Asthma is a widespread respiratory disease affecting millions of children. Salbutamol is a well-established bronchodilator available to treat asthma. However, response to bronchodilators is very heterogeneous, particularly in children. Pharmacometabolomics via exhaled breath analysis holds promise for patient stratification. Here, we integrate a real-time breath analysis platform in the workflow of an outpatient clinic to provide a detailed metabolic snapshot of patients with asthma undergoing standard clinical evaluations. We observed significant metabolic changes associated with salbutamol inhalation within ∼1 h. Our data supports the hypothesis that sphingolipid metabolism and arginine biosynthesis mediate the bronchodilator effect of salbutamol. Clustering analysis of 30 metabolites associated with these pathways revealed characteristic metabotypes related to clinical phenotypes of poor bronchodilator responsiveness. We propose that such a metabolic fingerprinting approach may be of utility in clinical practice to quantify response to inhaled medications or asthma outcomes.
Keywords: Diagnostics; Health sciences; Internal medicine; Medical specialty; Medicine; Respiratory medicine.
© 2024 The Author(s).