Revisão Acesso aberto Produção Nacional Revisado por pares

COVID-19, asthma, and biological therapies: What we need to know

2020; Elsevier BV; Volume: 13; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.waojou.2020.100126

ISSN

1939-4551

Autores

Mário Morais‐Almeida, Rita Aguiar, Bryan Martin, Ignacio J. Ansotegui, Motohiro Ebisawa, L. Karla Arruda, Marco Caminati, Giorgio Walter Canonica, Tara F. Carr, Geoffrey Chupp, Jonathan Corren, Ignacio Dávila, Hae‐Sim Park, Nicola A. Hanania, Lanny J. Rosenwasser, Mario Sánchez‐Borges, J. Christian Virchow, Anahí Yáñez, Jonathan A. Bernstein, Luis Caraballo, Yoon‐Seok Chang, Manana Chikhladze, Alessandro Fiocchi, Sandra Nora González Díaz, Luciana Kase Tanno, Michael Levin, José Antonio Ortega‐Martell, Giovanni Passalacqua, David B. Peden, Philip W. Rouadi, James L. Sublett, Gary Wong, Eugene R. Bleecker,

Tópico(s)

Inhalation and Respiratory Drug Delivery

Resumo

Managing patients with severe asthma during the coronavirus pandemic and COVID-19 is a challenge. Authorities and physicians are still learning how COVID-19 affects people with underlying diseases, and severe asthma is not an exception. Unless relevant data emerge that change our understanding of the relative safety of medications indicated in patients with asthma during this pandemic, clinicians must follow the recommendations of current evidence-based guidelines for preventing loss of control and exacerbations. Also, with the absence of data that would indicate any potential harm, current advice is to continue the administration of biological therapies during the COVID-19 pandemic in patients with asthma for whom such therapies are clearly indicated and have been effective. For patients with severe asthma infected by SARS-CoV-2, the decision to maintain or postpone biological therapy until the patient recovers should be a case-by-case based decision supported by a multidisciplinary team. A registry of cases of COVID-19 in patients with severe asthma, including those treated with biologics, will help to address a clinical challenge in which we have more questions than answers.

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