SIGN UP FOR UPDATES!
Sign up for Englemed updates from TwitterSign up for Englemed updates from Facebook
ENGLEMED
Contact Englemed
Our contact email address.
We can provide a specialist, tailored health and medical news service for your site.
Click here for more information
RSS graphic XML Graphic Add to Google
About Englemed news services - services and policies.
Englemed News Blog - Ten years and counting.
Diary of a reluctant allergy sufferer - How the British National Health Service deals with allergy.
BOOKS AND GIFTS THIS WAY!
BookshopFor books on women's health, healthy eating ideas, mental health issues, diabetes, etc click here
SEARCH THIS SITE
Google

WWW Englemed
Copyright Notice. All reports, text and layout copyright Englemed Ltd, 52 Perry Avenue, Birmingham UK B42 2NE. Co Registered in England No 7053778 Some photos copyright Englemed Ltd, others may be used with permission of copyright owners.
Disclaimer: Englemed is a news service and does not provide health advice. Advice should be taken from a medical professional or appropriate health professional about any course of treatment or therapy.
FreeDigitalPhotos
www.freedigitalphotos.net
FreeWebPhotos
www.freewebphoto.com
FROM OUR NEWS FEEDS
Elite football players 'more likely to develop dementia'
Fri March 17th - Elite male footballers are more likely to develop dementia than the general population, according to a Swedish study published today. More
RECENT COMMENTS
On 09/10/2020 William Haworth wrote:
How long is recovery time after proceedure... on Ablation cuts atrial fibrillat...
On 08/02/2018 David Kelly wrote:
Would you like to write a piece about this to be i... on Researchers unveil new pain re...
On 23/10/2017 Cristina Pereira wrote:
https://epidemicj17.imascientist.org.uk/2017/06/21... on HIV breakthrough - MRC...
On 12/09/2017 Aparna srikantam wrote:
Brilliant finding! indeed a break through in under... on Leprosy research breakthrough...
On 01/07/2017 Annetta wrote:
I have been diagnosed with COPD for over 12 years.... on Seaweed plan for antimicrobial...
ASTHMA & ALLERGY BOOKS
Clearing the air: An Assessment of Asthma and Indoor Allergens ABC of Asthma For more books click here
ALLERGY NEWS
ALLERGY RSS FEEDS
RSS graphic XML Graphic
ENGLEMED HEALTH NEWS

COPD and asthma “labels”?

Monday February 1st, 2016

A new “radical” approach to patient management should be introduced that identifies “treatable traits” rather than labelling someone as having asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, respiratory experts claim today (1 February, 2016).

Professor Alvar Agusti, associate professor of medicine at the University of Barcelona, said defining a patient's symptoms using historical diagnostic labels is an outdated approach to understanding an individual's condition.

Writing a perspective article in European Respiratory Journal, Prof Agusti and colleagues said a more radical approach towards a personalised approach that treatable traits is more appropriate because there are a growing number of patients who do not fit neatly into COPD or asthma categories, including patients with adult-onset asthma, smoking asthmatics, or patients with the so-called asthma-COPD overlap syndrome.

“We propose a label-free precision medicine approach based on treatable traits that categorise the clinical and biological complexity of airway disease,” he says.

“The approach we are suggesting would radicalise healthcare and have significant implications for the organisation of a healthcare system. By recognising the clinical and biological complexity of a disease, we can use causal mechanistic disease pathways to adopt a more precise approach, which is hopefully more effective at managing patients with these conditions."

New technologies over the past 30 years have enabled clinicians to observe a patient and define that patient's condition.

They can access information about a range of other underlying complex biological traits, including cellular and molecular traits.

Agusti A, Bel E, Thomas M et al. Treatable traits: toward precision medicine of chronic airway diseases. European Respiratory Journal. January 2016. DOI: 10.1183/13993003.01359-2015

Tags: Allergies & Asthma | Europe | Respiratory

Printer friendly page Printer friendly page

CATEGORIES