Obesity-Associated Non-T2 Mechanisms in Obese Asthmatic Individuals

Author:

Shailesh Harshita1ORCID,Bhat Ajaz A.2ORCID,Janahi Ibrahim A.134ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Education, Sidra Medicine, Doha 26999, Qatar

2. Precision Medicine in Diabetes, Obesity and Cancer Research Program, Department of Human Genetics, Sidra Medicine, Doha 26999, Qatar

3. Department of Pediatric Medicine, Sidra Medicine, Doha 26999, Qatar

4. Department of Pediatrics, Weill Cornell Medicine, Doha 24144, Qatar

Abstract

Obesity and asthma are two common health issues that have shown increased prevalence in recent years and have become a significant socioeconomic burden worldwide. Obesity increases asthma incidence and severity. Obese asthmatic individuals often experience increased exacerbation rates, enhanced airway remodeling, and reduced response to standard corticosteroid therapy. Recent studies indicate that obesity-associated non-T2 factors such as mechanical stress, hyperinsulinemia, systemic inflammation, adipose tissue mediators, metabolic dysregulation, microbiome dysbiosis, and high-fat-diet are responsible for increased asthma symptoms and reduced therapeutic response in obese asthmatic individuals. This manuscript reviews the recent findings highlighting the role of obesity-associated factors that contribute to airway hyper-reactivity, airway inflammation and remodeling, and immune cell dysfunction, consequently contributing to worsening asthma symptoms. Furthermore, the review also discusses the possible future therapies that might play a role in reducing asthma symptoms by diminishing the impact of obesity-associated non-T2 factors.

Funder

Qatar National Research Fund

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Medicine (miscellaneous)

Reference93 articles.

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