B190 - Genetics of asthma GWAS - 01/09/2004
Asthma is an inflammatory disease of the airways of the lung. Asthmatics suffer from intermittent airflow
limitation and the symptoms of wheeze and shortness of breath.
Asthma is not one disease but many. In childhood it is commonly associated with allergy (atopy) to
common inhaled proteins (allergens). Significant numbers of children with disease have persistent symptoms
throughout life. Asthma also may present in later life, when it is less obviously associated with allergy, more
common in women and cigarette smokers, and often resistant to treatment. The combination of cigarette
smoking and asthma can produce chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, which is the sixth most common
cause of death worldwide. Occupational asthma is due to workplace exposure to dusts and chemicals, and is
the most prevalent occupational lung disease in the European Community. Ten % of new onset adult asthma
cases are caused by workplace exposures, and the prognosis of most forms of occupational asthma is poor
and is associated with job loss, loss of income and loss of quality of life.
Asthma has a high prevalence and a chronic relapsing course. Childhood asthma is a global health
problem that imposes a burden on family, health care and society as a whole, and results in a massive social
and economic cost to the community.
A recent cost-of-illness study requested by the Joint Research Centre (JRC) of the European
Commission has estimated the total burden of asthma in children under the age of 15 in the 25 EU member
states to be EUR3.0 billion each year. The total burden of asthma to the European Community is at least double
when taking adult and occupational asthma into account. A significant reduction of the quality of life of
asthmatic children is well recognised.
Current asthma therapies are effective in cases of mild asthma, but severe asthma remains very
difficult to treat, and 80% of the cost arises from the 20% of individuals with severe disease 1.
The aim of the GABRIEL project is to discover the environmental and genomic causes of asthma.
The understanding of these factors and their interactions at the molecular level will open new avenues into
the development of preventive, diagnostic and therapeutic strategies to combat the asthma epidemic in
Europe and worldwide. This proposal lays out an extended systematic structure of research that will define
the molecular mechanisms of gene-environment interactions and