| Literature DB >> 28008228 |
Timothy E Albertson1, Samuel W Bullick2, Michael Schivo3, Mark E Sutter4.
Abstract
The use of inhaled corticosteroids (ICSs) plays a key role in the treatment of asthmatic patients, and international guidelines have designated ICSs as an early maintenance therapy in controlling asthma symptoms. When asthmatic patients remain symptomatic on ICSs, one common option is to add a long-acting beta2 agonist (LABA) to the maintenance treatment. Fixed combination inhalers that contain both an ICS and a LABA have been popular for both chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and asthma. Historically, these inhalers have been dosed twice daily. However, currently, there is a once-daily combination therapy with the ICS fluticasone furoate (FF) and the LABA vilanterol trifenatate (VI) with indications for use in both COPD and asthma. This dry powder inhaler (DPI) comes in two doses of FF (100 or 200 μg) both combined with VI (25 μg). This article reviews the clinical trial data for FF, VI and FF/VI combination inhalers and documents the efficacy and safety of once-daily inhaled maintenance therapy by DPI in asthmatic patients.Entities:
Keywords: asthma; combined inhaler; dry powder inhaler; fluticasone furoate/vilanterol trifenatate; inhaled corticosteroid; long-acting beta2 agonist; persistent asthma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28008228 PMCID: PMC5167476 DOI: 10.2147/DDDT.S113573
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Des Devel Ther ISSN: 1177-8881 Impact factor: 4.162
The 2016 stepwise approach to asthma treatment1
| Asthma step | As-needed SABA | Low-dose ICS preferred controller | Medium/high-dose ICS/LABA | LTRA or Theo | Tiotropium | Alternative |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Step 1 | + | + | ||||
| Step 2 | + | + | + | |||
| Step 3 | + | + | + | + | + | |
| Step 4 | + | + | + | + | + | |
| Step 5 | + | + | + | + | + |
Notes: Adapted from GINA 2016.1
May also include a single low-dose ICS/formoterol as a reliever medication for patients prescribed low-dose BUD/F for maintenance or low-dose BEC/F for those patients using BEC/F for maintenance.
Preferred step 3 maintenance for children aged 6–11 years is medium-dose ICS; adolescent/adults, low-dose ICS/LABA option.
Medium/high-dose ICS, low-dose ICS + LTRA, low-dose ICS + Theo are alternate options.
Tiotropium (LAMA) by spring-driven mist (not indicated in children aged <12 years).
Tiotropium (LAMA) by spring-driven mist, high-dose ICS and LTRA or Theo are alternate options.
Refer to asthma specialist for add-on treatment options including tiotropium (LAMA), omalizumab, mepolizumab and/or oral corticosteroids.
Abbreviations: BEC/F, beclomethasone dipropionate/formoterol; BUD/F, budesonide/formoterol; GINA, Global Initiative for Asthma; ICS, inhaled corticosteroids; LABA, long-acting beta2 agonist; LAMA, long-acting muscarinic antagonist; LTRA, leukotriene receptor antagonist; SABA, short-acting beta2 agonist; Theo, theophylline.
