Basic problem: Treatment of chronic severe bronchial asthma with corticosteroids is inadequate in a minority of patients and is often accompanied by considerable side effects. Additional specific immunosuppression appears to be therapeutically promising.
Patients and treatment: Three patients (2 women, aged 44 and 29, a man aged 57 years), all with chronic severe asthma requiring corticosteroids, were given cyclosporin (mean dose 1.8 mg/kg; serum level 72 +/- 35 ng/ml) additional to conventional bronchospasmolytic drugs for 9 to 20 months.
Course: The frequency and intensity of asthmatic attacks markedly decreased in all three patients. The mean peak-flow measurements in the mornings before broncholysis had increased by 23% over the precyclosporin level of the calculated normal value. Peak flow variability improved by 13%. The mean one-second forced expiratory volume (FEV1) rose from 37 to 66% of the normal value (P < or = 0.05) and correlated with the serum cyclosporin level (correlation coefficient 0.58-0.97). The frequency of acute severe asthmatic attacks (FEV1 < or = 40%) requiring additional hospitalization with intravenous administration of glucocorticoids fell by 30%. The systemic corticosteroid maintenance dosage could be significantly reduced or the drug discontinued in two patients.
Conclusion: These observations indicate that cyclosporin can be useful in the treatment of selected cases of chronic severe steroid-refractory asthma. Prospective studies are needed to judge its long-term efficacy.