| Literature DB >> 25089228 |
Daan A De Coster1, Melvyn Jones1.
Abstract
This literature review updates the reader on the new studies regarding steroid therapy over the last year in stable COPD and in exacerbations. In stable COPD, we critique the 2011 update and 2013 revision of the GOLD guidelines, discuss why combining inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) with long-acting beta-agonists (LABA) (ICS/LABA) is preferable over LABA alone and review the literature for intraclass differences, finding that the evidence does not clearly support superiority of any particular ICS/LABA. We also address other comparisons against ICS/LABA, including triple therapy. We briefly review which type of inhaler should be chosen. For exacerbations, we report the REDUCE trial findings favouring a 5-day course of systemic steroids, and other trials addressing which steroid and route to use, including in an intensive care setting. Lastly, the future lies in new anti-inflammatories and re-phenotyping the heterogeneous amalgamation of COPD. A Spanish guideline recommends distinguishing steroid-responsive eosinophilic exacerbators from other phenotypes.Entities:
Keywords: Beclometasone; Budesonide; COPD; Ciclesonide; Corticosteroids; DPI; Drug therapy; Exacerbation; Fluticasone; Formoterol; Glycopyrronium; Heterogeneity; Inhaler; MDI; Mometasone; Phenotype; Salmeterol; Tiotropium; Vilanterol; Withdrawal
Year: 2014 PMID: 25089228 PMCID: PMC4113685 DOI: 10.1007/s13665-014-0084-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Respir Care Rep ISSN: 2161-332X
Revised GOLD 2013 management of stable COPD. Differences with 2011 update in bold
| GOLD group | First choice | Alternative choice (in random order) |
|---|---|---|
| A (low risk, less symptoms) | SABA or SAMA | LABA or LAMA or SABA + SAMA |
| B (low risk, more symptoms) | LABA or LAMA | LABA + LAMA |
| C (high risk, less symptoms) | ICS/LABA or LAMA | LABA + LAMA |
| D (high risk, more symptoms) | ICS with (LABA | ICS/LABA + LAMA or ICS/LABA + PDE-4I or LABA + LAMA or LAMA + PDE-4I |
SABA, short-acting beta-2 agonist (e.g. salbutamol, terbutaline). LABA, long-acting beta-2 agonists (formoterol, salmeterol; extra-long: indacaterol, vilanterol). SAMA, short-acting anticholinergic (ipratropium, glycopyrronium, aclidium). LAMA, long-acting anticholinergic (tiotropium, umeclidinium). ICS, inhaled corticosteroid (e.g. budesonide, fluticasone, beclometasone, mometasone). PDE-4I, phosphodiesterase-4 inhibitor (e.g. roflumilast)
Advantages and disadvantages of MDIs and DPIs
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| Good hand-breath coordination required (except for breath-actuated Autohaler) [ | No need for coordination of inhalation and actuation [ |
| Addition of spacer does not completely fix this | Does not require a spacer [ |
| May be unsuitable for elderly, confused, or patients with hand rheumatologic conditions | Easier to use than MDI [ |
| Suitable for tracheostomy, intubation [ | Breath-actuation difficult in patients with low inspiratory effort (hyperinflation, muscular weakness) [ |
| Concerns about HFA-propellant environmental friendliness [ | Lactose carrier: contra-indicated in lactose allergy [ |
| Drugs may settle (shake before use) [ |