Major handheld inhaler therapy in asthma and COPD
| Category | Drug | Dose (μg) | Additional drug | Dose (μg) | Frequency | Type | Examples of brand name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SABA | Albuterol sulfate | 90 | None | N/A | prn, q6h | MDI | Proventil HFA® |
| Albuterol sulfate | 90 | None | N/A | prn, q6h | MDI | Ventolin HFA® | |
| Albuterol sulfate | 90 | None | N/A | prn, q6h | MDI | ProAir HFA® | |
| Albuterol sulfate | 90 | None | N/A | prn, q4–6h | DPI | ProAir RespliClick® | |
| Albuterol sulfate (salbutamol) | 100 and 200 | None | N/A | prn, q6h | DPI | Easyhaler Salbutamol® | |
| Levalbuterol tartrate | 45 | None | N/A | prn, q6h | MDI | Xopenex HFA® | |
| LABA | Formoterol fumarate | 12 | None | N/A | Twice daily | DPI | Foradil® |
| Formoterol fumarate | 12 | None | N/A | Twice daily | DPI | Atimos Modulite® | |
| SAL xinafoate | 50 | None | N/A | Twice daily | DPI | Serevent Diskus® | |
| SAL xinafoate | 25 | None | N/A | Twice daily | MDI | Neovent® | |
| Indacaterol maleate | 75 | None | N/A | Daily | DPI | Arcapta® | |
| Indacaterol maleate | 150 and 300 | None | N/A | Once daily | DPI | Onbrez Breezhaler® | |
| Olodaterol hydrochloride | 2.5 | None | N/A | Daily | SDM | Striverdi Respimat® | |
| SAMA | Ipratropium bromide | 21 | None | N/A | q6h | MDI | Atrovent HFA® |
| LAMA | Tiotropium bromide | 18 | None | N/A | Daily | DPF | Spiriva HandiHaler® |
| Tiotropium bromide | 2.5 | None | N/A | Daily | SDM | Spiriva Respimat® | |
| Tiotropium bromide | 1.25 | None | N/A | Daily | SDM | Spiriva Respimat® | |
| Aclidinium bromide | 400 | None | N/A | Twice daily | DPI | Tudorza Pressair® | |
| UMEC bromide | 62.5 | None | N/A | Daily | DPI | Incruse Ellipta® | |
| Glycopyrrolate bromide | 50 | None | N/A | Daily | DPI | Seebri Breezhaler® | |
| Combination of SABA + SAMA | Albuterol sulfate | 100 | Ipratropium bromide | 30 | q6h | SDM | Combivent Respimat® |
| Combination of LAMA + LABA | Tiotropium bromide | 2.5 | Olodaterol | 2.5 | Daily | SDM | Stiolto Respimat® |
| Aclidinium bromide | 400 | Formoterol | 12 | Twice daily | DPI | Duaklir Genuair® | |
| UMEC bromide | 62.5 | VI | 25 | Daily | DPI | Anora Ellipta® | |
| Glycopyrrolate bromide | 15.6 | Indacaterol | 27.5 | Twice daily | DPI | Ultibro Neohaler® | |
| Glycopyrrolate bromide | 50 | Indacaterol | 110 | Daily | DPI | Ultibro Breezhaler® | |
| Glycopyrrolate bromide | 9 | Formoterol | 4.8 | Twice daily | MDI | Bevespi Aerosphere® | |
| ICS | Beclomethasone dipropionate | 40 and 80 | None | N/A | Twice daily | MDI | QVAR HFA® |
| Budesonide | 90 and 180 | None | N/A | Twice daily | DPI | Pulmicort Flexhaler® | |
| Ciclesonide | 80 and 160 | None | N/A | Twice daily | MDI | Alvesco HFA® | |
| FP | 50, 100 and 250 | None | N/A | Twice daily | DPI | Flovent Diskus® | |
| FP | 44, 110 and 220 | None | N/A | Twice daily | MDI | Flovent HFA® | |
| FF | 100 and 200 | None | N/A | Daily | DPI | Arnuity Ellipta® | |
| Mometasone furoate | 110 and 220 | None | N/A | Daily and twice daily | DPI | Asmanex Twisthaler® | |
| Combination of ICS + LABA | Budesonide | 80 and 160 | Formoterol fumarate | 4.5 | Twice daily | MDI | Symbicort® |
| Budesonide | 160 and 320 | Formoterol fumarate | 4.5/9 | Twice daily | DPI | DuoResp SpiroMax® | |
| FP | 100, 250 and 500 | SAL xinafoate | 50 | Twice daily | DPI | Advair Diskus® | |
| FP | 45, 115 and 500 | SAL xinafoate | 21 | Twice daily | MDI | Advair HFA® | |
| FF | 100 and 200 | VI | 25 | Daily | DPI | Breo Ellipta® | |
| Mometasone furoate | 100 and 200 | Formoterol fumarate | 5 | Twice daily | MDI | Dulera® |
Notes:
Approved in the UK and Europe for COPD and asthmatic patients.
No longer manufactured and sold in the USA but still FDA approved, still available in the UK/Europe.
Approved in the UK, Europe and Canada for COPD, not routinely used in asthmatic patients.
Approved by the FDA only for COPD, not routinely used in asthmatic patients.
