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  1. Article ; Online: Heterogeneity in the use of biologics for severe asthma in Europe

    Anne-Noelle Frix / Liam G. Heaney / Barbro Dahlén / Florin Mihaltan / Svetlana Sergejeva / Sanja Popović-Grle / Vratislav Sedlak / Lauri Lehtimäki / Arnaud Bourdin / Stephanie Korn / Eleftherios Zervas / Zsuzsanna Csoma / Dora Lúðvíksdóttir / Marcus Butler / Giorgio Walter Canonica / Ineta Grisle / Kristina Bieksiene / Anneke Ten Brinke / Piotr Kuna /
    Claudia Chaves Loureiro / Natalia M. Nenasheva / Zorica Lazic / Sabina Škrgat / David Ramos-Barbon / Joerg Leuppi / Bilun Gemicioglu / Apostolos Bossios / Celeste M. Porsbjerg / Elisabeth H. Bel / Ratko Djukanovic / Renaud Louis

    ERJ Open Research, Vol 8, Iss

    a SHARP ERS study

    2022  Volume 4

    Abstract: Introduction Treatment with biologics for severe asthma is informed by international and national guidelines and defined by national regulating bodies, but how these drugs are used in real-life is unknown. Materials and methods The European Respiratory ... ...

    Abstract Introduction Treatment with biologics for severe asthma is informed by international and national guidelines and defined by national regulating bodies, but how these drugs are used in real-life is unknown. Materials and methods The European Respiratory Society (ERS) SHARP Clinical Research Collaboration conducted a three-step survey collecting information on asthma biologics use in Europe. Five geographically distant countries defined the survey questions, focusing on seven end-points: biologics availability and financial issues, prescription and administration modalities, inclusion criteria, continuation criteria, switching biologics, combining biologics and evaluation of corticosteroid toxicity. The survey was then sent to SHARP National Leads of 28 European countries. Finally, selected questions were submitted to a broad group of 263 asthma experts identified by national societies. Results Availability of biologics varied between countries, with 17 out of 28 countries having all five existing biologics. Authorised prescribers (pulmonologists and other specialists) also differed. In-hospital administration was the preferred deliverance modality. While exacerbation rate was used as an inclusion criterion in all countries, forced expiratory volume in 1 s was used in 46%. Blood eosinophils were an inclusion criterion in all countries for interleukin-5 (IL-5)-targeted and IL-4/IL-13-targeted biologics, with varying thresholds. There were no formally established criteria for continuing biologics. Reduction in exacerbations represented the most important benchmark, followed by improvement in asthma control and quality of life. Only 73% (191 out of 263) of surveyed clinicians assessed their patients for corticosteroid-induced toxicity. Conclusion Our study reveals important heterogeneity in the use of asthma biologics across Europe. To what extent this impacts on clinical outcomes relevant to patients and healthcare services needs further investigation.
    Keywords Medicine ; R
    Subject code 610
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-10-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher European Respiratory Society
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  2. Article ; Online: COVID-19 vaccination acceptance, safety and side-effects in European patients with severe asthma

    Apostolos Bossios / Alison M. Bacon / Katrien Eger / Dóra Paróczai / Florence Schleich / Shane Hanon / Svetlana Sergejeva / Eleftherios Zervas / Konstantinos Katsoulis / Christina Aggelopoulou / Konstantinos Kostikas / Eleni Gaki / Nikoletta Rovina / Zsuzsanna Csoma / Ineta Grisle / Kristina Bieksiené / Jolita Palacionyte / Anneke ten Brinke / Simone Hashimoto /
    Florin Mihălţan / Natalia Nenasheva / Biljana Zvezdin / Ivan Čekerevac / Sanja Hromiš / Vojislav Ćupurdija / Zorica Lazic / Rekha Chaudhuri / Steven James Smith / Hitasha Rupani / Hans Michael Haitchi / Ramesh Kurukulaaratchy / Olivia Fulton / Betty Frankemölle / Peter Howarth / Celeste Porsbjerg / Elisabeth H. Bel / Ratko Djukanovic / Michael E. Hyland

    ERJ Open Research, Vol 9, Iss

    2023  Volume 6

    Abstract: Background Vaccination is vital for achieving population immunity to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, but vaccination hesitancy presents a threat to achieving widespread immunity. Vaccine acceptance in chronic potentially immunosuppressed ...

