| Literature DB >> 28496190 |
Janine Pilcher1,2, Mitesh Patel1,3,4, Alison Pritchard1, Darmiga Thayabaran1,2, Stefan Ebmeier1,2, Dominick Shaw3, Peter Black5, Irene Braithwaite6, Mark Weatherall2,7, Richard Beasley1,2,7.
Abstract
Asthma mortality surveys report delays in seeking medical review and overuse of beta-agonist therapy as factors contributing to a fatal outcome. However, the strength of these associations is limited because many asthma deaths are unwitnessed. We undertook a secondary analysis of data from a 24-week randomised controlled trial of 303 patients with high-risk asthma, randomised to combination budesonide/formoterol inhaler according to a single maintenance and reliever therapy regimen or fixed dose budesonide/formoterol with salbutamol as reliever (Standard) regimen. Medication use was measured by electronic monitors. The thresholds for high, marked and extreme beta-agonist use days were defined in the single maintenance and reliever therapy arm as: >8, >12 and >16 actuations of budesonide/formoterol in excess of four maintenance doses, respectively; and in the Standard arm as: >16, >24 and >32 actuations of salbutamol, respectively. Whether a medical review was obtained within 48 h of an overuse episode was determined by review of data collected during the study by participant report. The mean (standard deviation) proportion of days in which high, marked and extreme beta-agonist overuse occurred without medical review within 48 h was 0·94(0·20), 0·94(0·15) and 0·94(0·17), and 0·92(0·19), 0·90(0·26) and 0·94(0·15) for single maintenance and reliever therapy and Standard regimens, respectively. In at least 90% of days, in which beta-agonist overuse occurred, patients did not obtain medical review within 48 h of beta-agonist overuse, regardless of the magnitude of overuse or the inhaled corticosteroid/long-acting beta-agonist regimen. RELIEVER INHALER OVERUSE AND DELAY IN MEDICAL REVIEW IN ASTHMA: In asthma, overuse of beta-agonist reliever medication and delay in seeking medical review in an exacerbation are linked to asthma deaths. Janine Pilcher at the Medical Research Institute of New Zealand, and co-workers, conducted a review of data from a study of 303 adult patients with severe asthma, followed over 24 weeks. The patients were allocated to either a budesonide/formoterol, or a salbutamol inhaler to take for symptom relief, in addition to their maintenance treatment. Inhalers were fitted with electronic monitors, to accurately document every use. In both groups, on 90% of days when an exacerbation requiring excess use of an inhaler occurred, patients did not follow-up with medical professionals within 48 h as advised. Further, in both groups, 'extreme' reliever inhaler use was recorded at least once in around one in four patients.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28496190 PMCID: PMC5435086 DOI: 10.1038/s41533-017-0032-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Prim Care Respir Med ISSN: 2055-1010 Impact factor: 2.871
Participant characteristics
| Characteristic | SMART group ( | Standard group ( |
|---|---|---|
| Mean [(standard deviation (SD)] | ||
| Age (years) | 41·3 (13·7) | 42·6 (14·5) |
| ACQ-5 Score | 1·78 (0·99) | 1·79 (2·4) |
| Daily ICS dose (budesonide or equivalent), µg | 805 (353) | 813 (370) |
| On-treatment FEV1 (L) | 2·62 (0·91) | 2·50 (0·78) |
| On-treatment FEV1 % predicted | 81·6 (18·9) | 80·4 (20·5) |
| Severe exacerbations in the prior 12 months | 1·55 (1·31) | 1·73 (1·22) |
| Median (IQR) | ||
| Baseline self-reported reliever usea | 2 (1 to 3) | 2 (1 to 3) |