Used in acute exacerbations of asthma. q6h, every 6 hours; prn, as needed.
Abbreviations: COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; DPI, dry powder inhaler; FDA, US Food and Drug Administration; FF, fluticasone furoate; FP, fluticasone propionate; ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; LABA, long-acting beta2 agonist; LAMA, long-acting muscarinic antagonist; MDI, metered dose inhaler; N/A, not applicable; SABA, short-acting beta2 agonist; SAL, salmeterol; SAMA, short-acting muscarinic antagonist; SDM, spring-driven mist; UMEC, umeclidinium; VI, vilanterol trifenatate.
Major clinical trials with FF in asthma
| Study | Trial number | N | Drugs (μg) | Design | Results (doses in μg) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT00603382 | 598 | FF (25, 50, 100 or 200) qpm or FP (100) bid or P | ≥12-year-old asthmatics; MC, R, DB, DD, PC, PG, ×8 weeks | A dose–response effect on FEV1 was seen ( | |
| NCT01431950 | 238 | FF (100 or 200) daily | ≥12-year-old asthmatics uncontrolled on mid–high-dose ICS; MC, R, DB, PG, ×24 weeks | Least-squares mean trough FEV1 was improved from baseline for both doses of FF. No significant difference between FF (100) and FF (200). Similar rates of AEs. No clinically relevant effects on 24-hour urinary cortisol excretion at week 24 by either FF dose | |
| NCT01159912 | 343 | FF (100) qpm or FP (250) bid or P | ≥12-year-old asthmatics uncontrolled on ICS; MC, R, DB, DD, PC, PG, ×24 weeks | Both FF and FP significantly ( | |
| NCT01436110 | 347 | FF (50) qpm or FP (100) bid or P | ≥12-year-old asthmatics uncontrolled by non-ICS therapy; MC, R, DB, DD, PC, PG, ×24 weeks | Evening trough FEV1 at week 24 was not significantly increased with FF (50) but increased with FP (100) bid ( | |
| NCT01436071 | 248 | FF (50) or P qpm | ≥12-year-old asthmatics; MC, R, DB, PC, PG, ×12 weeks | Significant ( | |
| Woodcock et al | NCT00398645 | 646 | FF (200 or 400) qam or FF (200 or 400) qpm or FF (200) or P bid all by DPI | ≥12-year-old asthmatics; MC, R, DB, PC, ×8 weeks | All five FF dose groups produced significant ( |
| Woodcock et al | NCT00766090 | 190 | All patients received bid dosing – if listed as qd – second daily dose was P. FF (100) bid or FF (200) qpm or FP (200) qpm or FP (100) bid or P bid | ≥12-year-old asthmatics; MC, R, XO, PC, XO, ×4 weeks | Day 28 pre-dose FEV1 showed non-inferiority between FF (100) bid versus FF (200) qpm. All doses of FP and FF were superior to P ( |
| Medley et al | NCT01499446 | 575 | FF (100) qam or FF (100) qpm or FF (250) qpm or P | Asthmatic patients aged 16–55 years; MC, R, DB, DD, PC, PG, ×4 weeks | Trough PEF improved with all doses of FF compared to P ( |
| Busse et al | NCT00063746 | 627 | FF (200, 400, 600 or 800) qpm, FP (500) bid, P qpm | ≥12-year-old asthmatics uncontrolled on ICS; MC, R, DB, DD, PC, PG, ×8 weeks | No dose–response effect was seen across the FF doses studied. All FF doses improved PEF ( |
| Lee et al | NCT01573624 | 421 | FF (100) qam or FF (100) + UMEC (15.6, 31.25, 62.5, 125 or 250) qam or FF (100) + VI (25) qam | ≥18-year-old asthmatics on ICS; MC, R, DB, XO, ×2 weeks | Trough FEV1 improved with FF (100) alone but > with FF1 (100) + UMEC (125 or 250). FF/UMEC increased morning and evening PEF compared to FF (100) alone. AEs were similar across groups, and no laboratory parameter changes were noted |
