| Literature DB >> 28484598 |
Dejan Radovanovic1, Pierachille Santus1, Francesco Blasi2, Marco Mantero2.
Abstract
Severe and poorly controlled asthma still accounts for a great portion of the patients affected. Disease control and future risk management have been identified by international guidelines as the main goals in patients with asthma. The need for new treatment approaches has led to reconsider anticholinergic drugs as an option for asthma treatment. Tiotropium is the first anticholinergic drug that has been approved for children and adults with poorly controlled asthma and is currently considered as an option for steps 4 and 5 of the Global Initiative for Asthma. In large randomized clinical trials enrolling patients with moderate to severe asthma, add-on therapy with tiotropium has demonstrated to be efficacious in improving lung function, decreasing risk of exacerbation and slowing the worsening of disease; accordingly, tiotropium demonstrated to be non inferior compared to long acting beta-agonists in the maintenance treatment along with medium to high inhaled corticosteroids. In view of the numerous ancillary effects acting on inflammation, airway remodeling, mucus production and cough reflex, along with the good safety profile and the broad spectrum of efficacy demonstrated in different disease phenotypes, tiotropium can represent a beneficial alternative in the therapeutic management of poorly controlled asthma. The present extensive narrative review presents the pharmacological and pathophysiological basis that guided the rationale for the introduction of tiotropium in asthma treatment algorithm, with a particular focus on its conventional and unconventional effects; finally, data on tiotropium efficacy and safety. from recent randomized clinical trials performed in all age categories will be extensively discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Airway remodeling; Anticholinergic; Asthma; Exacerbation; Forced expiratory flow; Inflammation; Muscarinic receptor; Poor control; Tiotropium
Year: 2017 PMID: 28484598 PMCID: PMC5420159 DOI: 10.1186/s40248-017-0094-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Multidiscip Respir Med ISSN: 1828-695X
Factors associated with increased risk of poor asthma control in adults and the pediatric population
| Determinants for poor control | Pediatric | Adults |
|---|---|---|
| Clinical and functional | ||
| Exacerbations in the previous year (previous 12 months) | X | X |
| Hospitalizations in the previous year (previous 12 months) | X | X |
| Respiratory infections (previous 12 months) | X | |
| Oral corticosteroid use (previous 12 months) | X | X |
| SABA prescriptions (1x200 dose canister/month) | X | |
| Healthcare utilization | X | X |
| Poor lung function | X | |
| Sputum or blood eosinophilia | X | |
| Variability of asthma control | X | X |
| ACQ-7 < 15 | X | X |
| Demographic | ||
| Female | X | |
| Age (40 to 64 years old) | X | |
| Comorbidities | ||
| GERD | X | |
| Obesity | X | X |
| Overweight | X | |
| Low birth weight | X | |
| OSA-sleep disordered breathing | X | X |
| Allergic rhinitis | X | X |
| Congestive heart failure | X | |
| Drug exposure | X | |
| Psychological | ||
| Anxiety and depression | X | |
| Misperception of disease | X | X |
| Low expectations | X | |
| Poor knowledge of disease | X | X |
| Parent related severity of disease | X | |
| Patient-independent | ||
| Doctor-related attitudes | X | |
| Patient-dependent | ||
| Weight gain | X | |
| Low adherence | X | |
| Poor inhaler technique | X | |
| Active and past smoking | X | |
| Passive smoking | X | |
As for gender-related risk, different authors demonstrated an association with poor asthma control and both female and male gender (mild and severe exacerbations for female gender and higher SABA usage for males). ACQ-7, Asthma control questionnaire; SABA, Short acting β2 agonists; mo, months. Data are from [3, 31–43]
Phase II dose finding and safety trials
