ASTHMA ASSOCIATED WITH
BACTERIAL INFECTION
From: Respiratory Reviews.com
The latest clinical information on respiratory medicine
Vol. 6 No. 7 July, 2001
DENVER—Increasingly,
microbes appear to be involved in the etiology of some cases of asthma. In
addition to previous findings indicating that viral infection may exacerbate
acute asthma, emerging evidence now implicates bacterial infection as a
cause of chronic asthma. Richard Martin, MD, and colleagues report detecting
infection with Mycoplasma pneumoniae or Chlamydia pneumoniae
in 31 of 55 asthma patients using a combination of polymerase chain reaction
(PCR), serology, and culture.[1] By contrast, PCR revealed mycoplasma
infection in only one of 11 normal controls.
“Given that we detected infection in 56% of asthma patients [vs one in 11
control subjects], there may indeed be a link between bacteria in the
airways and asthma in some patients,” said Dr. Martin, head of the Pulmonary
Division and Vice Chair of the Department of Medicine at National Jewish
Medical and Research Center (NJMRC) in Denver. The researchers did not,
however, find an association between chronic stable asthma and viral
infection.
“We were surprised to find these bacteria in the lower airways of a subset
of stable asthmatics,” said coauthor Monica Kraft, MD, Associate Professor
in the Department of Medicine and Division of Pulmonary Medicine at NJMRC.
“The association raises an interesting ‘chicken versus egg’ issue—did the
asthma allow microorganisms to ‘set up shop,’ or do the microorganisms
actually cause chronic asthma?” Dr. Kraft told RESPIRATORY
REVIEWS.
If the latter is true, then antibiotics would be expected to help some
patients with asthma.
LONG-TERM ANTIBIOTIC
THERAPY?
The authors have garnered support for this idea from both clinical
experience and research. “Using an empirical approach, we’ve tried
clarithromycin with some of our clinical patients. Anecdotally speaking, we
have steroid-dependent asthmatics who improved with clarithromycin,” said
Dr. Kraft. “Initially, we tried a six-week course, but we found that
respiratory function continued to improve in many patients [if the
antibiotic was administered] over three to six months.”
Dr. Martin explained the reason for the lengthy course: “Unfortunately,
mycoplasma is difficult to eradicate from the airways. In true pneumonias,
even after chest X-rays show that mycoplasma infection is largely cleared
from the lungs, some residual infection lingers.”
Dr. Martin and colleagues also back up their clinical experience with
experimental evidence. “We’re submitting a manuscript shortly, describing a
study demonstrating that asthmatics who are PCR-positive for chlamydia or
mycoplasma infection show a 12% to 13% improvement in airway function
following clarithromycin treatment,” he reported. Said Dr. Kraft, “Most
antibiotics do have some anti-inflammatory quality, so it’s not clear how
this works. Hopefully, animal studies will answer this question.”
While the researchers are encouraged by clinical and experimental success
with antibiotic therapy in a subset of asthma patients, Dr. Kraft recognizes
that long-term antibiotic treatment for asthma may be controversial. In
light of concerns regarding general overuse of antibiotics and need to
justify long-term administration under managed health care, this approach
might be questioned. However, in the absence of a practical means of
establishing the diagnosis, she said, “We haven’t found any other way.”
SEROLOGY UNRELIABLE
Despite the experimental evidence for an association between lower airway
infection and chronic asthma, testing patients for such infections in the
clinical setting is problematic. In the present study, all subjects were
seronegative for Mycoplasma pneumoniae, and only three of seven
subjects PCR-positive for chlamydia were seropositive. “Seropositivity is
not a great marker for mycoplasmalpha- or chlamydialpha-induced asthma.
Mycoplasma infection frequently can be shown by PCR to be very active in the
airways of seronegative individuals,” explained Dr. Martin. “It seems to be
triggering inflammation but may not be potent enough to trigger an immune
response,” said Dr. Kraft. On the other hand, she pointed out, “Chlamydia
serology tends to give false positives.”
PCR: FUTURE DIAGNOSTIC?
As
demonstrated by the present study, PCR remains the only reliable way of
demonstrating chronic infection. But PCR requires collecting relevant
samples. “The lower airway samples we need for diagnosis require invasive
bronchoscopy,” said Dr. Kraft.
Dr. Martin told RESPIRATORY
REVIEWS,
“We’re trying to work out procedures on cells from induced sputum, which
right now is not as sensitive as PCR from samples obtained by bronchoscopy.”
For now, PCR testing for lower airway chronic infections may be impractical
in the clinical setting.
An
interesting finding was that, among the asthma patients tested, users of
inhaled corticosteroids were less likely to test positive for the microbes
by PCR. Dr. Martin cited evidence for one explanation: “In animal airway
studies with another species of Mycoplasma, steroids were equally
efficacious with antibiotics in reducing bacterial load and reducing
inflammatory processes. We’re developing a mouse model to look at how
steroids might work to reduce infection with Mycoplasma pneumoniae.”
Dr. Martin is hopeful that animal work will reveal whether corticosteroids
have a direct action on the microbes or simply impede infection by blocking
inflammation.
Dr. Martin noted another interesting finding: “In patients positive for
mycoplasma, especially among those with allergic asthma, there were
increased numbers of mast cells in the lungs. It looks like there could be a
connection between infection and allergic sensitization.” Yet immunoglobulin
E elevation in these individuals was not significant. While this finding is
intriguing, the study was not designed to reveal whether infection precedes
sensitization or vice versa.
ONE OF MANY TYPES
“In the past few decades, a lot of chronic inflammatory diseases have been
shown to have infectious causes—stable asthma may be another,” said Dr.
Kraft. “Our work connecting chronic infection with asthma may change how we
look at asthma in general. What we’re finding is that asthma is probably not
one disease—historically, a lot of phenotypes have been lumped together, but
there’s a lot of heterogeneity in phenotype as well as etiology. Separating
out the various types of asthma and their causes may be the first step
toward finding more effective treatments and preventative strategies.”
—Mimi Zucker, PhD
Reference
1. Martin RJ, Kraft M, Chu HW, et al. A link between chronic asthma and
chronic infection. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2001;107:595-601.