| Kempsford et al | NCT01808339 | 21 | FF (100) qam + P qpm or P qam + FF (100) qpm or P qam + P qpm | 18–70-year-old asthmatics on ICS; SC, R, DB, DD, PC, XO, ×2 weeks | FF (100) increased 24-hour weighted mean FEV1. The increases for FF dosed in the AM or PM were comparable. No serious AEs were reported |
| Bleecker et al | NCT 00603278 | 622 | FF (100, 200, 300 or 400) qpm or FP (250) bid or P bid | ≥12-year-old asthmatics; MC, R, DB, DD, PC, PG, ×8 weeks | Significant ( |
| van den Berge et al | Not given | 24 | Single dose – P or FF (1,000) −2, 14 or 26 hours or FP (1,000) −14 or 26 hours before AmpCT | Asthmatic patients not on ICS; MC, R, DB, PC, XO | Threshold dose AmpCT increased by prior exposure to FF at 2, 14 or 26 hours compared to P. Prior FP exposure only increased AmpCT threshold at 14 hours not at 26 hours compared to P |
| Yang et al | NCT01725685 | 18 | Single dose – FF (400) or UMEC (500) or FF (400) plus UMEC (500) | 18–65-year-old healthy volunteers; SC, R, DB, XO | Plasma FF concentrations peaked at 0.5 hours alone and with combined FF/UMEC inhaler. No clinically significant AEs, vital signs or laboratory parameters |
| Allen et al | NCT01000597 | 80 | FF (250) intravenous or FF (800) or FF (400) both by DPI | 20–59-year-old healthy Caucasian, Japanese, Korean and Chinese subjects; OL, R, XO, single and daily repeat doses ×7 days; intravenous dose ×1 only | Higher FF systemic exposures were seen in Chinese, Japanese and Korean subjects compared to Caucasian subjects. Bioavailability was higher in Asian subjects than Caucasian. Japanese had on average 22% lower serum weighted mean cortisol levels than Caucasians, Chinese or Koreans. Serum weighted mean cortisol levels were similar in Caucasians, Chinese or Koreans. Well tolerated in all groups |
Notes: References in bold are key studies; bid, twice daily; qam, daily morning; qd, once daily; qpm, daily evening.
Abbreviations: AEs, adverse events; AmpCT, adenosine 51-monophosphate (AMP) challenge test; DB, double blind; DD, double dummy; DPI, dry powder inhaler; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 second; FF, fluticasone furoate; FP, fluticasone propionate; ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; MC, multiple centers; NCT, clinicaltrials.gov study numbers, OL, open label; P, placebo; PC, placebo controlled; PEF, peak expiratory flow; PG, parallel group; R, randomized; SC, single center; UMEC, umeclidinium; VI, vilanterol trifenatate; XO, crossover.
Major clinical trials with VI in asthma
| Study | Trial number | N | Drugs (μg) | Design | Results (doses in μg) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT00469040; NCT00463697; NCT00519376; NCT00702910 | 36, 22 and 24 | VI (25) or VI (50) or VI (100) or P all daily and VI (25) or VI (50) or VI (100) or P single dose and VI (6.25) or VI (25) or VI (100) or P all single dose, all by DPI | Healthy subjects (36) between 18 and 55 years old, SC, PC, R, DB, PG, ×14 days and persistent asthmatics (22) ≥18 years old, MC, R, DB, PC, XO, single dose and persistent asthmatics (24) between 18 and 55 years old, MC, R, DB, PC, XO, single dose | VI rapidly absorbed maximal concentration between 5 and 10 minutes. No significant changes in vital signs, 12-lead ECG or blood chemistry changes were noted with VI. All doses of VI resulted in increases in FEV1 within 5 minutes and lasted at least 24 hours | |
