Effectiveness of biologics for reducing occlusive mucus plugs in patients with severe asthma: a systematic review
Helena Aegerter, Christopher E Brightling, Eleanor M Dunican, Bart N Lambrecht, Njira L Lugogo, John D Newell, Celeste Porsbjerg, Sarah Svenningsen, Deborah Clarke, Andrew W Lindsley, Lars Nordenmark, Christopher S Ambrose, Mario Castro

TL;DR
This review examines how biologics reduce mucus plugs in severe asthma patients, showing improved lung function and quality of life.
Contribution
A systematic review of biologic effects on mucus plugs in asthma, highlighting T2 inflammation's role and treatment outcomes.
Findings
Biologics reduced mucus plug scores in placebo-controlled trials.
Greater effects were seen in T2-high asthma patients with tezepelumab.
Mucus plug reduction was linked to better lung function and quality of life.
Abstract
Asthma is a heterogeneous disease characterized by chronic airway inflammation and reversible airflow obstruction. Particularly in severe asthma, airway mucus plugs can contribute to substantial and persistent airflow obstruction, despite inhaled corticosteroid and bronchodilator treatment. Consequently, it is important that clinicians assess and treat mucus plugs. Increased mucus production and airway eosinophilia caused by type 2 (T2) inflammation contributes to mucus plug formation and persistence. Several biologics are available to target T2 inflammation in asthma and studies have described their effects on airway mucus plugs using mucus plug scoring derived from computed tomography scans. However, the outcomes, designs and populations of the various studies have not been comprehensively summarized. A literature search was performed to identify primary publications examining the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAsthma and respiratory diseases · Respiratory and Cough-Related Research · Inhalation and Respiratory Drug Delivery