| Authors | Year | Main inclusion criteria | Age | Number | Treatment | Duration | Primary outcome | Secondary outcomes | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vogelberg C et al. [ | 2015 | FEV1 60–90%pred. Symptomatic with ACQ-7 > 1.5 and treatment with 200–400 μg of budesonide or eq. +/− LABA +/− LTRA | 6–11 | 101 | Add on tiotropium 1.25 μg, 2.5 μg, 5 μg or placebo to medium-dose ICS with or without LTRA | 12 weeks | Peak FEV1(0–3 h) | 1) Trough FEV1
| All doses were superior to placebo in all outcomes. No difference between doses. |
| Vogelberg C et al. [ | 2014 | FEV1 60–90%pred. Symptomatic with ACQ-7 > 1.5 | 12–17 | 105 | Add on tiotropium 1.25 μg, 2.5 μg, 5 μg or placebo to medium-dose | 4 weeks | Peak FEV1(0–3 h) | 1) Trough FEV1
| The response of Tiotropium 5 μg dose is superior compared to placebo and greater than tiotropium 1.25 and 2.5 μg |
| Kerstjens HA et al. [ | 2011 | Severe persistent asthma FEV1 < 80%pred. | 18–75 | 100 | Add on tiotropium 5 μg vs 10 μg vs placebo | 24 weeks | Peak FEV1(0–3 h) | 1) Trough FEV1
| Compared with placebo, both tiotropium doses were superior in all outcomes. There was no difference between doses. |
| Beeh KM et al. [ | 2014 | FEV1 60–90%pred. | 18–75 | 141 | Add on tiotropium 1.25 μg vs 2.5 μg vs 5 μg vs placebo | 12 weeks | Peak FEV1(0–3 h) | 1) Trough FEV1
| Compared with placebo, all tiotropium doses were superior in all outcomes. The largest response was obtained with 5 μg |
| Timmer W et al. [ | 2015 | FEV1 60–90%pred. | 18–75 | 89 | Add on tiotropium 5 μg OD vs 2.5 μg BID vs placebo | 12 weeks | FEV1AUC (0–24) | 1) Peak FEV1 (0–24 h) | Both tiotropium doses are superior to placebo in all outcomes. No advantage of BID administration. |
| Ohta K et al. [ | 2015 | FEV1 60–90%pred. | 18–75 | 285 | Add on tiotropium 2.5 μg, 5 μg or placebo to ICS +/− maintenance therapy | 52 weeks | Long term safety | 1) Trough FEV1
| No difference in AEs rate between groups |
Phase II dose finding and safety trials performed with tiotropium in patients with poorly controlled moderate and severe asthma. N number of patients randomized to treatment, %pred percent predicted, eq. equivalent, AQLQ Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire, PAQLQ Pediatric Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire, OCS oral corticosteroids. For other abbreviations please see text
Phase III RCTs that evaluated efficacy and safety of tiotropium in asthma
| Authors | Year | Main inclusion criteria | Age | Number | Treatment | Duration | Primary outcome | Secondary outcomes | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Children and adolescents | |||||||||
| Szefler SJ et al. [ | 2017 | FEV1 60–90%pred | 6–11 | 392 | Add on tiotropium 5 μg, 2.5 μg or placebo to chronic medium dose ICS (200–400 μg budesonide or eq.) + 2 controller or high dose ICS (≥400 μg) plus one controller | 12 weeks | Peak FEV1 (0–3 h) | 1) Trough FEV1
| Primary and key secondary outcomes were significantly improved only for tiotropium 5 μg. Peak FVC (0–3 h) and trough FVC did not reach significance for any tiotropium dose. |
| Huang J et al. [ | 2016 | Moderate persistent asthma | 6–14 | 80 | 125 μg fluticasone propionate aerosol TD + placebo OD vs 125 μg fluticasone propionate aerosol TD + tiotropium 18 μg dry-powder OD | 12 weeks | (not clearly stated) | 1) FEV1, FVC and PEF at week 12. | Tiotropium 18 as add-on to maintenance therapy significantly improved lung function compared to maintenance therapy alone. |
| Hamelmann E et al. [ | 2016 | FEV1 60–90%pred | 12–17 | 376 | Add on tiotropium 5 μg, 2.5 μg or placebo to maintenance therapy, with ICS +/− LTRA (LABA not permitted) + open label SABA as rescue medication | 48 weeks | Peak FEV1 (0–3 h) | 1) Trough FEV1
| All functional outcomes were significantly improved compared to placebo for all tiotropium doses. Greatest overall benefit was found for tiotropium 5 μg. A trend towards improvements was present for ACQ-7 |
