| Literature DB >> 29928118 |
Donald P Tashkin1, Nicholas J Gross2.
Abstract
Long-acting muscarinic antagonists (LAMAs), along with long-acting β2-agonists (LABAs), are the mainstay for treatment of patients with COPD. Glycopyrrolate, or glycopyrronium bromide, like other LAMAs, inhibits parasympathetic nerve impulses by selectively blocking the binding of acetylcholine to muscarinic receptors. Glycopyrrolate is unusual in that it preferentially binds to M3 over M2 muscarinic receptors, thereby specifically targeting the primary muscarinic receptor responsible for bronchoconstriction occurring in COPD. Inhaled glycopyrrolate is slowly absorbed from the lungs and rapidly eliminated from the bloodstream, most likely by renal excretion in its unmetabolized form, limiting the potential for systemic adverse events. Inhaled glycopyrrolate is a fast-acting, efficacious treatment option for patients with moderate-severe COPD. It improves lung function, reduces the risk of exacerbations, and alleviates the symptoms of breathlessness, which in turn may explain the improvement seen in patients' quality of life. Inhaled formulations containing glycopyrrolate are well tolerated, and despite being an anticholinergic, few cardiovascular-related events have been reported. Inhaled glycopyrrolate is thus of value as both monotherapy and in combination with other classes of medication for maintenance treatment of COPD. This review covers the mechanism of action of inhaled glycopyrrolate, including its pharmacokinetic, pharmacodynamic, and safety profiles, and effects on mucus secretion. It also discusses the use of inhaled glycopyrrolate in the treatment of COPD, as monotherapy and in fixed-dose combinations with LABAs and inhaled corticosteroid-LABAs, including a triple therapy recently approved in Europe.Entities:
Keywords: anticholinergic; bronchodilator; glycopyrronium bromide; long-acting muscarinicantagonist
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29928118 PMCID: PMC6003532 DOI: 10.2147/COPD.S162646
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis ISSN: 1176-9106
Figure 1Role of ACh and muscarinic receptors in the lung.
Notes: Data from these studies.11,17 In large airways, ACh released from cholinergic nerves activates M3 receptors on ASM, causing bronchoconstriction. In peripheral airways, where cholinergic nerves are absent, inflammatory cells stimulate epithelial cells to release ACh, activating M3 receptors on ASM and causing bronchoconstriction. M3 muscarinic receptors are shown as solid blue circles. For simplicity, other types of muscarinic receptor are not shown.
Abbreviations: ACh, acetylcholine; ASM, airway smooth muscle; CNS, central nervous system.
Preclinical studies comparing the pharmacological profile of glycopyrrolate with other LAMAs and ipratropium
| Study | Characteristic | Glycopyrrolate | Aclidinium | Tiotropium | Ipratropium |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| In vitro calcium assay | Equilibrium binding constant, mean ± SE: | – | – | ||
| M2 | 8.70±0.04 | 10.05±0.03 | |||
| M3 | 9.59±0.05 | 10.37±0.04 | |||
| Drug binding | 11.4 vs 1.07 (10.7) | – | 46.2 vs 10.8 (4.3) | – | |
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| In vitro study of recombinant human receptors | Muscarinic receptor-binding affinity (Ki, nM), mean ± SE: | ||||
| M2 | 1.77±0.06 | 0.14±0.04 | 0.13±0.04 | 1.12±0.13 | |
| M3 | 0.52±0.04 | 0.14±0.02 | 0.19±0.04 | 1.24±0.08 | |
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| Ex vivo binding in rat lungs | Binding to muscarinic receptors in lung | Binding lasted 24 hours | – | Binding lasted 24 hours | Binding observed at 2 hours, but not at 12 hours |
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| In vitro study of recombinant human receptors | M3 vs M2 receptors, dissociation | 8.1 vs 1.1 (7.3) | 29.2 vs 4.7 (6.2) | 62.2 vs 15.1 (4.1) | 0.5 vs 0.1 (5.9) |
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| In vivo study in guinea pigs | Onset of action (hours) postadministration | 2 | 2 | 4 | 2 |
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| Ex vivo study in human airways | Onset of action of 1 µM dose, minutes ± SEM | 3.4 | 6.4±0.5 | 8.4±1.1 | – |
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| In vitro study in guinea pig trachea | Duration of action ( | >8 hours | >8 hours | >8 hours | 42 minutes |
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| In vivo study in guinea pigs | Duration of bronchodilator action, in hours ( | 13 | 29 | 64 | 8 |
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| In vivo rat salivation study | ED50 (µg/kg) for inhibition of salivation | 0.74 | 38 | 0.88 | – |
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| In vitro human plasma study | Hydrolysis | 6 | 0.04 | 1.6 | 33 |
Notes:
P<0.05 vs both aclidinium and tiotropium at equal concentrations. “–” indicates data not available.
