Imagine having severe asthma in a part of the world where the right care can be hard to find. A new expert statement from the Asia-Pacific region tries to map a better path forward. It proposes a clear definition for what 'clinical remission' should mean for patients: eliminating serious flare-ups and the need for oral steroid pills, achieving good daily symptom control, and including lung function as a key measure. The experts also offer a dose of realism, noting that for patients with long-term airway damage, getting back to 'normal' lung function might not be possible. Instead, they suggest the goal should be reaching the best possible function for that individual, or simply keeping things stable.
The statement doesn't come from a new clinical trial, but from experts reviewing the current landscape. They point to serious challenges holding back care, like a shortage of specialist knowledge, delays in getting the right diagnosis, poor access to advanced tests and treatments, and a lack of government funding and support. These are the real-world barriers patients face.
It's important to remember this is a position paper—a set of recommendations based on expert review, not fresh data from a study. The authors themselves note there's limited information on just how widespread the burden of severe asthma is across the diverse Asia-Pacific region. Their advice is shaped by local factors like genetics, environment, and health policies, which may differ from other parts of the world. This makes the roadmap a crucial starting point for discussion, but one that needs to be tested and adapted with real-world evidence.