| Literature DB >> 31412856 |
Jaya Muneswarao1, Mohamed Azmi Hassali2, Baharudin Ibrahim2, Bandana Saini3, Irfhan Ali Hyder Ali4, Ashutosh Kumar Verma5.
Abstract
Asthma is a heterogeneous lung disease, usually characterised by chronic airway inflammation. Although evidence-based treatments are available in most countries, asthma control remains suboptimal, and asthma-related deaths continue to be an ongoing concern. Generally, it is believed that between 50 to 75% of patients with asthma can be considered as having mild asthma.Previous versions of Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) suggested that mild asthma in adults can be well managed with either reliever medications, for example, short-acting beta2 agonists (SABA) alone or with the additional use of controllers such as regular low-dose inhaled corticosteroids (ICS). Given the low frequency or non-bothersome nature of symptoms in mild asthma, patients' adherence towards their controller medications, especially to ICS is usually not satisfactory. Such patients often rely on SABA alone to relieve symptoms, which may contribute to SABA over-reliance. Overuse of relievers such as SABAs has been associated with poor asthma outcomes, such as exacerbations and even deaths. The new GINA 2019 asthma treatment recommendations represent significant shifts in asthma management at Steps 1 and 2 of the 5 treatment steps. The report acknowledges an emerging body of evidence suggesting the non-safety of SABAs overuse in the absence of concomitant controller medications, therefore does not support SABA-only therapy in mild asthma and has included new off-label recommendations such as symptom-driven (as-needed) low dose ICS-formoterol and "low dose ICS taken whenever SABA is taken".The GINA 2019 report highlights significant updates in mild asthma management and these recommendations represent a clear deviation from decades of clinical practice mandating the use of symptom-driven SABA treatment alone in those with mild asthma. While the new inclusions of strategies such as symptom-driven (as-needed) ICS-formoterol and "ICS taken whenever SABA is taken" are based on several key trials, data in this context are still only emergent data, with clear superiority of as needed ICS-formoterol combinations over maintenance ICS regimens yet to be established for valid endpoints. Nevertheless, current and emerging data position the clinical asthma realm at a watershed moment with imminent changes for the way we manage mild asthma likely in going forward.Entities:
Keywords: Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA); Mild asthma; Short-acting β2 agonists (SABA) overuse; Symptom-driven
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31412856 PMCID: PMC6694574 DOI: 10.1186/s12931-019-1159-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Res ISSN: 1465-9921
Differences in recommended Step 1 and 2 controller options between GINA 2018 and 2019 [1, 25]
| Controller options | GINA 2018 | GINA 2019 | |
|---|---|---|---|
Step 1 | Preferred | • SABA as-needed and no controller. | • |
| Other options | • Daily low dose ICS. | • | |
| Step 2 | Preferred | • Daily low dose ICS. | • Daily low dose ICS. • |
| Other options | • Daily LTRA. • Daily low dose ICS-LABA. | • • Daily LTRA. • Daily low dose ICS-LABA (better improvement in symptoms and FEV1 than when ICS is used alone but more costly, and exacerbation rate is similar to the above option). |
SABA = Short-acting beta agonist, LABA = Long-acting beta agonist, ICS=Inhaled corticosteroids, LTRA = Leukotriene receptor antagonist, FEV = Forced expiratory volume in one second
Note: (1) The new recommendations in GINA 2019 are highlighted in bold (2) The reliever option in GINA2019 is as-needed low dose ICS-formoterol or as-needed SABA
The summary of clinical trials supporting the recommendation for symptom-driven (as-needed) ICS-formoterol strategy
| Name of the trial | Symbicort Given as Needed in Mild Asthma 1 | Symbicort Given as Needed in Mild Asthma 2 |
|---|---|---|
| Trial Design | Double-blind, multisite, parallel-group RCT (Phase 3 trial) | Double-blind, multisite, parallel-group RCT (Phase 3 trial) |
| Trial Duration | 52 weeks | 52 weeks |