    Abstract Background Vaccination is vital for achieving population immunity to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, but vaccination hesitancy presents a threat to achieving widespread immunity. Vaccine acceptance in chronic potentially immunosuppressed patients is largely unclear, especially in patients with asthma. The aim of this study was to investigate the vaccination experience in people with severe asthma. Methods Questionnaires about vaccination beliefs (including the Vaccination Attitudes Examination (VAX) scale, a measure of vaccination hesitancy-related beliefs), vaccination side-effects, asthma control and overall safety perceptions following coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccination were sent to patients with severe asthma in 12 European countries between May and June 2021. Results 660 participants returned completed questionnaires (87.4% response rate). Of these, 88% stated that they had been, or intended to be, vaccinated, 9.5% were undecided/hesitant and 3% had refused vaccination. Patients who hesitated or refused vaccination had more negative beliefs towards vaccination. Most patients reported mild (48.2%) or no side-effects (43.8%). Patients reporting severe side-effects (5.7%) had more negative beliefs. Most patients (88.8%) reported no change in asthma symptoms after vaccination, while 2.4% reported an improvement, 5.3% a slight deterioration and 1.2% a considerable deterioration. Almost all vaccinated (98%) patients would recommend vaccination to other severe asthma patients. Conclusions Uptake of vaccination in patients with severe asthma in Europe was high, with a small minority refusing vaccination. Beliefs predicted vaccination behaviour and side-effects. Vaccination had little impact on asthma control. Our findings in people with severe asthma support the broad message that COVID-19 vaccination is safe and well tolerated.
    Keywords Medicine ; R
    Subject code 610 ; 150
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-11-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher European Respiratory Society
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  3. Article ; Online: The effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on severe asthma care in Europe

    Katrien Eger / Dora Paroczai / Alison Bacon / Florence Schleich / Svetlana Sergejeva / Arnaud Bourdin / Isabelle Vachier / Eleftherios Zervas / Konstantinos Katsoulis / Dimosthenis Papapetrou / Konstantinos Kostikas / Zsuzsanna Csoma / Enrico Heffler / Giorgio Walter Canonica / Ineta Grisle / Kristina Bieksiene / Jolita Palacionyte / Anneke ten Brinke / Simone Hashimoto /
    Frank W.J.M. Smeenk / Gert-Jan Braunstahl / Simone van der Sar / Florin Mihălţan / Natalia Nenasheva / Marina Peredelskaya / Biljana Zvezdin / Ivan Čekerevac / Sanja Hromiš / Vojislav Ćupurdija / Zorica Lazic / Branislava Milenkovic / Sanja Dimic-Janjic / Valentyna Yasinska / Barbro Dahlén / Apostolos Bossios / Nikolaos Lazarinis / David Aronsson / Arne Egesten / Abul Kashem Mohammad Munir / Lars Ahlbeck / Christer Janson / Sabina Škrgat / Natalija Edelbaher / Joerg Leuppi / Fabienne Jaun / Jochen Rüdiger / Nikolay Pavlov / Pietro Gianella / Reta Fischer / Florian Charbonnier / Rekha Chaudhuri / Steven James Smith / Simon Doe / Michelle Fawdon / Matthew Masoli / Liam Heaney / Hans Michael Haitchi / Ramesh Kurukulaaratchy / Olivia Fulton / Betty Frankemölle / Toni Gibson / Karen Needham / Peter Howarth / Ratko Djukanovic / Elisabeth Bel / Michael Hyland

    ERJ Open Research, Vol 8, Iss

    will care change for good?

    2022  Volume 2

    Abstract: Background The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has put pressure on healthcare services, forcing the reorganisation of traditional care pathways. We investigated how physicians taking care of severe asthma patients in Europe reorganised care, ...

    Abstract Background The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has put pressure on healthcare services, forcing the reorganisation of traditional care pathways. We investigated how physicians taking care of severe asthma patients in Europe reorganised care, and how these changes affected patient satisfaction, asthma control and future care. Methods In this European-wide cross-sectional study, patient surveys were sent to patients with a physician-diagnosis of severe asthma, and physician surveys to severe asthma specialists between November 2020 and May 2021. Results 1101 patients and 268 physicians from 16 European countries contributed to the study. Common physician-reported changes in severe asthma care included use of video/phone consultations (46%), reduced availability of physicians (43%) and change to home-administered biologics (38%). Change to phone/video consultations was reported in 45% of patients, of whom 79% were satisfied or very satisfied with this change. Of 709 patients on biologics, 24% experienced changes in biologic care, of whom 92% were changed to home-administered biologics and of these 62% were satisfied or very satisfied with this change. Only 2% reported worsening asthma symptoms associated with changes in biologic care. Many physicians expect continued implementation of video/phone consultations (41%) and home administration of biologics (52%). Conclusions Change to video/phone consultations and home administration of biologics was common in severe asthma care during the COVID-19 pandemic and was associated with high satisfaction levels in most but not all cases. Many physicians expect these changes to continue in future severe asthma care, though satisfaction levels may change after the pandemic.
    Keywords Medicine ; R
    Subject code 360
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-05-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher European Respiratory Society
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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