| Literature DB >> 29983907 |
C Bachert1,2,3, J Bousquet4,5,6, P Hellings6,7,8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This article summarizes a EUFOREA symposium, presented during the European Rhinology Research Forum in Brussels (9-10 November 2017; https://www.rhinologyresearch.eu/) which focused on novel pathways and therapeutic approaches in allergic rhinitis (AR). MAIN BODY: AR remains under-diagnosed, under-estimated and under-treated. A key component in understanding the AR landscape has been the realization of a significant mismatch between how physicians instruct AR patients to manage their disease and what AR patients actually do in real life. Data from the Allergy Diary (developed by MACVIA ARIA) showed that AR patients take their medication prn, rapidly switch treatments, often experience poor control, use multiple therapies and stop treatment when symptoms are controlled. Better control of AR may be achievable by using an AR treatment which has a rapid onset of action and which effectively targets breakthrough symptoms. Indeed, AR patients report complete symptom relief, lack of breakthrough symptoms, rapid onset of action, safety and use on an 'as needed' basis as key targets for new nasal sprays. MP-AzeFlu comprises intranasal azelastine and fluticasone propionate (FP) in a novel formulation delivered in a single device. It is the first AR treatment to break the 5 min onset of action threshold and provides clinically relevant symptom relief in 15 min, much faster than that noted for FP + oral loratadine. MP-AzeFlu also significantly reduces nasal hyperresponsiveness (NHR) which may be responsible for the breakthrough symptoms frequently reported by AR patients. Mechanisms underlying MP-AzeFlu's effect include inhibition of mast cell degranulation, stabilization of the mucosal barrier, synergistic inhibition of inflammatory cell recruitment and a unique desensitization of sensory neurons expressing the transient receptor potential A1 and V1 channels.Entities:
Keywords: Allergic rhinitis; MP-AzeFlu; Nasal hyperreactivity; Onset of action; Real life
Year: 2018 PMID: 29983907 PMCID: PMC6016145 DOI: 10.1186/s13601-018-0210-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Allergy ISSN: 2045-7022 Impact factor: 5.871
Fig. 1Allergic rhinitis (AR) control according to treatment in a single Allergy Diary user. VAS: visual analogue scale; AH: anti-histamine; INS: intranasal corticosteroid; MP-AzeFlu (MP-azelastine/fluticasone propionate); AR: allergic rhinitis. Reprinted with permission from MACVIA-ARIA
Fig. 2Effect of MP-AzeFlu, FP + LOR and placebo on nasal symptoms. Data are presented as mean change from baseline in total nasal symptom score (TNSS) assessed over a period of 4 h following exposure to ragweed pollen in an allergen exposure chamber. Arrow: onset of action; dotted arrow: onset to clinically relevant effect compared to placebo (i.e. 1.17 change in TNSS). MP-AzeFlu (MP-azelastine/fluticasone propionate; Dymista®; 1 spray/nostril; 138 μg/50 μg); FP (fluticasone propionate; Flonase®; 1 spray/nostril; 50 μg) + LOR (Loratadine; Claritin®; 10 mg). LS: least squares; SE: standard error. *p ≤ 0.005 vs placebo; †p = 0.038 vs placebo; ‡p ≤ 0.003 vs FP + LOR.
Modified from Bousquet et al. 2017 [45]
Fig. 3Effect of MP-AzeFlu on nasal-hyperreactivity induced by cold dry air provocation. Nasal hyper-reactivity assessed by a PNIF (peak nasal inspiratory flow), b T5SS (total of 5 symptom scores) and c VAS (visual analogue scale) at day 7 (V1) and day 28 (V2) post-treatment. MP-AzeFlu (MP-azelastine/fluticasone propionate; Dymista®; 1 spray/nostril bd; 137 μg/50 μg). CDA: cold dry air. *p < 0.001 vs Day 1; ** p < 0.0001 vs Day 1; † p=0.03 vs placebo; ‡ p=0.003 vs placebo.
Modifed from Krohn et al. 2017 [49]