| NCT01181895 | 347 | VI (25) daily SAL (50) bid or P, all by DPI | Adult asthmatics uncontrolled by ICS alone; MC, R, PC, DB, DD, ×12 weeks | VI, SAL and P all showed substantial improvement in 24-hour weighted mean FEV1 after 12 weeks without statistically significant differences. Low rates of AEs compared to P | |
| NCT01573767 | 456 | VI (6.25, 12.5 or 25) or P Daily, all by DPI, all replaced their ICS with FP (100) bid during 4-week run-in phase | Children aged 5–11 years with persistent asthma on ICS; MC, R, DB, PC, PG, ×4- and 1-week follow-up | The adjusted mean change from baseline in evening PEF averaged over the 4-week treatment phase showed no significant difference between VI and P. No difference was also seen in trough FEV1 between VI and P. VI resulted in an additional 0.6 rescue-free days and 0.7 symptom-free days per week compared to P. AEs were slightly higher with VI (28%–33%) versus P (22%) | |
| Lötvall et al | NCT00600171 | 614 | VI (3, 6.25, 12.5, 25 or 50) or P qpm, by DPI | ≥12-year-old symptomatic asthmatics on stable ICS dose; MC, R, DB, P, dose-ranging study, ×28 days | A VI dose–response effect ( |
| Sterling et al | NCT00980200 | 75 | VI (6.25) daily or VI (6.25) bid or VI (12.5) daily or VI (25) daily or P, all by DPI | ≥18-year-old asthmatics on stable dose ICS; MC, R, DB, PC, XO, ×7 days | All VI doses had significant ( |
| Oliver et al | NCT01453296 | 28 | VI (25) or P single dose and VI (25) or P daily, all by DPI | Children aged 5–11 years with persistent asthma on ICS; MC, R, DB, PC, XO, single dose then 7 days later, once-daily dosing, ×7 days | All ages showed similar VI pharmacokinetics. No laboratory or ECG abnormalities. No change in PEF from day 1 to day 14 |
Notes: References in bold are key studies; bid, twice daily; qpm, daily evening.
Abbreviations: AEs, adverse events; DB, double blind; DD, double dummy; DPI, dry powder inhaler; ECG, electrocardiogram; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 second; FP, fluticasone propionate; ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; MC, multicenter; P, placebo; PC, placebo controlled; PEF, peak expiratory flow; PG, parallel group; R, randomized; SAL, salmeterol; SC, single center; VI, vilanterol trifenatate; XO, crossover.
Pharmacokinetics of FF and VI
| Drug | Mean absorption time (IN) (hours) | Absolute bioavailability (IN) (%) | VD (IN) (L) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FF | 10.53 (8.52–13.01) | 6.3–18.4; 15.2 (12.6–18.4) | 1.0 (0.08–4.00) to 0.08 (0.08–1.50) | 23.7 (20.8–26.9) (IN); 15.4 (13.1–18.2) (IV) | 661 (546–800) |
| VI | 0.659 (0.286–1.517) | 10–12; 27.3 (21.6–34.6) | 0.150 (0.08–0.17) to 0.100 (0.08–0.18) | 2.47 (1.65–3.70) (IN); 2.40 (1.65–3.48) (IV) | 165 (129–211) |
Notes: Data are mean (90% CI); tmax, time to maximum observed concentration (inhaled); t1/2 beta, terminal elimination half-life. Data from.10,70,72,73
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; FF, fluticasone furoate; IN, inhaled dose; IV, intravenous dose; L, liters; VD, volume of distribution at steady state; VI, vilanterol trifenatate.
