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Review
. 2025 Mar 31:6:1579224.
doi: 10.3389/falgy.2025.1579224. eCollection 2025.

How does asthma coexistence affect the strategic selection of biologic therapies in CRSwNP management?

Affiliations
Review

How does asthma coexistence affect the strategic selection of biologic therapies in CRSwNP management?

Imran Ozdemir et al. Front Allergy. .

Abstract

Objectives: We reviewed asthma coexistence and the selection of biologic therapies in CRSwNP Management.

Methods: The literature review utilized Google and Google Scholar, in addition to PubMed, EBSCO, and Proquest Central at Kırıkkale University. We searched for " CRSwNP", "asthma", "biologic therapies", "Anti-IL-4RA", "Dupilumab", "Anti-IgE", "Omalizumab", "Anti-IL-5", "mepolizumab" from 2024 to 2000.

Results: Patients with CRSwNP frequently have co-occurring lower airway illnesses, including asthma and AERD asthma, which have a shared pathogenesis. The inflammatory bases of CRSwNP and asthma might be heterogeneous, with a type 2 or, less frequently, a non-type two inflammatory history. Lower airway inflammation and asthma control are worse in patients with asthma who also have CRSwNP. Patients with CRSwNP can now access targeted biologic medicines, a novel therapy option. The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has authorized three medications for CRSwNP: dupilumab, omalizumab, and mepolizumab. To treat chronic rhinosinusitis with a biological agent, the 2020 European position paper on rhinosinusitis established clear indications. A patient is considered a biologic therapy candidate if they have either undergone FESS before or did not meet FESS criteria but met three of the five. A diagnosis of concomitant asthma, necessitating an inhaled glucocorticoid controller regularly, is one of the five requirements.

Conclusion: Biologic treatments have the potential to be used in certain patients where CRSwNP and asthma coexist. The recommended treatments include omalizumab, dupilumab, and mepolizumab.

Keywords: CRSwNP; asthma coexistence; biologic therapies; dupilumab; mepolizumab; omalizumab.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The author(s) declared that they were an editorial board member of Frontiers, at the time of submission. This had no impact on the peer review process and the final decision.

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