Abbreviations: ED50, dose required to inhibit salivation in 50% of rats; Ki, antagonist dissociation constant; LAMAs, long-acting muscarinic antagonists; SE, standard error; SEM, standard error of the mean; t½, half-life.
Available glycopyrrolate and other LAMA formulations
| Formulation | Brand name | Delivery method | Regions approved | Approved dosage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monotherapy | Seebri Neohaler | DPI | US | 15.6 µg BID |
| Seebri Breezhaler | DPI | Europe | 50 µg QD (glycopyrronium moiety in capsule) | |
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| Monotherapy | Lonhala Magnair | Nebulized | US | 25 µg BID |
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| Glycopyrrolate–formoterol | Bevespi Aerosphere | pMDI | US | 18/9.6 µg BID (as glycopyrrolate–formoterol fumarate) |
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| Glycopyrrolate–indacaterol | Utibron Neohaler | DPI | US | 15.6/27.5 µg BID |
| Ultibro Breezhaler | DPI | Europe | 50/110 µg QD (in capsule, as glycopyrronium/indacaterol) | |
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| Glycopyrrolate–beclomethasone–formoterol | Trimbow | pMDI | Europe | 12.5/100/6 µg BID (metered dose, as glycopyrronium bromide–beclomethasone dipropionate–formoterol fumarate dihydrate) |
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| Monotherapy | Spiriva HandiHaler | DPI | US | 18 µg QD (as tiotropium bromide) |
| Spiriva Respimat | SMI | US | 5 µg QD (as tiotropium bromide) | |
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| Tiotropium–olodaterol | Stiolto Respimat | SMI | US | 5/5 µg QD |
| Spiolto Respimat | SMI | Europe | 5/5 µg QD (delivered dose, as tiotropium bromide monohydrate–olodaterol hydrochloride) | |
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| Monotherapy | Incruse Ellipta | DPI | US | 62.5 µg QD |
| Incruse Ellipta | DPI | Europe | 62.5 µg QD (predispensed dose, as umeclidinium) | |
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| Umeclidinium–vilanterol | Anoro Ellipta | DPI | US | 62.5/25 µg QD |
| Anoro Ellipta | DPI | Europe | 62.5/25 µg QD (predispensed dose, as umeclidinium–vilanterol trifenatate) | |
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| Umeclidinium–fluticasone furoate–vilanterol | Trelegy Ellipta | DPI | US | 62.5/100/25 µg QD (as umeclidinium–fluticasone furoate–vilanterol) |
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| Monotherapy | Eklira Genuair | DPI | Europe | 400 µg BID (as aclidinium bromide) |
| Bretaris Genuair | DPI | Europe | 400 µg BID (as aclidinium bromide) | |
| Tudorza Pressair | DPI | US | 400 µg BID (as aclidinium bromide) | |
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| Aclidinium–formoterol | Duaklir Genuair | DPI | Europe | 400/12 µg BID (as aclidinium bromide–formoterol fumarate dihydrate) |
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| Monotherapy | TBC | Nebulized | Completed Phase III trials | NA |
Note:
Theravance Biopharma and Mylan submitted a new drug application for revefenacin use in patients with COPD in November 2017 and were waiting for a response at the time of submission of this review article.93
Abbreviations: BID, bis in die (twice daily); DPI, dry-powder inhaler; LAMA, long-acting muscarinic antagonist; NA, not applicable; pMDI, pressurized metered dose inhaler; QD, quaque die (once daily); SMI, soft-mist inhaler; TBC, to be confirmed.
