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Showing posts from June, 2017

Cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events among patients receiving omalizumab: Results from EXCELS, a prospective cohort study in moderate to severe asthma

Omalizumab is a potent medication approved to treat asthma, which has been shown to improve symptoms as well as decrease flares and use of rescue medications.  When it first became available, its long-term safety was not solidly clarified.  In the May 2017 issue of JACI, Iribarren and colleagues discuss the results of the post-marketing observational study called EXCELS, which followed patients for five years to determine the long-term effects of omalizumab, with a particular focus on cardiovascular (CV) and cerebrovascular (CBV) events, such as heart attacks and strokes ( J Allergy Clin Immunol 2017; 139(5): 1489-1495 ).  Pooled results from previous studies showed a higher incidence of these events, but no clear association with omalizumab use was found.  Iribarren and colleagues looked at nearly 5000 patients on omalizumab and compared them to nearly 3000 that were not on omalizumab.  They found that omalizumab is effective for moderate-to-severe asthma....

The nasal methylome and childhood atopic asthma

It has long been known that many diseases, like asthma, are the result of complex interactions between genes and the environment.  But how exactly do these two factors contribute to atopic asthma?  In the May 2017 issue of JACI, Yang and colleagues discuss the epigenetic factors involved in the development of childhood asthma ( J Allergy Clin Immunol 2017; 139(5): 1478-1488 ).  They looked at nasal brushings from 36 inner-city children with asthma between the ages of 10 and 12 and compared them with nasal brushings from 36 children without asthma.  They then looked at patterns of methylation, a way that genes can be chemically modified in order to change their expression. They found that 186 genes were modified in this way.  The median percentage in methylation changes between allergic patients and non-allergic patients was 6.8%.  This is in line with previous research that shows that there are significant changes in methylation in other airway diseases lik...