Major clinical trials with FF/VI in asthma
| Study | Trial number | N | Drugs (μg) | Design | Results (doses in μg) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT01086410 | 185 | FF (100)/VI (25) or FF (200)/VI (25) or P by DPI or P by DPI plus 10 mg Pred oral last 7 days | 12–65-year-old asthmatic patients; MC, R, PC, DB, PG, DD, all daily doses ×6 weeks | No differences (non-inferior) in 24-hour weighted mean serum or urinary cortisol levels between FF/VI at either dose and P. Pred substantially reduced 24-hour weighted mean serum cortisol compared to P | |
| NCT01147848 | 806 | FF (100)/VI (25) qpm or FP (250)/SAL (50) bid by DPI | ≥12-year-old asthmatic patients on stable ICS; MC, R, DB, DD, PG, ×24 weeks | Significant improvement from baseline seen in 0–24-hour weighted mean FEV1 after 24-week treatment with both FF/VI qpm or FP/SAL bid. No difference in asthma control measures or exacerbations | |
| NCT01018186 | 503 | FF (100)/VI (25) qpm or FF (200)/VI (25) qpm or FP (500) bid by DPI | ≥12-year-old asthmatic patients on ICS; MC, R, DB, DD, PG, ×52 weeks | Exacerbation rates were FF (100)/VI (25) (1%), FF (200)/VI (25) (3%) and FP (500) (3%) during the study. Statistically significant ( | |
| NCT01134042 | 586 | FF (200)/VI (25) qpm or FF (200) qpm or FP (500) bid by DPI | ≥12-year-old asthmatic patients on ICS; MC, R, DB, DD, PG, ×24 weeks | FF/VI significantly ( | |
| NCT01086384 | 2,019 | FF (100)/VI (25) or FF (100) daily qpm by DPI | ≥12-year-old asthmatic patients on ICS; MC, R, DB, PG, ×24–78 weeks | FF/VI compared to FF alone delayed onset of first severe asthma experience exacerbation ( | |
| NCT01686633 | 1,039 | FF (100) or FF (100)/VI (25) or FF (200)/VI (25) qpm daily by DPI | ≥12-year-old asthmatic patients on ICS; MC, R, DB, stratified, PG, ×12 weeks | Weighted mean FEV1 (0–24 hours) was significantly ( | |
| Kempsford et al | NCT01287065 | 26 | FF (100)/VI (25) qpm or FF (100)/VI (25) qam or P by DPI | 18–70-year-old asthmatic patients on stable ICS; SC, R, DB, PC, XO, daily dose of FF/VI given qam or qpm with P given the opposite qam/qpm or P given bid ×14 days | Both, morning and evening FF/VI, increased weighted mean FEV1. Both dosing times produced comparable improvements in lung function |
| Allen et al | NCT01266941 and NCT01266980 | 35 | FF (200)/VI (25) or FF (100)/VI (25) by DPI | Two studies, OL, PG, daily doses in: 1) mild to moderate hepatic impaired patients or healthy matched patients, all daily dose ×7 days; 2) severe renal impaired (CrCl <30 mL/min) patients or healthy matched patients, all daily dose ×7 days | No effect on VI maximal concentrations or area under the concentration curve for 24 hours in liver or renal impaired patients. No difference in heart rate, serum potassium or 24 hour serum cortisol levels seen |
| Oliver et al | NCT01128569 | 52 | FF (100) or FF (100)/VI (25) or P by DPI | 18–65-year-old asthmatics; MC, R, DB, PC, XO, daily dose ×28 days | Weighted mean FEV1 for the 2-hour post-allergen challenge was improved by FF and FF/VI compared to P. No difference was seen between FF and FF/VI |
| Kempsford et al | NCT01165125 and NCT00866515 | 20 and 18 | 1) Keto 400 mg or P oral daily ×6 days on day 5 VI (25) ×1 dose by DPI and 2) Keto 400 mg or P oral daily ×11 days with FF (200)/VI (25) daily days 4–11 by DPI | 18–52-year-old healthy subjects; SC, R, DB, XO, all doses were daily | Oral Keto is known as CYP3A4 and PgP inhibitors. No major effect of Keto on VI pharmacodynamics was seen. Maximal levels and area under the curve (0–24 hours) were increased approximately twofold by Keto on FF (36%) and VI (65%). No effect on maximal heart rate or minimal potassium levels was seen when Keto was given with FF/VI. A 27% decrease in 24-hour weighted mean serum cortisol levels was noted |
