Saturday, December 7, 2024
News

Adjuvant Long-Acting Muscarinic Antagonist Improves Asthma

Versus adjuvant placebo, LAMA or LABA plus inhaled corticosteroids lowers risk of asthma exacerbations

WEDNESDAY, March 21, 2018 (HealthDay News) — For patients with persistent asthma, the use of long-acting muscarinic antagonists (LAMAs) versus placebo as an adjunct to inhaled corticosteroids, and combined use of inhaled corticosteroids and long-acting β-agonists (LABAs), termed single maintenance and reliever therapy (SMART), are associated with a reduced risk of exacerbations, according to two reviews published online March 19 in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Diana M. Sobieraj, Pharm.D., from the University of Connecticut School of Pharmacy in Storrs, and colleagues reviewed the effects associated with LAMA versus placebo versus another controller as an adjunct to inhaled corticosteroids in patients with uncontrolled persistent asthma. Data were included from 15 randomized clinical trials with 7,122 patients. The researchers found that the risk of exacerbations requiring systemic corticosteroids was significantly reduced by adding LAMA versus placebo to inhaled corticosteroids (risk ratio, 0.67); there was no significant improvement in the exacerbation risk for adding LAMA versus LABA.

In a second study, Sobieraj and colleagues conducted a review of the effects of SMART in patients with persistent asthma. Data were reviewed from 16 randomized clinical trials with 22,748 patients. The researchers found that SMART correlated with a reduced risk of asthma exacerbations compared with the same or a higher dose of inhaled corticosteroids and LABA as the controller therapy (relative risks, 0.68 and 0.77, respectively).

“The use of single maintenance and reliever therapy compared with inhaled corticosteroids as the controller therapy (with or without a long-acting β-agonist) and short-acting β-agonists as the relief therapy was associated with a lower risk of asthma exacerbations,” Sobieraj and colleagues write in the second study.

Abstract/Full Text 1

Abstract/Full Text 2

Copyright © 2018 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

HealthDay.com
the authorHealthDay.com