Clinical evidence of the efficacy of glycopyrrolate monotherapy in patients with COPD
| Clinical trial | Treatment duration | Treatments | Key findings | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase III GLOW1 | 26 weeks | Glycopyrrolate 50 µg QD (n=552), placebo (n=270) | Glycopyrrolate significantly increased trough FEV1 vs placebo at week 12 (LSM treatment difference 0.108 L, | ||||
| Phase III GLOW2 | 52 weeks | Glycopyrrolate 50 µg QD (n=529), placebo (n=269), open-label tiotropium 18 µg QD (n=268) | Glycopyrrolate significantly increased trough FEV1 vs placebo at week 12 (LSM treatment difference 97 mL, | ||||
| Phase III GLOW3 crossover | 3 weeks | Glycopyrrolate 50 µg QD, then placebo (n=55); placebo, then glycopyrrolate 50 µg QD (n=53) | Glycopyrrolate significantly improved submaximal exercise endurance time vs placebo on day 1 ( | ||||
| Phase III GLOW5 | 12 weeks | Glycopyrrolate 50 µg QD (n=327), tiotropium 18 µg QD (n=330) | Glycopyrrolate was noninferior to tiotropium for trough FEV1 at week 12 (LSM treatment difference 0 L, | ||||
| GLOW7 | 26 weeks | Glycopyrrolate 50 µg QD (n=306), placebo (n=154) | Glycopyrrolate significantly improved trough FEV1 vs placebo at week 12 (LSM treatment difference 141 mL, | ||||
| SPRING crossover | 4 weeks | Glycopyrrolate 50 µg QD, then tiotropium 18 µg QD; tiotropium 18 µg QD, then glycopyrrolate 50 µg QD (n=126) | On day 1, glycopyrrolate 50 µg treatment significantly improved FEV1 AUC0–4 after the first dose compared with tiotropium 18 µg (LSM treatment difference 0.030 L, | ||||
| GEM1 | 12 weeks | Glycopyrrolate 15.6 µg BID (n=222), placebo (n=219) | Glycopyrrolate significantly improved FEV1 AUC0–12 vs placebo at week 12 (LSM treatment difference 0.139 L, | ||||
| GEM2 | 12 weeks | Glycopyrrolate 15.6 µg BID (n=216), placebo (n=216) | Glycopyrrolate significantly improved FEV1 AUC0–12 vs placebo at day 1 (LSM treatment difference 0.119 L, | ||||
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled GOLDEN 3 and GOLDEN 4 | 12 weeks | Glycopyrrolate 25 µg BID (n=431), glycopyrrolate 50 µg BID (n=432), placebo (n=430) | At week 12, treatment with glycopyrrolate 25 and 50 µg BID resulted in significant and clinically important improvements in trough FEV1 vs placebo (GOLDEN 3 [LSM difference 0.105 and 0.126 L, respectively] and GOLDEN 4 [LSM difference 0.084 and 0.082 L, respectively], all | ||||
| Open-label, active-controlled GOLDEN 5 | 48 weeks | Glycopyrrolate 50 µg BID (n=621), tiotropium 18 µg QD (n=466) | Glycopyrrolate treatment improved trough FEV1 from baseline, which was maintained until week 48 (LSM change from baseline at week 48 0.069 L) | ||||
| Chronic-dosing, Phase II, crossover trial | 2 weeks | Glycopyrrolate 18, 9, 4.6, 2.4, 1.2, 0.6 µg BID (n=64, 64, 62, 64, 57, 59, respectively), open-label tiotropium 18 µg QD (n=62), placebo BID (n=62) | After 14 days’ treatment, glycopyrrolate at doses 18, 9, 4.6, and 2.4 µg BID resulted in significant and clinically relevant improvements in FEV1 AUC0–12 compared with placebo (LSM difference from baseline 126–158 mL, | ||||
| Chronic-dosing, Phase IIB, incomplete block, crossover trial | 7 days | Glycopyrrolate (as glycopyrronium) 28.8, 14.4, 7.2, 3.6 µg BID (n=192), placebo BID (n=48), open-label ipratropium 34 µg QID (n=48) | At day 7, all glycopyrrolate doses were superior to placebo for improvement from baseline in FEV1 AUC0–12 (LSM treatment differences vs placebo 0.121–0.191 L, all | ||||
Notes:
Phase II studies included, as Phase III trial data have not yet been published for this product;
each patient received three treatments of two doses of glycopyrrolate and either placebo or ipratropium.
Abbreviations: AUC, area under curve; BID, bis in die (twice daily); FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 second; FVC, forced vital capacity; LSM, least squares mean; NS, not significant; QD, quaque die (once daily); QID, quater in die (four times daily); SGRQ, St George’s Respiratory Questionnaire; TDI, Transition Dyspnea Index.
