From the Journals

Adjunct treatments assist with persistent asthma

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New asthma guidelines needed

Asthma remains a major public health problem in the United States, but 11 years have passed since the last update to treatment guidelines, and an update to the current guidelines for asthma treatment is needed, wrote Jerry A. Krishnan, MD, and David H. Au, MD, in an accompanying editorial (JAMA. 2018;319[14]:1441-3). “It is time to connect the efforts of the FDA, the evidence presented by Sobieraj et al., and the support from the National Education and Prevention Program to update the 2007 [Expert Panel Report 3] guidelines on asthma.”

Both reviews showed effectiveness for the treatments being assessed, compared with placebo, but each had limitations, the editorialists noted.

The study findings in the report on the efficacy of inhaled long-acting muscarinic antagonists (LAMAs) in adolescents and adults with uncontrolled asthma were limited by several factors including a focus primarily on tiotropium, absence of data on potential harms and relative costs of treatment, and a lack of data on children younger than 12 years, they noted. The findings in the analysis of the strategy known as Single Maintenance and Reliever Therapy (SMART) containing formoterol, a long-acting beta2-agonist, were similarly limited by a lack of assessment of potential harm and a data on children within the same age group, they said.

However, the effectiveness of the treatments seen in both reviews suggest that the forthcoming revision of the Expert Panel Report 3 guidelines on asthma from the National Asthma Education and Prevention Program should include the option for inhaled tiotropium, a LAMA, and for the formoterol-based SMART protocol, the editorialists wrote.

“For patients and clinicians, the results from these meta-analyses suggest that dual therapy with scheduled doses of inhaled corticosteroids and LABA or inhaled corticosteroids and LAMA should help reduce the risk of future asthma exacerbations in patients with inadequate asthma control while using inhaled corticosteroids alone,” they said. The new guidelines should include evidence for the SMART therapy as well, but “studies assessing the efficacy of SMART using combination formoterol and budesonide via a metered-dose inhaler are needed,” they concluded.

Dr. Krishnan is affiliated with the division of pulmonary, critical care, sleep, and allergy at the University of Illinois, Chicago, and disclosed having received compensation from Sanofi for participation on an independent data-monitoring committee. Dr. Au is affiliated with the division of pulmonary, critical care, and sleep medicine at the University of Washington, Seattle, and disclosed having received compensation from Novartis for participation on a data-monitoring committee and for serving as a consultant to Gilead Sciences.


 

FROM JAMA

Asthma patients who struggle with poor control despite using inhaled corticosteroids can benefit from additional treatment with long-acting muscarinic antagonists (LAMAs) or single maintenance and reliever therapy, suggest data from a pair of systematic reviews and meta-analyses.

Asthma control remains a problem for many patients despite the daily use of inhaled corticosteroids. The current preferred adjunct therapy for patients aged 12 years and older is long-acting beta-agonists (LABAs), wrote Diana M. Sobieraj, PharmD, of the University of Connecticut School of Pharmacy, Storrs, and her colleagues in a study published in JAMA. The researchers examined the efficacy of other adjunct therapies and therapeutic regimes, including the use of a LAMA, in two studies of patients with persistent asthma.

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In one of their analyses, the researchers evaluated LAMAs as an add-on therapy for patients with poorly controlled asthma. They reviewed data from 15 randomized clinical trials including 7,122 patients aged 12 years and older.

Overall, patients who took a LAMA had a lower risk of asthma exacerbation requiring systemic corticosteroids and improved spirometry measures than did the patients who took a placebo or used another controller as an adjunct therapy.

In trials that compared LAMAs with placebo as an add-on to inhaled corticosteroids, LAMA patients experienced a significantly reduced risk of exacerbation requiring systemic corticosteroids (–1.8) and a significantly reduced risk of asthma worsening (–4.8). Another benefit seen in the patients who used a LAMA rather than those who used a placebo was improved spirometry measures, but the differences between these two patient groups’ numbers did not reach statistical significance.

The analysis also included studies that compared “triple therapy” – defined as use of a LAMA as add-on therapy to inhaled corticosteroids and LABAs – to LABA plus use of inhaled corticosteroids.

Triple therapy was significantly associated with a lower risk of asthma worsening, compared with inhaled corticosteroids and LABAs, but not with a reduced risk of exacerbation. In addition, no significant differences appeared in Asthma Control Questionnaire-7 scores or overall Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire scores between the two patient groups.

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