American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine
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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Oct 2024
Exploring Definitions and Predictors of Severe Asthma Clinical Remission Post-Biologic in Adults.
Rationale: There is no consensus on criteria to include in an asthma remission definition in real life. Factors associated with achieving remission after biologic initiation remain poorly understood. Objectives: To quantify the proportion of adults with severe asthma achieving multidomain-defined remission after biologic initiation and identify prebiologic characteristics associated with achieving remission that may be used to predict it. ⋯ The odds of remission increased in those with fewer exacerbations per year, lower LTOCS daily dose, better control, and better lung function before biologic initiation. Conclusions: One in five patients achieved four-domain remission within 1 year of biologic initiation. Patients with less severe impairment and shorter asthma duration at initiation had a greater chance of achieving remission after biologic treatment, indicating that biologic treatment should not be delayed if remission is the goal.
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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Oct 2024
The Effect of PEEP on Pulmonary Vascular Resistance Depends on Lung Recruitability in ARDS Patients.
Rationale: A U-shaped relationship should exist between lung volume and pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR), with minimal PVR at FRC. Thus, positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) should increase PVR if it induces significant lung distension compared with recruitment. However, this has never been proved in patients. ⋯ Raising PEEP decreased cardiac index only in preload responsive patients. Conclusions: PEEP increases PVR only when it induces significant lung distension compared with recruitment according to the R/I ratio. Tailoring PEEP on this recruitability index should mitigate its hemodynamic effects.