Asthma linked to seven genetic variants: Study – News-Medical.net


TheMedGuru

Asthma linked to seven genetic variants: Study
News-Medical.net
In a new study seven genes linked to asthma have been discovered. For the research genetic variations of 10365 people with asthma
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Genomewide Study Finds Asthma-Associated Genes, One Specific to Childhood Onset – Medscape


TheMedGuru

Genomewide Study Finds Asthma-Associated Genes, One Specific to Childhood Onset
Medscape
September 23, 2010 — A genomewide association study has identified several variants associated with asthma throughout the life cycle but found only a
Genetic clue to asthma triggersNHS Choices
Asthma comes first, not allergy, study findsSydney Morning Herald
Asthma yields up some of its secrets to gene researchersNature.com (blog)
Examiner.com –HealthCanal.com –BusinessWeek
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Asthma comes first, not allergy, study finds – Sydney Morning Herald

Asthma comes first, not allergy, study finds

Press reports suggest that allergies are a consequence of asthma, not a cause of it, the largest genetic study of the condition has concluded.

Scientists have found seven genes linked to the development of the ailment, which could lead to new treatments.
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Researchers from Imperial College London and colleagues around the world carried out more than half a million genetic tests on 26,000 subjects.

The findings, published in The New England Journal of Medicine, suggest that allergies are a consequence of asthma, which causes damaged airways.

They also found that adult-onset asthma and childhood asthma were different diseases.

But the head of respiratory and environmental epidemiology at the Woolcock Institute in Sydney, Guy Marks, said he did not think the study had definitively shown that allergies were a consequence of asthma, not the cause.

”That is the conclusion the authors have drawn but I would be a bit more cautious,” he said.

He believed this type of research – including other genetic studies of asthma being conducted among Australians – might lead to better-targeted treatments and ways to prevent asthma in the first place. Australian asthma rates were among the highest in the world, said the chief executive of the Asthma Foundation NSW, Michele Goldman.

About one in nine children and one in 10 adults had it. It was thought to be caused by a combination of genetic and environmental factors, Ms Goldman said.

This research highlighted that asthmatics were better off finding a medication that worked for them than trying to avoid potential allergens, she said.

The genes were found in a third of children with asthma. Some were involved in activating the immune system; others were linked to breathing. This means treatments could be designed to correct their function.

Professor William Cookson, of Imperial College London, who co-ordinated the research, said: ”Our study highlights targets for asthma therapies and suggests that therapies against these targets will be of use to many asthmatics.”

The researchers will now look for what causes damage to the airways and why some factors seem to protect against asthma.

Genetic study could aid new asthma treatments – WebMD.Boots.com


India Talkies

Genetic study could aid new asthma treatments
WebMD.Boots.com
23 rd September 2010 – Scientists say they have found genetic variations that 'substantially' increase a person's risk of developing asthma
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Asthma causes allergies by damaging airways — study – Irish Independent


Daily Mail

Asthma causes allergies by damaging airways — study
Irish Independent
ALLERGIES are a consequence of asthma not a cause of it, the largest genetic study into the condition has discovered.
Complex Asthma Genes Not Useful for Setting RiskMedPage Today
Drugs 'could target asthma genes'BBC News
Genetic breakthrough heralds hope of asthma cure in ten yearsDaily Mail
EurekAlert (press release)
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National Study Shows Drug Effective for Hard-to-Control Asthma – WMTV

Information from the University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics:

National Study Shows Drug Effective for Hard-to-Control Asthma

Madison, Wis. – An already available drug eases asthma in patients whose breathing problems persist while using inhaled corticosteroids, according to study results released this week.

University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers who were part of the trial say the ability to prescribe tiotropium bromide – which is already prescribed for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) under the brand name Spiriva – adds another weapon to the fight against asthma.

“This is good news because sometimes patients don’t respond to low doses of inhaled corticosteroids, and raising the dose doesn’t always work, either,’’ says Dr. Christine Sorkness, professor of pharmacy at the UW School of Pharmacy. “This gives physicians another option for patients whose asthma is not being adequately controlled.”

Sorkness and Dr. Robert Lemanske, professor of pediatrics and medicine and head of the UW division of pediatric allergy, immunology, and rheumatology at the UW School of Medicine and Public Health, led the UW part of the trial, which enrolled 21 of the 210 adults who took part in the national study. Study results are being released this week in the New England Journal of Medicine and at the Annual Congress of the European Respiratory Society in Barcelona, Spain.

The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) supported the study, which compared three tactics for treating uncontrolled asthma. In one treatment, participants received a doubled dose of inhaled corticosteroids; in the second, inhaled corticosteroids were supplemented by a long-acting beta-agonist (salmeterol); and in the third, the inhaled corticosteroids were supplemented with a long-acting anticholinergic drug (tiotropium bromide). Anticholinergics block the nerves that tighten the muscles around the lungs’ airways whereas beta-agonists relax the muscles lining the breathing passages of the lungs.

Before the trial, the patients averaged 77 days per year when their asthma was under control and they didn’t need to use their albuterol rescue inhalers. Doubling corticosteroids gave patients another 19 symptom-free days on average, while adding tiotropium to low-dose corticosteroids gave them another 48, similar to the improvement they had on corticosteroids plus salmeterol. But increasing corticosteroids and using beta- agonists both have risks,

“This is the first study to explore adding an anticholinergic inhaler to low-dose inhaled corticosteroids,” said Dr. James Kiley, director of the NHLBI’s division of lung diseases. “The Asthma Clinical Research Network is designed to address exactly these kinds of practical and important management questions, with the ultimate goal of helping asthma patients.”

In addition to UW-Madison, other members of the Asthma Clinical Research Network who took part in this trial include: Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston; Columbia University, New York City; Duke University, Durham, N.C.; The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston; National Jewish Medical and Research Center, Denver; University of California, San Diego; University of California, San Francisco; Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis; and Wake Forest University. The data coordinating center is at Penn State College of Medicine in Hershey, Pa.

Asthma Study Proves Spiriva Good As Serevent – On Public Speaking


CBC.ca

Asthma Study Proves Spiriva Good As Serevent
On Public Speaking
For those adults who suffer with hard-to-control asthma there might be a new asthma treatment available on the market soon, but as with any answer to hard a
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