| Hamelmann E et al. [ | 2016 | ACQ-7 > 1.5 and high dose ICS + 1 controller therapy or medium dose ICS + 2 controller therapies | 12–17 | 388 | Add on tiotropium 5 μg, 2.5 μg or placebo to chronic ICS plus one or more controller therapies. | 12 weeks | Peak FEV1 (0–3 h) | 1) Trough FEV1
| Primary and secondary endpoint not met. Numerical greater response with tiotropium 5 μg compared to placebo. |
| Adults | |||||||||
| Peters SP et al. [ | 2010 | Symptomatic despite 160 μg daily beclomethasone with FEV1 < 70%pred | ≥18 | 174 | Tiotropium 18 μg + placebo vs beclomethasone 320 μg + placebo vs salmeterol 50 TD + beclomethasone 160 μg + placebo | 14 weeks – 3 period | Morning PEF | 1) Trough FEV1
| Tiotropium 18 μg is superior to doubling the ICS dose and non-inferior to salmeterol in patients with uncontrolled asthma |
| Wang K et al. [ | 2015 | Moderate asthma. | ≥18 | 94 | Add on therapy with tiotropium 18 μg, LTRA or double dose ICS on salmeterol/fluticasone dry-powdre 50/250 μg TD | 16 weeks | Asthma control in terms of FeNO; daily PEF variability and ACT score | Not clearly stated | Tiotropium non inferior to doubling doses of ICS. Best response obtained with double dose ICS/LABA but higher risk of pneumonia and RTI. |
| Kerstjens HA et al. [ | 2012 | Uncontrolled asthma defined with ACQ-7 > 1.5, FEV1 ≤ 80%pred and/or FVC ≤ 70%pred despite chronic treatment with ≥800 μg budesonide + LABA | 18–75 | 912 (456 per study) | Tiotropium 5 μg add on therapy or matching placebo. Teophylline, OCT and LTRA were permitted if part of maintenance therapy along with LABA/ICS. | Two replicate 48 weeks | 1) Peak FEV1 (0–3 h) | At each visit: | Add on treatment with tiotropium to ICS/LABA sustained bronchodilation over 24 h, reduces severe exacerbations and episodes of worsening of disease. |
| Kerstjens HA et al. [ | 2015 | Uncontrolled asthma defined with ACQ-7 > 1.5, FEV1 60–90%pred despite chronic treatment with 400–800 μg budesonide or eq. +/− LABA or SABA | 18–75 | 1972 (998 & 974 per study) | Tiotropium 5 μg, 2.5 μg, salmeterol 50 μg TD or placebo as add on therapy to 400–800 μg of budesonide or eq. | Two replicate 24 weeks | 1) Peak FEV1 (0–3 h) | 1) trough FVC | Add on treatment with tiotropium significantly improves lung function and asthma control compared with placebo, and has similar efficacy and tolerability to salmeterol |
| Paggiaro P et al. [ | 2016 | Uncontrolled asthma defined with ACQ-7 > 1.5, FEV1 60–90%pred despite chronic treatment with 200–400 μg budesonide or eq. | 18–75 | 464 | Tiotropium 5 μg or tiotropium 2.5 μg or placebo as add on treatment to chronic low to medium ICS. | 12 week | Peak FEV1 (0–3 h) | 1) Trough FEV1
| Both doses of tiotropium were significantly superior to placebo for every lung function outcome. No effect size retrieved. No difference in reduction of ACQ-7 score between active and placebo groups. |
Phase III RCTs that evaluated efficacy and safety of different doses of tiotropium in patients with moderate to severe uncontrolled asthma. RCTs are divided according to the study sample age. N number of patients randomized to treatment, ACQ-IA Interviewer-Administered version of the Asthma Control Questionnaire, RTI respiratory Tract Infections, FeNO Exhaled Fraction of Nitric Oxide, %pred percent predicted, eq. equivalent. For other abbreviations please see text. In all trials adverse effects were not different between groups if not otherwise reported. For other abbreviations, please see text
Fig. 1Possible role of tiotropium bromide in the management of asthma. The colour code refers to the functional and clinical characteristics that tiotropium should be able to modify according to its pharmacological properties. If the effect on functional and clinical asthma domains is effected prevalently by specific tiotropium properties, the effect on asthma control and future risk might be modulated by the concomitant action of different characteristics taken together. Th2, T helper-2 lymphocytes; SM, smooth muscle cells; MUC5AC, mucin-5 subtype AC gene; QoL, Quality of Life; ACQ-7, Asthma Control Questionnaire