A systematic review of the humanistic, economic, sociodemographic, and environmental burden of severe/difficult-to-treat asthma

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Title: A systematic review of the humanistic, economic, sociodemographic, and environmental burden of severe/difficult-to-treat asthma
Authors: Arnaud Bourdin, Ioanna Vlachaki, Alessandra Madoni, Simon Donhauser, Marielle van der Deijl, Mithun Chakrawarthy Manne, Bala Ganesh Geddamuri, Nicola A. Hanania
Publication Year: 2025
Subject Terms: Genetics, Ecology, Immunology, Science Policy, Biological Sciences not elsewhere classified, Systematic literature review, humanistic burden, economic burden, sociodemographic, environmental, severe or difficult-to-treat asthma
Description: We examined gaps in our understanding of the health-related, humanistic, socioeconomic, and environmental burden of patients with difficult-to-treat/severe asthma. A systematic literature review was performed using Embase and MEDLINE. The searchs were performed separately for studies investigating humanistic and economic burden and those investigating environmental and sociodemographic impact, using a predefined search strategy. Study selection was based on the population, interventions, comparisons, outcomes, and study design framework. Data extraction from full-text publications was conducted using a standardized Microsoft Excel© template. Fifty-two studies reporting the humanistic and economic burden and 11 studies reporting the environmental and sociodemographic impact were identified. Patients with severe vs non-severe asthma had lower quality of life (QoL). As expected, the impact of asthma on healthcare resource utilization and costs increased with disease severity. More frequent hospitalizations, emergency department visits, longer hospital length of stay, and higher frequency of exacerbations were seen in severe vs non-severe asthma. Eleven studies reported on factors such as air pollution and their association with increased risk of asthma severity, and there is a lack of evidence specifically addressing its impact on severe asthma. Severe asthma imposes significant economic and humanistic burdens on patients and healthcare systems. Both environmental and sociodemographic factors exacerbate asthma severity and should be further investigated to ensure optimal asthma management. Gaps remain in our knowledge of the impact of climate change on the most vulnerable patients with severe disease and our review highlights aspects of this burden that are still to be fully understood.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: unknown
DOI: 10.6084/m9.figshare.29301337.v2
Availability: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.29301337.v2
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/A_systematic_review_of_the_humanistic_economic_sociodemographic_and_environmental_burden_of_severe_difficult-to-treat_asthma/29301337
Rights: CC BY 4.0
Accession Number: edsbas.DF637B6E
Database: BASE
Description
Abstract:We examined gaps in our understanding of the health-related, humanistic, socioeconomic, and environmental burden of patients with difficult-to-treat/severe asthma. A systematic literature review was performed using Embase and MEDLINE. The searchs were performed separately for studies investigating humanistic and economic burden and those investigating environmental and sociodemographic impact, using a predefined search strategy. Study selection was based on the population, interventions, comparisons, outcomes, and study design framework. Data extraction from full-text publications was conducted using a standardized Microsoft Excel© template. Fifty-two studies reporting the humanistic and economic burden and 11 studies reporting the environmental and sociodemographic impact were identified. Patients with severe vs non-severe asthma had lower quality of life (QoL). As expected, the impact of asthma on healthcare resource utilization and costs increased with disease severity. More frequent hospitalizations, emergency department visits, longer hospital length of stay, and higher frequency of exacerbations were seen in severe vs non-severe asthma. Eleven studies reported on factors such as air pollution and their association with increased risk of asthma severity, and there is a lack of evidence specifically addressing its impact on severe asthma. Severe asthma imposes significant economic and humanistic burdens on patients and healthcare systems. Both environmental and sociodemographic factors exacerbate asthma severity and should be further investigated to ensure optimal asthma management. Gaps remain in our knowledge of the impact of climate change on the most vulnerable patients with severe disease and our review highlights aspects of this burden that are still to be fully understood.
DOI:10.6084/m9.figshare.29301337.v2