What have we learnt about asthma control from trials of budesonide/formoterol as maintenance and reliever?
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TL;DR: The data confirm that patients with asthma treated with budesonide/formoterol MART achieved the same or better asthma symptom control compared with ICS/LABA plus SABA regimens at similar or higher ICS doses, with consistently lower rates of exacerbations and considerably lower annual requirement for oral corticosteroids.
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Abstract: Despite improvements in medications, devices and understanding of the disease, about half of all asthma patients worldwide remain inadequately controlled, suggesting the need for a new approach to asthma management. Poor adherence to prescribed maintenance therapy and over-reliance on SABA reliever medication is a common cause of inadequate control. This article reviews published data from 6- to 12-month, double-blind, RCT and open-label real-world studies involving budesonide/formoterol maintenance and reliever therapy (MART) and relevant comparator approaches to asthma management, and considers how these compare in achieving the treatment goals described in guidelines. The data confirm that patients with asthma treated with budesonide/formoterol MART achieved the same or better asthma symptom control compared with ICS/LABA plus SABA regimens at similar or higher ICS doses, with consistently lower rates of exacerbations and considerably lower annual requirement for oral corticosteroids. These findings have been confirmed across a range of severities of persistent asthma. With the MART approach, maintenance dosing ensures coverage for day-to-day control, and the use of a reliever with anti-inflammatory properties (budesonide/formoterol) provides extra doses of ICS as soon as symptoms prompt the use of reliever, resulting in a 40-50% reduction of exacerbations compared with an ICS-based treatment approach plus as-needed SABA as reliever. As-needed, budesonide/formoterol has also recently been shown to be more effective as a reliever in mild asthma than SABA alone, reducing exacerbations by up to 64% in the SYGMA studies.
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Citations
Key recommendations for primary care from the 2022 Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) update
Mark L Levy,Leonard B. Bacharier,Eric D. Bateman,Louis-Philippe Boulet,Christopher E. Brightling,Roland Buhl,Guy Brusselle,Alvaro A. Cruz,Jeffrey M. Drazen,Liesbeth Duijts,Louise Fleming,Hiromasa Inoue,Fanny W.S. Ko,Jerry A. Krishnan,Kevin Mortimer,Paulo Márcio Pitrez,Aziz Sheikh,Arzu Yorgancioglu,Helen K. Reddel +18 more
TL;DR: The Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) was established in 1993 by the World Health Organization and the US National Heart Lung and Blood Institute to improve asthma awareness, prevention and management worldwide as mentioned in this paper .
Severe Adult Asthmas: Integrating Clinical Features, Biology, and Therapeutics to Improve Outcomes
TL;DR: Integration of molecular signals, biomarkers, and clinical responses to targeted therapies has enabled identification of critical molecular pathways and, in certain phenotypes, advanced them to near-endotype status.
108
Albuterol–Budesonide Fixed-Dose Combination Rescue Inhaler for Asthma
02 Jun 2022
TL;DR: The use of a fixed-dose combination of albuterol and budesonide as rescue medication might reduce the risk of severe asthma exacerbation in patients with uncontrolled moderate-to-severe asthma who were receiving inhaled glucocorticoid-containing maintenance therapies as discussed by the authors .
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Albuterol-Budesonide Fixed-Dose Combination Rescue Inhaler for Asthma.
Alberto Papi,Bradley E. Chipps,Richard Beasley,Reynold A. Panettieri,Elliot Israel,Mark Cooper,L. Dunsire,Allison Jeynes-Ellis,Eva Johnsson,Robert Rees,Christy Cappelletti,Frank C. Albers +11 more
TL;DR: The risk of severe asthma exacerbation was significantly lower with as-needed use of a fixed-dose combination of 180 μg of albuterol and 160 μg of budesonide than with as the needed use of al buterol alone among patients with uncontrolled moderate-to-severe asthma who were receiving a wide range of inhaled glucocorticoid-containing maintenance therapies.
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The reality of managing asthma in sub-Saharan Africa – Priorities and strategies for improving care
Kevin Mortimer,Refiloe Masekela,Obianuju B. Ozoh,Eric D. Bateman,Rebecca Nantanda,Arzu Yorgancioglu,Jeremiah Chakaya,Helen K. Reddel +7 more
TL;DR: This review considers the reality faced by clinicians managing asthma in the primary and secondary care in sub-Saharan Africa and suggests how to go about making diagnosis and treatment decisions in a range of resource-constrained scenarios.
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