Ebpay生命医药出版社

Ebpay生命

100763

论文已发表

提 交 论 文


注册即可获取Ebpay生命的最新动态

注 册



IF 收录期刊



  • 3.3 Breast Cancer (Dove Med Press)
  • 3.4 Clin Epidemiol
  • 2.5 Cancer Manag Res
  • 2.9 Infect Drug Resist
  • 3.5 Clin Interv Aging
  • 4.7 Drug Des Dev Ther
  • 2.7 Int J Chronic Obstr
  • 6.6 Int J Nanomed
  • 2.5 Int J Women's Health
  • 2.5 Neuropsych Dis Treat
  • 2.7 OncoTargets Ther
  • 2.0 Patient Prefer Adher
  • 2.3 Ther Clin Risk Manag
  • 2.5 J Pain Res
  • 2.8 Diabet Metab Synd Ob
  • 2.8 Psychol Res Behav Ma
  • 3.0 Nat Sci Sleep
  • 1.8 Pharmgenomics Pers Med
  • 2.7 Risk Manag Healthc Policy
  • 4.2 J Inflamm Res
  • 2.1 Int J Gen Med
  • 4.2 J Hepatocell Carcinoma
  • 3.7 J Asthma Allergy
  • 1.9 Clin Cosmet Investig Dermatol
  • 2.7 J Multidiscip Healthc



更多详情 >>





视频

New Perspectives in the Diagnosis and Management of Allergic Fungal Airway Disease

 

Authors Wardlaw AJ, Rick EM, Pur Ozyigit L, Scadding A, Gaillard EA, Pashley CH

Received 9 March 2021

Accepted for publication 4 May 2021

Published 25 May 2021 Volume 2021:14 Pages 557—573

DOI http://doi.org/10.2147/JAA.S251709

Checked for plagiarism Yes

Review by Single anonymous peer review

Peer reviewer comments 2

Editor who approved publication: Dr Amrita Dosanjh

Abstract: Allergy to airway-colonising, thermotolerant, filamentous fungi represents a distinct eosinophilic endotype of often severe lung disease. This endotype, which particularly affects adult asthma, but also complicates other airway diseases and sometimes occurs de novo, has a heterogeneous presentation ranging from severe eosinophilic asthma to lobar collapse. Its hallmark is lung damage, characterised by fixed airflow obstruction (FAO), bronchiectasis and lung fibrosis. It has a number of monikers including severe asthma with fungal sensitisation (SAFS) and allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis/mycosis (ABPA/M), but these exclusive terms constitute only sub-sets of the condition. In order to capture the full extent of the syndrome we prefer the inclusive term allergic fungal airway disease (AFAD), the criteria for which are IgE sensitisation to relevant fungi in association with airway disease. The primary fungus involved is Aspergillus fumigatus , but a number of other thermotolerant species from several genera have been implicated. The unifying mechanism involves germination of inhaled fungal spores in the lung in the context of IgE sensitisation, leading to a persistent and vigorous eosinophilic inflammatory response in association with release of fungal proteases. Most allergenic fungi, including Alternaria  and Cladosporium  species, are not thermotolerant and cannot germinate in the airways so only act as aeroallergens and do not cause AFAD. Studies of the airway mycobiome have shown that A. fumigatus  colonises the normal as much as the asthmatic airway, suggesting it is the tendency to become IgE-sensitised that is the critical triggering factor for AFAD rather than colonisation per se. Treatment is aimed at preventing exacerbations with glucocorticoids and increasingly by the use of anti-T2 biological therapies. Anti-fungal therapy has a limited place in management, but is an effective treatment for fungal bronchitis which complicates AFAD in about 10% of cases.
Keywords: fungi, Aspergillus , ABPA, SAFS, asthma, eosinophils

 

 

Download Article[PDF]