum cell counts assist somewhat in improving asthma management in this population but outside of eosinophilic inflammation (one subtype) do not predict asthma control (Lemiere C et al. J Allergy Clin Immunol 2006;118:1033-9).
Little is understood regarding the many patients who do not have frequent exacerbations but rather have chronic persistent asthma (symptoms multiple times a day) particularly when non-eosinophilic. SCCs are not as useful within this group and more detailed analysis of sputum (particularly supernatant) and more invasive testing is required as we see more of this population, to better treat them.
Even less is understood about severe asthma in childhood.
We have been reviewing a few of the patients' biopsies for clues to how we can better manage them within clinical setting and note significant differences between individuals in relation to muscle mass, neuronal hypertrophy, and inflammation (which more often than not is absent in those with severe asthma).
Bronchoscopies are done routinely in SA patients to assess their airways better and obtain bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) specimens and sometimes transbronchial biopsies.
Our hypotheses and/ or research questions are:
Immediate:
Natural History:
NFA and SA:
What is the burden of co-morbidities in individuals with SA as opposed to individuals with MMA?
What is the burden of steroid-related complications in patients with SA?
Immunology:
Future Projects once CSAN registry is established (with specific grant funding requests)
Education:
Inflammatory monitoring:
Symptom perception:
Pathophysiology:
Health Service Delivery:
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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