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Featured researches published by William W. Busse.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2010

Use of Exhaled Nitric Oxide Measurement to Identify a Reactive, at-Risk Phenotype among Patients with Asthma

Raed A. Dweik; Ronald L. Sorkness; Sally Wenzel; Jeffrey P. Hammel; Douglas Curran-Everett; Suzy Comhair; Eugene R. Bleecker; William W. Busse; William J. Calhoun; Mario Castro; Kian Fan Chung; Elliot Israel; Nizar N. Jarjour; Wendy C. Moore; Stephen Peters; Gerald Teague; Benjamin Gaston; Serpil C. Erzurum

RATIONALEnExhaled nitric oxide (Fe(NO)) is a biomarker of airway inflammation in mild to moderate asthma. However, whether Fe(NO) levels are informative regarding airway inflammation in patients with severe asthma, who are refractory to conventional treatment, is unknown. Here, we hypothesized that classification of severe asthma based on airway inflammation as defined by Fe(NO) levels would identify a more reactive, at-risk asthma phenotype.nnnMETHODSnFe(NO) and major features of asthma, including airway inflammation, airflow limitation, hyperinflation, hyperresponsiveness, and atopy, were determined in 446 individuals with various degrees of asthma severity (175 severe, 271 non-severe) and 49 healthy subjects enrolled in the Severe Asthma Research Program.nnnMEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTSnFe(NO) levels were similar among patients with severe and non-severe asthma. The proportion of individuals with high Fe(NO) levels (>35 ppb) was the same (40%) among groups despite greater corticosteroid therapy in severe asthma. All patients with asthma and high Fe(NO) had more airway reactivity (maximal reversal in response to bronchodilator administration and by methacholine challenge), more evidence of allergic airway inflammation (sputum eosinophils), more evidence of atopy (positive skin tests, higher serum IgE and blood eosinophils), and more hyperinflation, but decreased awareness of their symptoms. High Fe(NO) identified those patients with severe asthma characterized by the greatest airflow obstruction and hyperinflation and most frequent use of emergency care.nnnCONCLUSIONSnGrouping of asthma by Fe(NO) provides an independent classification of asthma severity, and among patients with severe asthma identifies the most reactive and worrisome asthma phenotype.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2007

Characterization of the severe asthma phenotype by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute's Severe Asthma Research Program

Wendy C. Moore; Eugene R. Bleecker; Douglas Curran-Everett; Serpil C. Erzurum; Bill T. Ameredes; Leonard B. Bacharier; William J. Calhoun; Mario Castro; Kian Fan Chung; Melissa Clark; Raed A. Dweik; Anne Fitzpatrick; Benjamin Gaston; Mark Hew; Iftikhar Hussain; Nizar N. Jarjour; Elliot Israel; Bruce D. Levy; James R. Murphy; Stephen Peters; W. Gerald Teague; Deborah A. Meyers; William W. Busse; Sally Wenzel


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 1991

404 Enhanced superoxide (O2−) generation by airway eosinophils (EOS)

Julie B. Sedgwick; William J. Calhoun; William W. Busse


/data/revues/00916749/unassign/S0091674915003462/ | 2015

Discriminating sputum-eosinophilic asthma: Accuracy of cutoffs in blood eosinophil measurements versus a composite index, ELEN

Deepak B. Khatry; David Gossage; Gregory P. Geba; Joseph M. Parker; Nizar N. Jarjour; William W. Busse; Nestor A. Molfino


/data/revues/00916749/unassign/S0091674913008385/ | 2013

Effects of benralizumab on airway eosinophils in asthmatic patients with sputum eosinophilia

Michel Laviolette; David Gossage; Gm Gauvreau; Richard Leigh; Ron Olivenstein; Rohit K. Katial; William W. Busse; Sally Wenzel; Yanping Wu; Vivekananda Datta; Roland Kolbeck; Nestor A. Molfino


Archive | 2010

a large asthma population Determinants of exhaled breath condensate pH in

John F. Hunt; Benjamin Gaston; Elliot Israel; W. Nizar Jarjour; Wendy C. Moore; Stephen P. Peters; Sally Wenzel; William J. Calhoun; Mario Castro; Kian Fan Chung; Douglas Curran-Everett; Raed A. Dweik; Eugene R. Bleecker; Deborah A. Meyers; William W. Busse; Lei Liu; W. Gerald Teague; Serpil C. Erzurum; Anne Fitzpatrick; Sneha Mantri


Journal of Asthma | 2009

Daclizumab Improves Asthma Control in Patients with Moderate to Severe Persistent Asthma: A Randomized, Controlled Trial

William W. Busse; Elliot Israel; Harold S. Nelson


Archive | 2004

Enhanced Generation of T helper 1- and 2-type Chemokines in Allergen-induced Asthma

Lin-Ying Liu; Nizar N. Jarjour; William W. Busse


Archive | 2000

NHLBI Workshop summary Pathophysiology of severe asthma

William W. Busse; Susan Banks-Schlegel; Sally Wenzel


The American review of respiratory disease | 1994

Relationship of plasma epinephrine and circulating eosinophils to nocturnal asthma

Mary Ellen Bates; Murray K. Clayton; William J. Calhoun; Nizar N. Jarjour; Lara M. Schrader; K. Geiger; T. Schultz; Julie B. Sedgwick; Cheri A. Swenson; William W. Busse

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Nizar N. Jarjour

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Sally Wenzel

National Institutes of Health

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William J. Calhoun

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Elliot Israel

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Benjamin Gaston

University of Virginia Health System

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Kian Fan Chung

University of Pittsburgh

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Mario Castro

University of Washington

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Raed A. Dweik

National Institutes of Health

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Serpil C. Erzurum

Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine

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