| Nakahara et al | NCT00625196; NCT00964249; NCT00972673 | 48, 32 and 16 | FF (200, 400 or 800) or P and VI (12.5 or 25) and FF (800) or VI (50) or FF (800)/VI (50) by DPI | Healthy adult Japanese males, single dose; then 4-day washout; then daily dose days 5–11 (7 days) and single dose daily ×7 days and single dose | Peak serum concentrations of FF and VI were up to two times higher compared to single doses. No clinically significant difference in VI or FF levels when administered together compared to alone. Repeat doses of FF affected weighted mean (0–24 hours) serum cortisol with FF (200, 400 and 800) resulting in respective reductions from placebo of 32%, 38% and 97% respectively. No safety concerns were seen |
| Oliver et al | NCT01128595 | 26 | FF (100) or VI (25) or FF (100)/VI (25) or P by DPI | 18–65-year-old asthmatic patients; MC, R, DB, PC, XO, daily dose qam ×21 days; allergen challenge test and MCT | Treatment with FF, VI or FF/VI all reduced the early decrease in FEV1 with allergen challenge test 0–2 hours and 24 hours compared to P on day 21. Same protection was seen with MCT for FF, VI or FF/VI on day 22 |
| Oliver et al | None given | 26 | FF (100)/VI (25) or FF (100) daily by DPI | 5–11-year-old patients with mild asthma controlled by ICS, R, DB, XO, stratified by age, ×14 days | No difference was seen in primary outcomes including AEs, laboratory measures, heart rate, blood pressure, PEF or ECG between FF/VI and FF |
| Bleecker et al | NCT01165138 | 609 | FF (100)/VI (25) or FF (100) or P all daily qpm by DPI | ≥12-year-old asthmatic patients; MC, R, DB, PG, ×12 weeks | Both FF/VI and FF significantly ( |
| Lin et al | NCT10498653 | 309 | FF (200)/VI (25) qpm or FP (500) bid by DPI | ≥12-year-old asthmatic patients from the People’s Republic of China, South Korea and the Philippines; MC, R, DB, DD, PG, ×12 weeks | Significantly greater change from baseline on evening PEF by FF/VI compared to FP ( |
| Chen et al | NCT01711463 | 16 | FF (50)/VI (25) or FF (100)/VI (25) or FF (200)/VI (25) or P qam daily by DPI | 18–45-year-old healthy Chinese subjects; SC, R, DB, PC, XO, ×7 days | Reductions compared to P in weighted mean serum cortisol (0–24 hour) levels for day 7 were seen for FF (100)/VI (25) and FF (200)/VI (25) compared to P. FF/VI was safe and well tolerated |
| Lin et al | NCT01498679 | 307 | FF (100)/VI (25) or P daily all by DPI | ≥12-year-old patients with Asian ancestry and asthmatics on ICS; MC, R, DB, PC, PG, ×12 weeks | Significant ( |
| Hozawa et al | None given | 30 | BUD (320)/F (9) bid plus as-needed BUD (160)/F (4.5) or FF (100)/VI (25) qpm plus as-needed procaterol, all by DPI | ≥20-year-old Japanese asthmatics on ICS; SC, R, OL, ×4 weeks | BUD/F and FF/VI both showed improvement in airway inflammation, FEV1, resonance frequency exhaled nitric oxide and asthma control scores, but FF/VI improvement seemed to plateau, while BUD/F did not. The use of a single as-needed dose of BUD/F was well tolerated |
| Dal Negro et al | None given | 117 | BEC (100)/F (6) bid or FF (92)/VI (22) daily, all by DPI | Adult asthmatic patients; observational, retrospective with propensity score matching, ×12 weeks | The number of relapses per patient was 0.53 (±0.12) for the BEC/F treatment group and 0.28 (±0.07) for the FF/VI group ( |
| Ishiura et al | None given | 16 | FF (200)/VI (25) qam or FP (500)/SAL (50) bid, all by DPI | Adult 59–87-year-old Japanese patients with ACOS; OL, R, XO, ×12 weeks | The trough FEV1 was significantly ( |
Notes: References in bold are key studies; bid, twice daily; qam, daily morning; qpm, daily evening.
Abbreviations: ACOS, asthma–COPD overlap syndrome; ADE, adverse drug event; AEs, adverse events; BEC/F, beclomethasone dipropionate/formoterol; BUD/F, budesonide/formoterol; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; CYP, cytochrome P450; DB, double blind; DD, double dummy; DPI, dry powder inhaler; ECG, electrocardiogram; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 second; FF, fluticasone furoate; FP, fluticasone propionate; ICS, inhaled corticosteroid; Keto, ketoconazole; MC, multicenter; MCT, methacholine challenge test; OL, open label; PC, placebo controlled; PEF, peak expiratory flow; PG, parallel group; PgP, P-glycoprotein; Pred, prednisolone; R, randomized; SAL, salmeterol; SC, single center; VI, vilanterol trifenatate; XO, crossover.