Environmental exposures: another effect on sphingolipids in asthma?

Classifying the heterogeneity of asthma has been an ongoing challenge. Asthma phenotypes and endotypes have mainly been defined by clinical features, markers of atopy, airway immune cells and inflammatory markers.1 While clustering has helped the advancement of biologics specific targeting immune receptors or IgE, there has been less success in using clustering by other parameters such as genetics or environmental factors therapeutically.2 Despite a wealth of information on the detrimental effects of environmental factors such as air pollution and tobacco smoke exposure on asthma,3 their role in asthma pathogenesis is still unclear. The integration of environmental factors in host metabolic and inflammatory endotypes is of great interest and poorly understood. The study by Wu and colleagues4 addresses this gap in knowledge by evaluating environmental exposures to small particulate matter (PM2.5) in six asthma endotypes from a data base of adults with...
Source: Thorax - Category: Respiratory Medicine Authors: Tags: Thorax Editorial Source Type: research