Asthma is a long-term condition affecting millions of people worldwide, but with the right approach to care, most individuals can live active, normal lives. Treatment focuses on controlling symptoms, preventing dangerous flare-ups, and helping people breathe easier every day. From time-tested medications to innovative therapies being explored in research studies, the options for managing asthma continue to expand and improve.
Finding the Right Path to Breathing Easier
When someone is diagnosed with asthma, the main goal of treatment is not to cure the disease—because currently no cure exists—but to help that person control their symptoms and reduce the risk of serious breathing problems. This means finding ways to keep the airways calm and open, preventing the inflammation and tightness that make breathing difficult. Treatment strategies depend on several factors, including how often symptoms appear, how severe they are, and what triggers seem to make things worse.[1][2]
Each person’s asthma behaves differently. Some people experience symptoms only occasionally, perhaps when they exercise or encounter certain triggers like pollen or cold air. Others deal with symptoms most days, requiring daily medication to keep their condition under control. The severity of asthma can range from mild and intermittent to persistent and severe. Doctors classify asthma based on both how much it impairs daily life and the risk of future complications, such as dangerous asthma attacks that could require emergency care.[1][3]
Medical societies and health organizations around the world have developed treatment guidelines based on years of research and clinical experience. These guidelines help doctors choose the safest and most effective medications for each patient. At the same time, researchers continue to study new therapies in clinical trials, searching for better ways to help people whose asthma remains difficult to control even with standard treatments.[12][15]
Standard Medications That Form the Foundation of Asthma Care
Most people with asthma use inhaled medications, which are breathed directly into the lungs through a device called an inhaler. This approach delivers medicine right where it is needed, allowing lower doses and reducing side effects compared to pills or injections. The two main categories of asthma medicines are called relievers and controllers, and understanding the difference between them is essential for good asthma management.[7][11]
Quick-relief medicines, also called rescue inhalers or relievers, work fast to open narrowed airways during an asthma attack or when symptoms suddenly worsen. The most common quick-relief medicine is a type of drug called a short-acting beta2-agonist, with albuterol (also known as salbutamol) being the most widely used. When someone takes a puff from a blue reliever inhaler, the medicine relaxes the muscles around the airways within minutes, making it easier to breathe. These inhalers are meant for occasional use when symptoms appear, not for daily prevention. If someone finds they need their reliever inhaler more than a few times a week, it usually means their asthma is not well controlled and they may need additional treatment.[12][18]
Long-term control medicines, also called preventer or controller medicines, are taken regularly—usually every day—to reduce inflammation in the airways and prevent symptoms from developing in the first place. The cornerstone of long-term asthma control is inhaled corticosteroids, which are different from the steroids athletes might misuse. These medicines reduce swelling and sensitivity in the airways, making them less likely to react to triggers. Common inhaled corticosteroids include fluticasone, budesonide, and beclomethasone. They work gradually, building up protection over days and weeks, so they must be used consistently even when someone feels well.[12][17]
For people whose asthma is not controlled with inhaled corticosteroids alone, doctors often add another type of medicine called a long-acting beta2-agonist (LABA). These medicines, such as formoterol and salmeterol, keep the airways open for up to 12 hours. However, LABAs should never be used by themselves for asthma—they must always be combined with an inhaled corticosteroid. Many inhalers now combine both types of medicine in a single device for convenience.[12][15]
Another class of controller medicines is leukotriene modifiers, which are taken as pills rather than inhaled. Montelukast is the most commonly prescribed medicine in this group. These drugs block chemicals called leukotrienes that cause inflammation and airway narrowing. They are often used as an add-on treatment or as an alternative for people who have difficulty using inhalers. However, they are generally not as effective as inhaled corticosteroids for most people with asthma.[17][18]
Some people with more severe asthma may need long-acting muscarinic antagonists (LAMAs), another type of bronchodilator that helps keep airways open. Tiotropium is an example of this type of medicine. LAMAs can be added to the combination of inhaled corticosteroid and LABA as a “triple therapy” for people whose asthma remains difficult to control.[15][17]
A Modern Approach: Single Maintenance and Reliever Therapy
In recent years, asthma treatment has evolved to include an approach called single maintenance and reliever therapy, or SMART. With this strategy, a person uses the same inhaler both as their daily controller medicine and as their quick-relief medicine when symptoms occur. SMART uses a combination inhaler containing both an inhaled corticosteroid and formoterol, a fast-acting LABA. This approach has several advantages: it is simpler because there is only one inhaler to remember, it ensures that people get anti-inflammatory medicine whenever they need relief, and research shows it reduces the risk of severe asthma attacks. Many guidelines now recommend SMART as a preferred option for adults and adolescents with moderate to severe asthma.[15][16]
Managing Side Effects and Treatment Duration
Like all medicines, asthma treatments can cause side effects, although most people tolerate them well when used as prescribed. Inhaled corticosteroids can sometimes cause minor problems like throat irritation or a fungal infection in the mouth called thrush. Rinsing the mouth with water after using the inhaler helps prevent these issues. When used at the doses typically prescribed for asthma, inhaled corticosteroids carry minimal risk of the serious side effects associated with corticosteroid pills taken for long periods. Quick-relief inhalers may cause temporary shakiness or a rapid heartbeat, but these effects are usually mild and brief.[17][18]