Recent clinical evidence (2015 to present) of efficacy of glycopyrrolate combinations in patients with COPD
| Clinical trial | Treatment duration | Treatments | Key findings | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase III, randomized, double-blind, PINNACLE-1 and -2 studies in moderate–very severe COPD | 24 weeks | Glycopyrrolate–formoterol 18/9.6 µg BID (n=1,039), glycopyrrolate 18 µg BID (n=891), formoterol 9.6 µg BID (n=891), placebo BID (n=444), open-label tiotropium 18 µg (PINNACLE-1 only, QD; n=453) | At week 24, the change in predose trough FEV1 for glycopyrrolate–formoterol was significantly greater than for glycopyrrolate, formoterol, and placebo (LSM difference in change from baseline vs comparators, PINNACLE-1, 0.059–0.150 L, | |
| Phase III, randomized, double-blind trial (PINNACLE-3 [a PINNACLE-1 and -2 extension study]) | 28 weeks | Glycopyrrolate–formoterol 18/9.6 µg BID (n=290), glycopyrrolate 18 µg BID (n=218), formoterol 9.6 µg BID (n=213), open-label tiotropium 18 µg QD (n=171) | At week 52, the change in predose trough FEV1 for glycopyrrolate–formoterol was significantly greater than that for all other treatments (LSM difference in change from baseline 0.025–0.065 L, | |
| Two Phase IIIB, double-blind, crossover studies (PT003011 and PT003012) in moderate–very severe COPD | 4 weeks | Glycopyrrolate–formoterol 18/9.6 µg BID (n=115), placebo (n=112), open-label tiotropium 5 µg QD (PT003011 only, n=73) | By day 29, glycopyrrolate–formoterol had significantly improved FEV1 AUC0–24 vs placebo (LSM treatment difference, PT003011, 0.265 L; PT003012, 0.249 L; both | |
| Randomized, double-blind, noninferiority FLAME trial in patients with high exacerbation risk | 52 weeks | Glycopyrrolate–indacaterol 50/110 µg QD (n=1,680), fluticasone propionate–salmeterol 500/50 µg BID (n=1,682) | The glycopyrrolate–indacaterol combination was found to be superior to fluticasone propionate–salmeterol in reducing annual COPD exacerbations ( | |
| Randomized, double-blind, LANTERN study in moderate–severe COPD with a history of exacerbations | 26 weeks | Glycopyrrolate–indacaterol 50/110 µg QD (n=372), fluticasone propionate–salmeterol 500/50 µg BID (n=372) | At week 26, glycopyrrolate–indacaterol was significantly superior at improving trough FEV1 to fluticasone propionate–salmeterol (LSM treatment difference 0.075, | |
| Post hoc analysis of pooled ILLUMINATE and LANTERN trials examining symptomatic (GOLD B and D) | 26 weeks | Glycopyrrolate–indacaterol 50/110 µg QD (n=630), fluticasone propionate–salmeterol 500/50 µg BID (n=633) | At week 26, glycopyrrolate–indacaterol significantly improved lung function from baseline vs fluticasone propionate–salmeterol in symptomatic patients (LSM treatment difference in predose trough FEV1 in GOLD B and D patients 0.10 and 0.08 L, respectively [both | |
| Two randomized, double-blind, crossover studies (A2349 and A2350) in patients with moderate–severe COPD | 12 weeks | Glycopyrrolate–indacaterol 15.6/27.5 µg BID, umeclidinium–vilanterol 62.5/25 µg QD (A2349, n=357; A2350, n=355) | Noninferiority of glycopyrrolate–indacaterol vs umeclidinium–vilanterol for change from baseline in FEV1 AUC0–24 at week 12 was not met (lower boundary of 97.5% one-sided CI for glycopyrrolate–indacaterol below prespecified margin of −20 mL in both studies; LSM between-treatment differences −11.5 mL, 95% CI −26.9 to 3.8 [A2349] and −18.2 mL, 95% CI −34.2 to 2.3 [A2350]) | |
| Randomized, double-blind, crossover, MOVE study in patients with moderate–severe COPD | 21 days | Glycopyrrolate–indacaterol 50/110 µg QD, then placebo; placebo, then glycopyrrolate–indacaterol 50/110 µg QD (n=194) | Glycopyrrolate–indacaterol significantly improved peak IC levels (LSM treatment difference 0.202 L, | |
