@ERSpublications Bronchial thermoplasty can be effective in patients who often have features of more severe asthma than in AIR2 http://ow.ly/Qv5730cTIuBCite this article as: Thomson NC, Chanez P. How effective is bronchial thermoplasty for severe asthma in clinical practice? Eur Respir J 2017; 50: 1701140 [https://doi.org/10.1183/13993003.01140-2017.Bronchial thermoplasty is an intervention developed for the treatment of asthma through the delivery of radio frequency energy to the airways [1,2]. Evidence for the efficacy and safety of bronchial thermoplasty in severe asthma is based on the results of three randomised controlled trials [3][4][5]. Two trials compared bronchial thermoplasty with usual care, the Asthma Intervention Research (AIR) trial [3] and the Research in Severe Asthma (RISA) trial [4], whereas the third trial (AIR2) compared bronchial thermoplasty with a sham procedure [5]. The AIR2 trial reported improved asthma quality of life questionnaire (AQLQ) scores, reduced severe exacerbations and decreased emergency department visits in the post-bronchial thermoplasty treatment period [5]. Bronchial thermoplasty was associated with a short-term increase in asthma-related symptoms and hospital admissions for asthma during the treatment phase [3][4][5]. Follow-up observational studies to date support the long-term safety of the procedure, based on unchanged rates of respiratory adverse events, lung function, serial computed tomography scans and rates of hospital admissions or emergency department visits in years 2-5 following the AIR [6], RISA [7] and AIR2 trials [8]. A Cochrane systematic review of the trials concluded that there was a modest clinical benefit in asthma quality of life and a reduction in exacerbation rates 12 months after bronchial thermoplasty [9]. In 2010, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) gave premarket approval for the Alair bronchial thermoplasty system (Boston Scientific, Marlborough, MA, USA) as a treatment for severe persistent asthma in patients 18 years and older whose asthma is not well controlled with inhaled corticosteroids and a long-acting β-agonist [10]. Bronchial thermoplasty is also approved for the treatment of asthma in the European Union and in many countries worldwide.