| Literature DB >> 27730140 |
Tari Haahtela1, Olof Selroos2, Paul M O'Byrne3.
Abstract
The term "early intervention" with inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) in asthma is used in different ways, thereby causing confusion and misinterpretation of data. We propose that the term should be reserved for start of ICS therapy in patients with a diagnosis of asthma but within a short period of time after the first symptoms, not from the date of diagnosis. Prospective clinical studies suggest a time frame of 2 years for the term "early" from the onset of symptoms to starting anti-inflammatory treatment with ICS. The current literature supports early intervention with ICS for all patients with asthma including patients with mild disease, who often have normal or near-normal lung function. This approach reduces symptoms rapidly and allows patients to achieve early asthma control. Later introduction of ICS therapy may not reduce effectiveness in terms of lung function but delays asthma control and exposes patients to unnecessary morbidity. Results of nationwide intervention programmes support the early use of ICS, as it significantly minimises the disease burden. Acute asthma exacerbations are usually preceded by progressing symptoms and lung function decline over a period of 1-2 weeks. Treatment with an increased dose of ICS together with a rapid- and long-acting inhaled β2-agonist during this phase has reduced the risk of severe exacerbations.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 27730140 PMCID: PMC5005140 DOI: 10.1183/23120541.00022-2015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ERJ Open Res ISSN: 2312-0541
Early Intervention trials of inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) therapy in patients with persistent asthma
| Mild-to-moderate asthma Duration of symptoms <12 months or <12 months + 2 years Mean age 37 years | 74 | Budesonide pMDI +spacer 1200 μg·day−1 | 1 year | Budesonide pMDI+spacer 1200 μg·day−1 with a 2-year delay | Significant improvement in prebronchodilator mPEF, ePEF and FEV1 in both groups but patients treated early achieved better lung function Difference statistically significant between early and delayed therapy (mPEF, p=0.006; ePEF, p=0.004) | Lower airway responsiveness in patients treated without a 2-year delay Difference statistically significant (p=0.027) | |
| Children with duration of asthma 0.5–10 years, mean 3.7 years | 278 | Budesonide pMDI +spacer, n=216 | 2–6 years | No ICS therapy (n=62) | Significant negative correlation between duration of asthma and annual improvement in FEV1 (p=0.01) Best improvement in patients with asthma duration <2 years | Lower cumulative dose of budesonide in patients treated early | |
| Patients with asthma symptoms of various duration (<6 months, 6–12 months, 1–2 years, 2–5 years and >10 years when starting ICS therapy) | 105 | Budesonide varying doses | 2 years | No | Significant negative correlation between duration of asthma symptoms and maximum improvement in prebronchodilator FEV1 (p=0.0012) and mPEF (p=0.0006) Best PEF improvement in patients with asthma symptom duration <6 months, +110 L·min−1, followed by patients with symptom duration of 6–12 months (+71 L·min−1) and 1–2 years (+69 L·min−1) | ||
| Mild-to-moderate asthma Group A: symptoms <12 months Group B: symptoms >24 months Mean age | 81 | Group A: budesonide 100 μg twice daily Group B: budesonide 400 μg twice daily | 12 weeks | Group A: budesonide 100 μg twice daily Group B: budesonide 400 μg twice daily | Group A: no difference between doses in FEV1 and mPEF Group B: higher dose significantly better in improving FEV1 and mPEF | Group A: no difference between doses in asthma symptoms, and use of reliever medication Group B: higher dose significantly better in improving symptoms, and reducing use of reliever medication | |
| Mild-to-moderate asthma Mean age 37–42 years | 462 | Budesonide varying doses (duration of asthma <2 years) | 5 years | Budesonide varying doses (duration of asthma 2.5–18 years) | Difference in change in mPEF and prebronchodilator FEV1 statistically significantly different in favour of early budesonide therapy (p<0.001 for both) | Lower maintenance dose of budesonide (mean 412 μg, delayed therapy 825 μg; p<0.001) Less additional asthma medications Statistically significantly fewer patients used ≤3 doses of rescue medication per day (p<0.001) Significantly fewer acute exacerbations (p<0.001) Statistically significantly better exercise tolerance (p<0.001) | |
| Mild-to-moderate asthma Duration of asthma <12 months Mean age 33–35 years No ICS therapy within 3 months | 68 | Budesonide 400 μg·day−1 | 1 year (6 months follow-up) | Placebo | Difference in change in mPEF statistically significant in favour of budesonide (p=0.011) | Significantly lower airway responsiveness (PD20) in patients treated with budesonide (p=0.0003) | |
| Mild persistent asthma <2 years duration Age 5–66 years No previous regular glucocorticosteroid use | 7241 | Budesonide 400 μg·day−1 (200 μg·day−1 in children <11 years) | 3 years | Placebo | Budesonide improved pre- and postbronchodilator FEV1
| Budesonide significantly reduced the risk of a severe asthma related event (p<0.0001) and was associated with more symptom-free days (p<0.0001) | |
| Newly detected asthma Age 5–10 years No previous regular glucocorticosteroid use | 176 | Budesonide continuous therapy (400 μg twice daily for 1 month, 200 μg twice daily months 2–6, 100 μg twice daily months 7–18); or budesonide as above for months 1–6, thereafter only as needed | 18 months | DSCG 10 mg three times daily | mPEF No differences between the 3 treatment groups at 6 and 18 months FEV1: At 6 months both budesonide groups sign better than DSCG; no difference between groups at 18 months | During the first 6 months, significantly fewer exacerbations in the budesonide groups compared with DSCG; during months 7–18, significantly fewer exacerbations in the continuous budesonide group compared with intermittent budesonide group and DSCG group Median time to first exacerbation: continuous budesonide, 344 days; intermittent budesonide, 268 days; DSCG, 78 days (p<0.001 for both budesonide groups compared with DSCG) Asthma-free days: at 6 months, significant increase (p<0.001) in both budesonide groups compared with DSCG As-needed use of reliever medication: at 6 months, significantly less use in both budesonide groups compared with DSCG (p=0.012) |
DB: double-blind; R; randomised; P: placebo-controlled; pMDI: pressurised metered-dose inhaler; DSCG: disodium cromoglycate; mPEF: morning peak expiratory flow; ePEF: evening peak expiratory flow; FEV1: forced expiratory flow in 1 s; PD20: provocative dose causing a 20% fall in FEV1.