Literature DB >> 22856629

Urinary fluticasone propionate-17beta-carboxylic acid to assess asthma therapy adherence.

John B Hagan1, Brian C Netzel, Marc R Matthews, Nichole L Korpi-Steiner, Ravinder J Singh.   

Abstract

Although the National Asthma Education and Prevention Program Expert Panel Report 3 recommends referral to specialists to address adherence, guidelines do not provide a tool to determine nonadherence. This study was designed to prospectively evaluate the characteristics of urinary analysis of fluticasone propionate-17beta-carboxylic acid (FP17betaCA) as a test to verify if a specific patient has not taken fluticasone propionate (FP) within 16-24 hours. Urine of asthmatic subjects was prospectively analyzed 16-24 hours after witnessed administration of orally inhaled FP using liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) analysis; limit of quantitation was 10.3 pg/mL. Results were compared with those from asthmatic subjects not receiving inhaled FP. Thirty asthmatic subjects receiving inhaled FP (2 oral inhalations of FP at 110 micrograms each or 1 oral inhalation twice daily of fluticasone and salmeterol in fixed combination at 250/50 micrograms for 1 week) were compared with 30 asthmatic subjects not receiving FP. FP17betaCA was detected in the urine of 30 of 30 asthmatic subjects receiving FP (median, interquartile range [IQR; 413.5, 212.8-1230.0] range 12.4-3290.0 pg/mL [corrected for urine creatinine: median, IQR {576.2, 188.1-1306.6} range 6.3-5425.9 ng/g Cr]) and was undetectable in 30 of 30 subjects not receiving inhaled FP. The sensitivity and specificity of LC-MS/MS to detect FP17betaCA in urine were 100% (95% exact binomial confidence interval, 88-100) and 100% (95% exact binomial confidence interval, 88-100), respectively. Analysis of FP17betaCA in urine provides a sensitive method that may be used to verify that a specific patient may not have administered FP within a 16- to 24-hour window before testing.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22856629     DOI: 10.2500/aap.2012.33.3568

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Allergy Asthma Proc        ISSN: 1088-5412            Impact factor:   2.587


  1 in total

Review 1.  Assessment of adherence to corticosteroids in asthma by drug monitoring or fractional exhaled nitric oxide: A literature review.

Authors:  Fahad Alahmadi; Adam Peel; Brian Keevil; Rob Niven; Stephen J Fowler
Journal:  Clin Exp Allergy       Date:  2020-11-27       Impact factor: 5.018

  1 in total

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