Mortimer Kevin, Reddel Helen K, Pitrez Paulo M, Bateman Eric D
Dept of Respiratory Medicine, Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Liverpool, UK
Dept of Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Eur Respir J. 2022 Sep 15;60(3). doi: 10.1183/13993003.03179-2021. Print 2022 Sep.
Asthma is the most common noncommunicable disease in children, and among the most common in adults. The great majority of people with asthma live in low and middle income countries (LMICs), which have disproportionately high asthma-related morbidity and mortality. Essential inhaled medications, particularly those containing inhaled corticosteroids (ICS), are often unavailable or unaffordable, and this explains much of the global burden of preventable asthma morbidity and mortality. Guidelines developed for LMICs are generally based on the outdated assumption that patients with asthma symptoms <1-3 times per week do not need (or benefit from) ICS. Even when ICS are prescribed, many patients manage their asthma with oral or inhaled short-acting β-agonists (SABA) alone, owing to issues of availability and affordability. A single ICS-formoterol inhaler-based approach to asthma management for all severities of asthma, from mild to severe, starting at diagnosis, might overcome SABA overuse/over-reliance and reduce the burden of symptoms and severe exacerbations. However, ICS-formoterol inhalers are currently very poorly available or unaffordable in LMICs. There is a pressing need for pragmatic clinical trial evidence of the feasibility and cost-effectiveness of this and other strategies to improve asthma care in these countries. The global health inequality in asthma care that deprives so many children, adolescents and adults of healthy lives and puts them at increased risk of death, despite the availability of highly effective therapeutic approaches, is unacceptable. A World Health Assembly Resolution on universal access to affordable and effective asthma care is needed to focus attention and investment on addressing this need.
哮喘是儿童中最常见的非传染性疾病,在成人中也颇为常见。绝大多数哮喘患者生活在低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs),这些国家哮喘相关的发病率和死亡率高得不成比例。基本的吸入药物,尤其是那些含有吸入性糖皮质激素(ICS)的药物,往往无法获得或价格昂贵,这在很大程度上解释了可预防的哮喘发病率和死亡率的全球负担。为LMICs制定的指南通常基于过时的假设,即每周哮喘症状发作<1 - 3次的患者不需要(或无法从)ICS中获益。即使开具了ICS处方,由于可及性和可负担性问题,许多患者仅使用口服或吸入短效β-激动剂(SABA)来控制哮喘。从诊断开始,采用单一的基于ICS-福莫特罗吸入器的方法来管理所有严重程度(从轻度到重度)的哮喘,可能会克服SABA的过度使用/过度依赖,并减轻症状负担和严重加重的情况。然而,目前在LMICs中,ICS-福莫特罗吸入器的可及性非常差或价格昂贵。迫切需要务实的临床试验证据,证明这种及其他改善这些国家哮喘护理策略的可行性和成本效益。尽管有高效的治疗方法,但哮喘护理方面的全球健康不平等现象却剥夺了如此众多儿童、青少年和成人享有健康生活的权利,并使他们面临更高的死亡风险,这是不可接受的。需要一项世界卫生大会关于普遍获得负担得起且有效的哮喘护理的决议,以集中关注和投资来满足这一需求。