| Number of hospital admissions ever for asthma | 1 (0 to 4) | 1 (0 to 4) |
| N/151 (%) | N/152 (%) | |
| Male | 48 (31·8) | 46 (30·3) |
| Ethnicity | ||
| European | 113 (74·8) | 118 (77·6) |
| Māori | 25 (16·6) | 19 (12·5) |
| Pacific Islander | 5 (3·3) | 10 (6·6) |
| Other | 8 (5·3) | 5 (3·3) |
| Number of severe exacerbations in previous 12 months | ||
| 0 | 14 (9·3) | 11 (7·2) |
| 1 | 86 (57·0) | 75 (49·3) |
| 2 | 29 (19·2) | 31 (20·4) |
| 3 | 10 (6·6) | 22 (14·5) |
| 4 | 5 (3·3) | 6 (3·9) |
| ≥5 | 7 (4·6) | 7 (4·6) |
| LABA use | 92 (60·9) | 103 (67·8) |
| Combination ICS plus LABA inhaler | 73 (48%) | 82 (54%) |
| Use of written asthma self-management plan | 15 (10%) | 20 (13%) |
| Current smokers | 30 (19·9) | 29 (19·1) |
| Ex-smokers | 49 (32·5) | 48 (31·6) |
| Non-smokers | 72 (47·7) | 75 (49·3) |
ACQ asthma control questionnaire, FEV forced expiratory volume in one second, ICS inhaled corticosteroids, LABA long acting beta-agonist
a As per the ACQ question 6. ACQ question 6 is a categorical score of beta-agonist use over the preceding 7 days in the following bands: score 0—none; score 1—1 to 2 salbutamol inhalations most days; score 2—3 to 4 salbutamol inhalations most days; score 3—5 to 8 salbutamol inhalations most days; score 4—9 to 12 salbutamol inhalations most days; score 5—13 to 16 salbutamol inhalations most days; score 6—more than 16 salbutamol inhalations most days.
High beta-agonist use without medical review
| Outcome | SMART group ( | Standard group ( | Relative risk or rate SMART vs Standard (95% CI) |
| |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Mean (SD) | Median (IQR) | Range |
| Mean (SD) | Median (IQR) | Range | Risk | Rate | ||
| At least one episode of high use | 84 (56) | 68 (45) | 1·24 (0·99–1·56) | – | 0·058 | ||||||
| Number of days of high use | 5·1 (14·3) | 1 (0–3) | 0–130 | 8·9 (20·9) | 0 (0–5) | 0–149 | – | 0·58 (0·39–0·88) | 0·010 | ||
| Number of days of high use in participants with at least one high use episode | 9·1 (18·2) | 2 (1–7·5) | 1–130 | 19·9 (27·7) | 7 (2–26·5) | 1–149 | – | – | – | ||
| Number of days of high use without medical review within 48 h in participants with at least one high use episode | 8·5 (17·8) | 2 (1–6·5) | 0–130 | 18·3 (24·8) | 5 (2–26) | 1–123 | – | 0·49 (0·31–0·75) | 0·001 | ||
| Proportion of high overuse days without medical review within 48 h compared to total high overuse days in participants with at least one high use episode | 0·94 (0·20) | 1 (1–1) | 0–1 | 0·94 (0·15) | 1 (1–1) | 0·25 –1 | – | – | – | ||
Extreme beta-agonist overuse without medical review
| Outcome | SMART group ( | Standard group ( | Relative risk or rate SMART vs Standard (95% CI) |
| |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N (%) | Mean (SD) | Median (IQR) | Range | N (%) | Mean (SD) | Median (IQR) | Range | Risk | Rate | ||
| At least one episode of extreme overuse | 41 (27) | 40 (26) | 1·03 (0·71–1·50) | – | 0·87 | ||||||
| Number of days of extreme overuse | 1·6 (6·7) | 0 (0–1) | 0–75 | 2·9 (12·2) | 0 (0–1) | 0–137 | – | 0·56 (0·34–0·91) | 0·02 | ||
| Number of days of extreme overuse in participants with at least one extreme overuse episode | 5·8 (11·9) | 2 (1–6) | 1–75 | 11·0 (22·1) | 4·5 (2·5–11) | 1–137 | – | – | – | ||
| Number of days of extreme overuse without medical review within 48 h in participants with at least one extreme overuse episode | 5·2 (11·9) | 2 (1–4) | 0–75 | 9·6 (18·3) | 4·5 (2–10) | 1–112 | – | 0·59 (0·31–1·10) | 0·096 | ||
| Proportion of extreme overuse days without medical review within 48 h compared to total extreme overuse days in participants with at least one high use episode | 0·90 (0·26) | 1 (1–1) | 0–1 | 0·94 (0·15) | 1 (1–1) | 0·29–1 | – | – | – | ||
