Introduction: The age of asthma onset is often implicated in clinical manifestation, diagnosis, and management of the disease. Aim: To define demographic, clinical and functional features and inflammatory characteristics in induced sputum in patients with adult-onset asthma. Methods: Optimally treated patients from asthma clinics of two tertiary hospitals were included in the study. Patients underwent assessment of demographic characteristics, severity and treatment regimes, pulmonary function tests, and skin prick tests, as well as measurement of blood eosinophils and sputum induction for the assessment of sputum inflammatory cells, IL-8 and IL-13 levels in the supernatant. Results: Of the 333 patients recruited, 234 (70.2%) had adult-onset asthma. Adult-onset asthmatics were older, had a higher BMI, a shorter disease duration, and were less often atopic, compared to patients with early onset asthma. Higher proportions of patients with severe asthma presented increased levels of FeNO and blood eosinophils, both in the early and the adult-onset patient groups. Finally, obese patients with early onset asthma were characterized by less atopy compared to non-obese patients in the same group. Conclusion: Adult-onset asthma was characterized by less sputum eosinophilia, a nonatopic profile and a higher BMI compared to early-onset asthma. The presence of blood eosinophilia and increased FeNO in patients with severe asthma was comparable in the two groups.
Keywords: Asthma; biomarkers; blood eosinophils; induced sputum; sputum eosinophils.