| Literature DB >> 26557255 |
Abstract
Bronchodilators are mainstay for the symptomatic treatment of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and the introduction of long-acting bronchodilators has led to an improvement in the maintenance treatment of this disease. Various clinical trials have evaluated the effects of fixed dose long-acting β2-agonists (LABA)/long-acting anti-muscarinics (LAMA) combinations and documented greater improvements in spirometry but such improvements do not always translate to greater improvements in symptom scores or reduction in the rates of exacerbation compared with a single component drug. An analysis of whether this significantly greater change in spirometry with combination therapy is additive or synergistic was undertaken and is the subject of this review. Bronchodilators are not disease modifiers and whilst glucocorticosteroids have been shown to reduce rates of exacerbation in moderate to severe COPD, the increase risk of pneumonia and bone fractures is a motivation enough to warrant developing novel anti-inflammatory and disease-modifying drugs and with the expectation of positive outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: LABA; LAMA; dose equivalence; glucocorticosteroid; p38 MAPK; phosphodiesterase; synergy
Year: 2015 PMID: 26557255 PMCID: PMC4629759 DOI: 10.3402/ecrj.v2.26634
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Clin Respir J ISSN: 2001-8525
Some examples of the use of a mathematical approach to investigate additivity or synergy for drug combinations in man
| Drug combination | Interaction/outcome measure | Method | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Remifentanil and sevofluorane | Evidence for synergism/sedation | Analysis of response surface/isobolographic |
( |
| Tramadol and acetaminophen | Evidence of synergism/analgesia | Isobolographic |
( |
| Tramadol and mefamizol | Evidence for synergism for some dose combinations/analgesia | Isobolographic |
( |
| Clonidine and fentanyl | Evidence for additivity/post-surgical pain | Isobolographic |
( |
| Neostigmine and clonidine | Evidence for additivity/analgesia | Isobolographic |
( |
Fig. 1Dose–response relationships for a LABA and a LAMA alone and in a fixed dose combination LABA/LAMA in patients with moderate to severe COPD. (a) Shows a linear regression for the dose–response relationship for umeclidinium bromide (UMEC: open circles) and vilanterol (VI: closed circles) (b) glycopyrronium bromide (GLY: open circles) and indacaterol (IND: closed circles). The theoretical additive response (open squares) and the observed response (circles; blue) for fixed dose combinations of these bronchodilators are superimposed. The combination effect was shown to be synergistic (see Table 2).
Summary of potency estimates, interaction index (alpha) and difference in effector response to assess synergy between different combinations of LABA/LAMA in moderate to severe COPD
| Parameter estimates of potency
(ED50: µg) | Interaction index
(alpha) | Delta response
(observed-additive, mL) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Umeclidinium | 250 (31–2012) | ||
| Vilanterol | 55 (9–326) | ||
| Combination (UMEC/VI) | 38 (10–154) | ||
| 125/25 µg (150) | 0.024 (0.015) | 76 (12) | |
| 62.5/25 µg (87.5) | 0.13 (0.15) | 51 (24) | |
| Additive | 161 (128–203) | ||
| Glycopyrronium | 152 (90–258) | ||
| Indacaterol | 320 (104–986) | ||
| Combination (GLY/IND) | 8.5 | ||
| 50/110 µg (160) | 0.074 | 70.2 | |
| 50/300 µg (350) | 0.051 | 70.6 | |
| Additive | 351 (288–428) |
Values in parentheses (first column) indicate total dose (µg) for each dose combination.
Values expressed as mean and 95% CI
values expressed as mean (SD).
There was evidence of synergy for umeclidinium bromide (UMEC) and vilanterol (VI) dose combinations as implied by the five-fold difference in bronchoprotector potency (combination vs. additive) and interaction index<1 (values compared with the theoretical additive response i.e. population mean=1)
P=1.06E-06
P=0.009716 (unadjusted).
Number of studies (n=3 for 87.5 µg combined dose; n=4 for 150 µg combined dose). There was a significant difference in observed–expected trough FEV1 measurement for the high (*P=0.0011) but not low dose combination (P=0.0675).
Data for glycopyrronium bromide (GLY) and indacaterol (IND) also suggest synergy, based on a comparison of potency, combination index and delta response, but too few studies to undertake statistical analysis (n=2 for 160 µg combined dose; n=1 for 350 µg combined dose).
Fig. 2A re-analysis of the data presented by McNamara et al. (55) using a mathematical approach to evaluate synergism of the bronchoprotective effect of a MABA in anaesthetized guinea pigs. Linear regression was used to fit the cumulative dose–response curve for MABA in animals in which airway obstruction was induced by histamine to detect the β2-agonist (BA) component of the MABA (closed circles); or MABA in animals treated with propranolol and airway obstruction induced by acetylcholine to detect the muscarinic antagonist (MA) component of the MABA (open circles) and response to MABA (blue circles) in animals in whom airway obstruction was induced by acetylcholine. The theoretical additive line (broken lines) for each dose of MABA was calculated assuming the proportion of each component was 1:1. The observed response obtained for the MABA is shown in blue.
Summary of potency estimates, interaction index (alpha) and difference in effector response to assess synergy for different doses of THRX-200495 against spasmogen-induced bronchoconstriction in guinea pigs
| Parameter estimates of potency (ED50: µg/mL) | Parameter estimates of potency (ED50: µg/mL) ( | Interaction index (alpha) | Delta response (observed–additive, % inhibition) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| β-Agonist | 12.7 (4–38) | 11.2 | ||
| Muscarinic antagonist | 18.7 (3–102) | 11.4 | ||
| MABA | 2 (0.008–419) | 3.5 | ||
| 1.5/1.5 (3) | 0.30 | 25 | ||
| 5/5 (10) | 0.16 | 37 | ||
| 15/15 (30) | 0.27 | 27 | ||
| 50/50 (100) | 1.189 | 0 | ||
| Additive | 4.7 (4.6–4.9) | ND |
Values in parentheses (first column) indicate total dose (µg/mL) for each dose combination.
Parameter estimates of potency for bronchoprotection 1.5 h following drug exposure and expressed as mean and 95% CI.
Values expressed as mean.
Bronchoconstriction was induced by histamine to measure β2-agonist effect of THRX-200495 (‘β-agonist’) or to acetylcholine in the presence of propranolol to measure the muscarinic antagonist effect of THRX-200495 (55). MABA refers to the effect of THRX-200495 alone. Inhibition of airway obstruction was measured 1.5 h following aerosol exposure to the bronchodilators.
Calculation of interaction index (alpha) and delta difference between observed and additive response both based on the method of dose equivalence (see Box 1). Values expressed as mean. No statistical analysis was possible but the analysis suggests evidence for synergy at low to moderate doses of MABA compared with the additive response. There was a small increase in bronchoprotection potency (approximately two fold) when MABA is compared with the additive potency value, alpha<1 for low and medium doses of MABA and the difference in bronchoprotection between observed and additive response was approximately 30%. ND: not determined.
a,cAnalysis based on the assumption that the dose of MABA can be considered as a combination of muscarinic antagonist and β2-agonist in a ratio of 1:1.