Fig. 1a Mean number of high use days in participants with at least one high use episode, and mean number of high use days without medical review within 48 h in participants with at least one high use episode. b Mean number of marked overuse days in participants with at least one marked overuse episode, and mean number of marked overuse days without medical review within 48 h in participants with at least one marked overuse episode. c Mean number of extreme overuse days in participants with at least one extreme overuse episode, and mean number of extreme overuse days without medical review within 48 h in participants with at least one extreme overuse episode
Marked beta-agonist overuse without medical review
| Outcome | SMART group ( | Standard group ( | Relative risk or rate SMART vs Standard (95% CI) |
| |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Mean (SD) | Median (IQR) | Range | N (%) | Mean (SD) | Median (IQR) | Range | Risk | Rate | ||
| At least one episode of marked overuse | 54 (36) | 56 (37) | 0·97 (0·72–1·31) | – | 0·85 | ||||||
| Number of days of marked overuse | 2·6 (10·2) | 0 (0–1) | 0–109 | 4·8 (14·9) | 0 (0–2) | 0 to 144 | – | 0·56 (0·35–0·88) | 0·013 | ||
| Number of days of marked overuse in participants with at least one marked overuse episode | 7·4 (16·0) | 2 (1–7) | 1–109 | 13·1 (22·3) | 4·5 (2 to 15) | 1–144 | – | – | – | ||
| Number of days of marked overuse without medical review within 48 h in participants with at least one marked overuse episode | 6·7 (15·7) | 2 (1–6) | 1–109 | 11·7 (19·0) | 4 (2–14) | 0–118 | – | 0·62 (0·37–1·06) | 0·079 | ||
| Proportion of marked overuse days without medical review within 48 h compared to total marked overuse days in participants with at least one high use episode | 0·94 (0·17) | 1 (0·74–1) | 0·15–1 | 0·92 (0·19) | 1 (0·96–1) | 0–1 | – | – | – | ||
Fig. 2Median [interquartile range (IQR)] daily budesonide/formoterol actuations in the 14 days prior to, and the 14 days following a severe exacerbation in the SMART group. Day 0 represents the initiation of corticosteroid therapy. There were 35 severe exacerbations in the SMART group. For patients with repeat exacerbations, a minimal interval of 28 days between exacerbations was required, to avoid overlap of data within the same participant. One patient in the SMART group had a second severe exacerbation within 28 days following the prior exacerbation. Thus, electronic data for 34 severe exacerbations were included in the plots of medication use patterns for the SMART group
Fig. 3Median (IQR) daily salbutamol a and budesonide/formoterol b actuations in the 14 days prior to, and the 14 days following a severe exacerbation in the Standard group. Day 0 represents the initiation of corticosteroid therapy. There were 66 severe exacerbations in the Standard group. For patients with repeat exacerbations, a minimal interval of 28 days between exacerbations was required, to avoid overlap of data within the same participant. Three patients in the Standard group had repeat severe exacerbations occurring within 28 days following the prior exacerbation. In another patient randomised to Standard treatment, there was no recorded data for two severe exacerbations due to use of non-study inhaled medication. Thus, electronic data for 61 severe exacerbations were included in the plots of medication use patterns in the Standard group. For these plots, only one of the included days (2 days prior to severe exacerbation for a patient in the Standard group) met dose dumping criteria (≥100 actuations in a 3 h period)