| Patient population | 1. Inclusion criteria: > 12 years or older, diagnosed with mild asthma at least 6 months previous to trial and deemed as needing Step 2 treatment 2. Average age of included patients: 39.6 ± 16.6 years. | 1. Inclusion criteria: > 12 years or older, diagnosed with mild asthma at least 6 months previous to trial and deemed as needing Step 2 treatment 2. Average age of included patients: 41.0 ± 17.0 years |
| Total number of patients | 3849 | 4215 |
| Treatment arms | 1. Twice-daily placebo + as-needed terbutaline (0.5 mg). 2. Twice-daily placebo + as-needed budesonide-formoterol (200/6 μg). 3. Twice-daily budesonide (200 μg) + as-needed terbutaline (0.5 mg). | 1. Twice-daily placebo + as-needed budesonide-formoterol (200/6 μg). 2. Twice-daily budesonide (200 μg) + as-needed terbutaline (0.5 mg). |
| Primary outcome | Weeks with well-controlled asthma. | Annualised rate of severe exacerbations |
| Conclusion | As-needed inhaled budesonide-formoterol provided superior asthma-symptom control to as-needed terbutaline but was inferior to budesonide maintenance therapy. Exacerbation rates with the two budesonide-containing regimens were similar and lower than in the terbutaline only group. Budesonide-formoterol used as-needed, resulted in substantially lower glucocorticoid exposure. | As-needed use of inhaled budesonide-formoterol was non-inferior to budesonide maintenance therapy concerning the annualised rate of severe asthma exacerbations but was inferior in controlling symptoms. Budesonide-formoterol used as-needed, resulted in substantially lower glucocorticoid exposure. |
RCT Randomised controlled trial
The summary of clinical trials supporting the recommendation for symptom-driven (as-needed) ICS with SABA strategy
| Name of the trial | BEST (Beclomethasone plus Salbutamol Treatment) [ | BASALT (Best Adjustment Strategy for Asthma in the Long Term) [ | TREXA (Treating Children to Prevent Exacerbations of Asthma) [ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trial Design | Double-blind, double-dummy, randomised parallel group trial | Multiple blind, parallel, 3-group, randomised, placebo-controlled trial | Double-blind, four-treatment, placebo-controlled, randomised, parallel group trial |
| Trial Duration | 6 months | 9 months | 44 weeks |
| Patient population | 18–65 years and diagnosed with mild persistent asthma | > 18 years and diagnosed with mild to moderate persistent asthma well controlled with low-dose inhaled corticosteroids | 6–18 years and diagnosed with mild persistent asthma. |
| Total number of patients | 466 | 342 | 843 |
| Treatment arms | 1. Twice-daily placebo + as-needed beclometasone (250 μg) with salbutamol (100 μg) in a single inhaler. 2. Twice-daily placebo + as-needed salbutamol (100 μg). 3. Twice-daily beclometasone (250 μg) + as-needed salbutamol (100 μg). 4. Twice-daily beclometasone (250 μg) and salbutamol (100 μg) in a single inhaler + as-needed salbutamol (100 μg). | 1. Beclometasone dose adjusted using physician assessment-based approach (PABA). 2. Beclometasone dose adjusted using biomarker-based (FeNO) approach (BBA). 3. Beclometasone dose adjusted based on symptoms (need for salbutamol), i.e. a symptom-based approach (SBA) | 1. Twice-daily beclomethasone (40 μg) + as-needed beclometasone (40 μg) with salbutamol (90 μg). 2. Twice-daily beclomethasone (40 μg) + as-needed placebo with salbutamol (90 μg). 3. Twice-daily placebo + as-needed beclometasone (40 μg) with salbutamol (90 μg). 4. Twice-daily placebo + as-needed placebo with salbutamol (90 μg) |
| Primary outcome | Morning peak expiratory flow rate | Time to first treatment failure | Time to first exacerbation requiring a prednisone dose |
| Conclusion | Symptom-driven use of ICS with SABA in a single inhaler is as effective as ICS maintenance therapy and is associated with a lower cumulative dose of the ICS | Neither the SBA nor the BBA strategy for ICS therapy was superior to the standard PABA strategy for the outcome of treatment failure. Mean monthly inhaled beclometasone dose was lowest in the SBA group. | Daily ICS was the most effective treatment to prevent exacerbations. As-needed ICS with SABA was more effective at reducing exacerbations compared with SABA alone and had the lowest daily ICS dose. Rescue treatment with SABA alone should be avoided. |
ICS Inhaled corticosteroid, SABA Short-acting beta2 agonist