A year ago, Lynn Kocka never dreamed she'd be able to exercise like this. Her severe asthma made just about every activity a challenge.
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Kocka told Ivanhoe, "I would take a few feet running, and I would cough, so I couldn't do it so much."
Kocka tried inhalers and oral meds, but nothing eased her symptoms.
"I could never understand quite why I couldn't get rid of all of this congestion," she said.
Then Kocka's doctors at the Cleveland clinic suggested she try something new, a class of medicines called biologics.
"For patients with severe asthma who have been suffering for years, this is now the time where we are seeing some hope," detailed Sumita Khatri, MD, Co-Director of the Asthma Center at Cleveland Clinic.
Standard treatments for asthma only address inflammation in the body. Biologics target specific pathways that trigger symptoms. For instance, they can zero-in on an antibody that's known to cause an allergic response in people with allergic asthma.
Dr. Khatri explained, "If we can figure out which pathway is particularly causing the most problems, then we can try to target that."
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There are currently three biologics on the market, but many more are in development. In clinical trials, these drugs lowered asthma flare-ups, some by about 50 percent, lowered the rate of hospital and ER visits, and reduced the need for steroid drugs.
Kocka receives an injection of a biologic every four weeks. She said she noticed improvement right away.
"Within three days, it was phenomenal." Kocka said.
Now she can do anything and go anywhere without her asthma holding her back.
"You get your life back, totally, 100 percent."
Candidates for biologic treatment are patients with severe forms of asthma that haven't been helped with standard treatments.
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For more information, contact:
Andrea Pacetti
Senior Manager, Public & Media Relations
Cleveland Clinic
216-444-8168
pancetta@ccf.org