| Literature DB >> 22958412 |
Alessandra Scaparrotta1, Sabrina Di Pillo, Marina Attanasi, Daniele Rapino, Anna Cingolani, Nicola Pietro Consilvio, Marcello Verini, Francesco Chiarelli.
Abstract
International guidelines recommend the use of inhaled corticosteroids (ICSs) as the preferred therapy, with leukotriene receptor antagonists (LTRAs) as an alternative, for the management of persistent asthma in children. Montelukast (MLK) is the first LTRA approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the use in young asthmatic children.Therefore, we performed an analysis of studies that compared the efficacy of MLK versus ICSs. We considered eligible for the inclusion randomized, controlled trials on pediatric populations with Jadad score > 3, with at least 4 weeks of treatment with MLK compared with ICS.Although it is important to recognize that ICSs use is currently the recommended first-line treatment for asthmatic children, MLK can have consistent benefits in controlling asthmatic symptoms and may be an alternative in children unable to use ICSs or suffering from poor growth. On the contrary, low pulmonary function and/or high allergic inflammatory markers require the corticosteroid use.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22958412 PMCID: PMC3436659 DOI: 10.1186/2049-6958-7-13
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Multidiscip Respir Med ISSN: 1828-695X
Studies that demonstrated similar efficacy of MLK compared to ICS
| 6 months | 124 pts (6–11 years) | MLK = 5 mg /d IBDP = 300 μg /d | Higher satisfaction for MLK vs IBPD with higher compliance. Similar: oral CS use, safety, FEV1 change, asthma-related medical resource utilization, school absenteeism, parental work loss. | |
| 37 weeks | 112 pts (6–14 years) | MLK = 5 mg /d IBDP = 300 μg /d | Similar improvement in multiple parameters of asthma control and in daytime symptom scores. | |
| 8 weeks | 91 pts (12 ± 1.7 years) | TRC = 400 μg /d MLK = 5 mg/d FMT = 24 μg /d | With TRC and MLK: IL-10 level increased, EOS and ECP levels significantly decreased, all clinical parameters improved, with no significant difference in clinical score improvement. | |
| 14 weeks | 63 pts (8–14 years) | MLK = 5 mg /d IBD = 400 μg /d MLK + IBD | MLK improvement: airway obstruction, DSS, β2-a use, nocturnal awakenings, asthma exacerbations, ULKE4 levels. | |
| 6 months | 51 pts (6–18 years) | IBD = 400 μg /d IBD = 800 μg /d MLK = 5 mg/d | ICS (high dose) and MLK significantly decreased total and specific IgE levels. Clinical score/FEV1 significantly improved with medium (p = 0.002) and high dose (p = 0.001) of IBD and MLK (p = 0.002). | |
| 12 months | 994 pts (6–14 years) | MLK = 5 mg/d FP = 100 μg /d | Significantly greater improvement of RFDs with FP vs MLK, but inferior to the limits (−7%) fixed for judging MLK inferior to FP, so MLK was not inferior to FP in % of asthma RFDs because the adjusted difference was −2.8%. | |
| 12 weeks | 62 pts (5–15 years) | IBD = 400 μg/d MLK = 5 mg/d | The median % predicted FEV1 was similar in the two groups (p = 0.44), similar improvement in clinical symptom scores; no significant difference in the need for rescue drugs. | |
| 4 weeks | 87 pts (6–18 years) | MLK = 5–10 mg /d IBD = 200 μg /d MLK + IBD | Lung function improved significantly in all groups, with no significant difference in improvement. | |
| 3 months | 63 pts (2–6 years) | MLK = 4 mg/day FP = 200 μg/d Placebo | FP had beneficial effect on symptoms (vs placebo, p = 0.021), MLK on EOS vs placebo (p = 0.045). No differences between FP and MLK in lung function parameters, except for FOT. |
β2-a, β2 agonist; DSS, daily symptom scores; ECP, eosinophil cationic protein; EOS, eosinophil blood counts; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 s; FMT, formoterol; FOT, Forced Oscillation Tecnique; FP, fluticasone propionate; IBD, inhaled budesonide; IBDP, inhaled beclomethasone; ICS, inhaled corticosteroids; MLK, montelukast; pts, patients; RFDs, rescue-free days; TRC, triamcinolone ULKE4, urinary leukotriene E4.
Studies that demonstrated inferiority of MLK compared to ICS
| 4 weeks | 256 pts (6–18 years) | MLK = 5–10 mg /d TRC = 400 μg /d | With TRC and MLK, FEV1 and PC20 significantly increased; mean total symptoms score and EOS significantly decreased. TRC had a stronger effect on PC20 than MLK and in reduction in β2-a use, similar improvement in clinical symptoms. | |
| 12 weeks | 342 pts (6–12 years) | MLK = 5 mg/d FP = 100 μg/d | FP (vs MLK) significantly increased % change from baseline FEV1, PEF, % RFDs and reduced night time symptom scores and β2-a use. | |
| 8 weeks | 144 pts (6–17 years) | MLK = 5–10 mg/d FP = 200 μg/d | FEV1 improvement was 6.8% for FP and 1.9% for MLK (mean difference 4,9%, p = <0,001). ICS therapy is better if low pulmonary function and high levels of allergic inflammation markers. | |
| 8 weeks | 144 pts (6–17 years) | MLK = 5–10 mg/d FP = 200 μg/d | Significantly greater improvement in ACDs/week with FP than MLK (p = 0.001). Clinical outcomes, pulmonary responses and inflammatory biomarkers improved significantly more with FP than with MLK. | |
| 48 weeks | 285 pts (6–14 years) | MLK = 5 mg/d FP = 200 μg/d PACT = FP 100 μg + LABA 100 μg/d | Significantly greater improvement with FP vs MLK (p = 0.004). FP group had a longer time to first prednisone burst and to a treatment failure, fewer treatment failure, better FEV1, FEV1/FVC, PEF, PC20, symptoms score and lower eNO level than MLK group. | |
| 48 weeks | 191 pts (6–14 years) | MLK = 5 mg /d FP = 200 μg /d PACT combination = FP 100 μg + LABA 100 μg/d | A history of parental asthma best predicted the expected treatment benefit with FP vs MLK in terms of gain in ACDs and time to first exacerbation; elevated baseline eNO predicted response for FP regarding the gain in ACDs; prior ICS use and low PC20 each predicted the expected treatment benefit with FP over MLK regarding time to first exacerbation. | |
| 52 weeks | 395 pts (2–8 years) | MLK = 4–5 mg /d BD = 0,5 mg /d | Both treatments provided acceptable asthma control; however, peak flow and caregiver and Physician Global Assessments favored IBD. |
ACD, asthma control days; β2-a, β2 agonist; eNO, exhaled nitric oxide; EOS, eosinophil blood counts; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 s; FP, fluticasone propionate; IBD, inhaled budesonide; ICS, inhaled corticosteroids; LABA, long-acting beta-agonist; MLK, montelukast; PEF, peak expiratory flow; pts, patients; RFDs, rescue-free days; TRC, triamcinolone.