| Randomized, multicenter, blinded, QUANTIFY study in moderate–severe COPD | 26 weeks | Glycopyrrolate–indacaterol 50/110 µg QD (n=476), tiotropium 18 µg QD + formoterol 12 µg BID (n=458) | At week 26, glycopyrrolate–indacaterol was found to be noninferior to tiotropium + formoterol in improving SGRQ scores (LSM treatment difference −0.69) | |
| Randomized, open-label, crossover, FAVOR study in symptomatic (GOLD B or D) | 4 weeks | Open-label glycopyrrolate–indacaterol 50/110 µg QD, then tiotropium 18 µg QD (n=43); tiotropium 18 µg QD, then open-label glycopyrrolate–indacaterol 50/110 µg QD (n=45) | Glycopyrrolate–indacaterol significantly increased FEV1 1 hour postdose vs tiotropium after 4 weeks’ treatment (treatment difference 0.081 L, | |
| Pooled analysis of randomized, double-blind, parallel-group, FLIGHT1 and FLIGHT2 studies in moderate–severe COPD | 12 weeks | Glycopyrrolate–indacaterol 15.6/27.5 µg BID (n=260), indacaterol 27.5 µg BID (n=260), glycopyrrolate 15.6 µg BID (n=261), placebo (n=261) | Glycopyrrolate–indacaterol improved FEV1 AUC0–12 significantly more than individual components (LSM treatment difference 0.103 L vs indacaterol and 0.088 L vs glycopyrrolate, respectively; both | |
| Randomized, multicenter, double-blind, parallel-group, FLIGHT3 study in moderate–severe COPD | 52 weeks | Glycopyrrolate–indacaterol 15.6/27.5 µg BID (n=204), glycopyrrolate–indacaterol 31.2/27.5 µg BID (n=204), indacaterol 75 µg QD (n=207) | Improvements in predose trough FEV1 were greater with glycopyrrolate–indacaterol 15.6/27.5 µg and 31.2/27.5 µg (LSM treatment difference 0.080 L and 0.079 L, respectively), and improvements in 1-hour postdose FEV1 were greater with glycopyrrolate–indacaterol 15.6/27.5 µg (LSM treatment difference 0.108 L) than indacaterol alone at week 52 | |
| Randomized, blinded, GLISTEN study in moderate–severe COPD | 12 weeks | Glycopyrrolate 50 µg QD + fluticasone propionate–salmeterol 500/50 µg BID (n=258), tiotropium 18 µg QD + fluticasone propionate–salmeterol 500/50 µg BID (n=258), placebo + fluticasone propionate–salmeterol 500/50 µg BID (n=257) | At week 12, glycopyrrolate + fluticasone propionate–salmeterol significantly improved trough FEV1 from baseline vs placebo + fluticasone propionate–salmeterol (LSM treatment difference 0.101 L, | |
| Randomized, double-blind, active-comparator, TRILOGY study in patients with symptomatic COPD | 52 weeks | 2-week open-label run-in period, beclomethasone–formoterol 100/6 µg; patients then randomly assigned to beclomethasone–formoterol 100/6 µg (n=681) or stepped up to glycopyrrolate–beclomethasone–formoterol 12.5/100/6 µg (n=687) | At week 26, triple FDC significantly improved predose (treatment difference 0.081 L) and 2-hour postdose FEV1 (treatment difference 0.117 L) from baseline vs the dual ICS–LABA (both | |
| Randomized, double-blind, TRINITY study in patients with symptomatic COPD | 52 weeks | 2-week open-label tiotropium 18 µg QD, then open-label tiotropium µg QD (n=1,075), glycopyrrolate–beclomethasone–formoterol 12.5/100/6 µg BID (n=1,078), beclomethasone–formoterol 100/6 µg BID + tiotropium 18 µg QD (n=538) | Glycopyrrolate–beclomethasone–formoterol was superior to tiotropium in reducing the rate of exacerbations ( | |
Note:
GOLD B and D defined according to the 2013 GOLD guidelines (FAVOR), the 2010 GOLD guidelines (ILLUMINATE), or the 2009 GOLD guidelines (LANTERN).
Abbreviations: AUC, area under curve; BID, bis in die (twice daily); DPI, dry-powder inhaler; FDC, fixed-dose combination; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 second; FVC, forced vital capacity; GOLD, Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease; LSM, least squares mean; IC, inspiratory capacity; ICS-LABA, inhaled corticosteroid-long-acting β2-agonist; NS, not significant; pMDI, pressurized metered-dose inhaler; QD, quaque die (once daily); SGRQ, St George’s Respiratory Questionnaire; TDI, Transition Dyspnea Index.