Department of Medicine, the Division of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Jeff and Penny Vinik Center for Translational Immunology Research, Boston, Mass.
Department of Medicine, the Division of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Jeff and Penny Vinik Center for Translational Immunology Research, Boston, Mass.
J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2023 Feb;151(2):301-309. doi: 10.1016/j.jaci.2022.08.021. Epub 2022 Sep 30.
Aspirin-exacerbated respiratory disease has fascinated and frustrated specialists in allergy/immunology, pulmonology, and otorhinolaryngology for decades. It generally develops in previously healthy young adults and is unremitting and challenging to treat. The classical triad of asthma, nasal polyposis, and pathognomonic respiratory reactions to aspirin and other cyclooxygenase-1 inhibitors is accompanied by high levels of mast cell activation, cysteinyl leukotriene production, platelet activation, and severe type 2 respiratory inflammation. The "unbraking" of mast cell activation and further cysteinyl leukotriene generation induced by cyclooxygenase-1 inhibition reflect an idiosyncratic dependency on cyclooxygenase-1-derived products, likely prostaglandin E, to maintain a tenuous homeostasis. Although cysteinyl leukotrienes are clear disease effectors, little else was known about their cellular sources and targets, and the contributions from other mediators and type 2 respiratory inflammation effector cells to disease pathophysiology were unknown until recently. The applications of targeted biological therapies, single-cell genomics, and transgenic animal approaches have substantially advanced our understanding of aspirin-exacerbated respiratory disease pathogenesis and treatment and have also revealed disease heterogeneity. This review covers novel insights into the immunopathogenesis of aspirin-exacerbated respiratory disease from each of these lines of research, including the roles of lipid mediators, effector cell populations, and inflammatory cytokines, discusses unanswered questions regarding cause and pathogenesis, and considers potential future therapeutic options.
阿司匹林加重的呼吸道疾病几十年来一直令过敏/免疫学、肺病学和耳鼻喉科学专家着迷和感到沮丧。它通常发生在以前健康的年轻成年人中,且难以治疗,具有持续性和挑战性。哮喘、鼻息肉和对阿司匹林和其他环氧化酶-1 抑制剂的特征性呼吸道反应的经典三联征伴随着高水平的肥大细胞激活、半胱氨酰白三烯的产生、血小板激活和严重的 2 型呼吸炎症。环氧化酶-1 抑制诱导的肥大细胞激活和进一步的半胱氨酰白三烯生成的“失控”反映了对环氧化酶-1 衍生产物(可能是前列腺素 E)的特发性依赖性,以维持脆弱的体内平衡。虽然半胱氨酰白三烯是明确的疾病效应物,但它们的细胞来源和靶点知之甚少,直到最近,其他介质和 2 型呼吸炎症效应细胞对疾病病理生理学的贡献也未知。靶向生物疗法、单细胞基因组学和转基因动物方法的应用大大提高了我们对阿司匹林加重的呼吸道疾病发病机制和治疗的理解,也揭示了疾病的异质性。这篇综述从这些研究领域中的每一个领域涵盖了对阿司匹林加重的呼吸道疾病免疫发病机制的新见解,包括脂质介质、效应细胞群和炎症细胞因子的作用,讨论了关于病因和发病机制的未解决问题,并考虑了潜在的未来治疗选择。