For people with persistent asthma who need controller medicines, treatment is typically long-term and ongoing. Asthma is a chronic condition, meaning it does not go away, though it may improve or worsen over time. Stopping controller medicines when symptoms improve often leads to a return of inflammation and symptoms. Doctors regularly review treatment at check-up appointments—at least once a year—and may adjust medicines up or down depending on how well the asthma is controlled.[7][12]
Innovative Therapies Being Tested in Clinical Trials
While standard treatments work well for most people with asthma, some individuals continue to struggle with frequent symptoms and severe attacks despite taking multiple medications correctly. For these people, researchers are studying newer, more targeted therapies. Many of these experimental treatments are biologic medicines—drugs made from living cells that target specific parts of the immune system involved in causing asthma.[11]
Biologic Therapies for Severe Asthma
Biologic medicines represent a major advance in treating severe asthma that does not respond well to standard inhalers. These drugs are given as injections, typically every few weeks, either under the skin or through an intravenous line. They work by blocking specific molecules in the body that drive the inflammation in asthma. Different biologics target different parts of the immune response, so doctors choose which one might help based on the characteristics of a patient’s asthma.[11][14]
One of the first biologics approved for asthma is omalizumab. This medicine is used for people whose asthma is triggered by allergies. Omalizumab blocks a substance called immunoglobulin E (IgE), which plays a key role in allergic reactions. By preventing IgE from causing inflammation, omalizumab helps reduce asthma symptoms and the need for oral corticosteroids. Clinical trials have shown that it can decrease the frequency of severe asthma attacks and improve quality of life for people with allergic asthma who remain symptomatic despite other treatments.[11]
Another group of biologics targets a type of white blood cell called an eosinophil, which contributes to airway inflammation in many people with severe asthma. When blood tests show high levels of eosinophils, doctors may consider biologic medicines that work by blocking chemicals called interleukins that help eosinophils survive and multiply. Several biologics in this category have been developed and tested in clinical trials. They block different interleukins—some target interleukin-5, while others target interleukin-4 and interleukin-13—but they all aim to reduce eosinophilic inflammation in the airways. Studies have found that these medicines can significantly reduce severe asthma attacks and allow some people to reduce or stop taking oral corticosteroids, which have more serious side effects when taken long-term.[15][11]
Understanding Clinical Trial Phases
When researchers develop a new asthma treatment, it must go through several stages of testing in clinical trials before it can be approved for general use. Phase I trials are small studies that test a new drug in a small number of people, usually healthy volunteers, to see if it is safe and to learn what dose to use. Phase II trials involve more people who actually have the disease and focus on whether the drug works as intended and what side effects it might cause. Phase III trials are large studies that compare the new treatment with current standard treatments or placebo to confirm effectiveness, monitor side effects, and gather information that will allow the drug to be used safely if approved. After a drug is approved, researchers may continue to study it in Phase IV trials to learn more about long-term effects and optimal use in real-world settings.[15]
Allergy Immunotherapy as an Add-On Treatment
For people whose asthma is triggered by allergies to things like pollen, dust mites, or animal dander, a treatment called immunotherapy may help reduce symptoms. This approach involves giving gradually increasing doses of the allergen to help the immune system become less sensitive to it over time. Subcutaneous immunotherapy, or allergy shots, has been used for many years. The person receives regular injections of allergen extract over several years. Studies have shown that allergy shots can reduce asthma symptoms and the need for medication in people aged five and older with mild to moderate allergic asthma. Another form called sublingual immunotherapy, where allergen tablets or drops are placed under the tongue, is available for some allergies, but research has not shown clear benefits for asthma, so it is not generally recommended for asthma treatment.[15][10]
Access to Clinical Trials
Clinical trials for asthma treatments are conducted around the world, including in the United States, Europe, and many other regions. People interested in participating in a trial should discuss the option with their doctor, who can help determine if any trials might be appropriate. Clinical trials have specific eligibility criteria—for example, they may only accept people with certain types or severity of asthma, particular age groups, or those who have tried specific medications. Participants in trials are closely monitored and often receive care from specialists, but there are also potential risks, as the treatments being studied are still experimental.[12]
Most common treatment methods
- Inhaled Quick-Relief Medicines
- Short-acting beta2-agonists like albuterol (salbutamol) that rapidly open airways during symptoms or attacks
- Used as needed when breathing becomes difficult, with effects lasting a few hours
- Should be carried at all times for emergency use
- Inhaled Controller Medicines
- Inhaled corticosteroids (fluticasone, budesonide, beclomethasone) taken daily to reduce airway inflammation
- Long-acting beta2-agonists (formoterol, salmeterol) combined with inhaled corticosteroids for prolonged airway opening
- Single maintenance and reliever therapy (SMART) using one combination inhaler for both daily control and symptom relief
- Additional Controller Options
- Leukotriene modifiers like montelukast taken as daily pills to block inflammatory chemicals
- Long-acting muscarinic antagonists such as tiotropium added as triple therapy for difficult-to-control asthma
- Biologic Medicines for Severe Asthma
- Omalizumab for people with allergic asthma, given as injections to block IgE
- Interleukin-5 antagonists to reduce eosinophilic inflammation in severe cases
- Interleukin-4/13 antagonists as another option for eosinophilic asthma
- Immunotherapy
- Subcutaneous allergy shots for people with mild to moderate allergic asthma
- Gradual allergen exposure over years to reduce immune system sensitivity





