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Disease Burden and Unmet Need in Eosinophilic Esophagitis

Authors :
Albert J, Bredenoord
Kiran, Patel
Alain M, Schoepfer
Evan S, Dellon
Mirna, Chehade
Seema S, Aceves
Jonathan M, Spergel
Brad, Shumel
Yamo, Deniz
Paul J, Rowe
Juby A, Jacob-Nara
Source :
American journal of gastroenterology. 117(8):1231-1241
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) is a chronic, progressive, type 2 inflammatory disease of increasing prevalence, characterized by symptoms of dysphagia and reduced quality of life. A dysregulated type 2 immune response to food and aeroallergen leads to barrier dysfunction, chronic esophageal inflammation, remodeling, and fibrosis. Patients with EoE have impaired quality of life because of dysphagia and other symptoms. They may also suffer social and psychological implications of food-related illness and expensive out-of-pocket costs associated with treatment. Disease burden in EoE is often compounded by the presence of comorbid type 2 inflammatory diseases. Current conventional treatments include elimination diet, proton pump inhibitors, and swallowed topical corticosteroids, as well as esophageal dilation in patients who have developed strictures. These treatments demonstrate variable response rates and may not always provide long-term disease control. There is an unmet need for long-term histologic, endoscopic, and symptomatic disease control; for targeted therapies that can normalize the immune response to triggers, reduce chronic inflammation, and limit or prevent remodeling and fibrosis; and for earlier diagnosis, defined treatment outcomes, and a greater understanding of patient perspectives on treatment. In addition, healthcare professionals need a better understanding of the patient perspective on disease burden, the disconnect between symptoms and disease activity, and the progressive nature of EoE and the need for continuous monitoring and maintenance treatment. In this review, we explore the progression of disease over the patient's lifespan, highlight the patient perspective on disease, and discuss the unmet need for effective long-term treatments.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00029270
Volume :
117
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of gastroenterology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....797cf93ed5f31c47829debd1a11c9ece