| Literature DB >> 32884252 |
José Luis López-Campos1,2, Bernardino Alcázar Navarrete3, Juan Antonio Riesco Miranda2,4, Borja G Cosío2,5, Juan P de-Torres6, Bartolomé Celli7, Carlos A Jiménez-Ruiz8, Ciro Casanova Macario9.
Abstract
Introduction: Despite the evidence provided by clinical trials, there are some uncertainties and controversies regarding the use of triple inhaled therapy. With the aim of evaluating clinical practice in specialized respiratory units, a Delphi consensus document was implemented on the use of single-inhaler fixed-dose triple therapies after 1 year of use in Spain.Entities:
Keywords: Delphi consensus; LABA/ICS; LABA/LAMA; bronchodilator agents; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; inhaled corticosteroids; statements; triple therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32884252 PMCID: PMC7435744 DOI: 10.2147/COPD.S258818
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis ISSN: 1176-9106
Figure 1Results of the degree of agreement among the panelists after the 1st and 2nd Delphi rounds. (N) number of panelists that participated in the Delphi round.
Results of the Degree of Agreement Among the Panelists with the Statements Regarding Efficacy of Single-Inhaler Fixed Triple Therapy vs LABA/LAMA, LABA/ICS and Open Triple Therapy After the two Delphi Rounds
| # | Statement | % Agreement | Round* | Final Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | In a non-exacerbator COPD patient, with eosinophilia ≥300, single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is indicated before dual LABA/LAMA. | 55.56% | 2 | Divergence |
| 2 | When deciding to use single-inhaler fixed triple therapy vs dual LABA/LAMA therapy, the COPD phenotype of the patient is taken into account. | 91.11% | 1 | Consensus |
| 3 | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is more effective than dual LABA/LAMA therapy to improve the pulmonary function | 44.44% | 2 | Divergence |
| 4 | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is more effective than dual LABA/LAMA therapy to improve dyspnea in symptomatic patients (CAT>10), independently of FEV1 and of the number of previous exacerbations. | 80.00% | 2 | Consensus |
| 5a | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy significantly improves the health-related quality of life (measured by the St. George’s Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ)) compared to dual LABA/LAMA therapy. | 62.22% | 2 | Divergence |
| 5b | In your clinical practice, the single-inhaler fixed triple therapy improves the health-related quality of life when compared with dual LABA/LAMA therapy. | 46.67% | 2 | Divergence |
| 6a | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is more effective than dual LABA/LAMA therapy to reduce the number of exacerbations in a patient with COPD and FEV1 < 50% | 62.22% | 2 | Divergence |
| 6b | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is more effective than dual LABA/LAMA therapy to reduce the number of exacerbations in a patient with COPD and frequent exacerbations. | 77.78% | 2 | Majority |
| 7 | In COPD patients treated with dual LABA/LAMA therapy hospitalized because of one severe or two moderate exacerbations, the treatment must be escalated to single-inhaler fixed triple therapy independently of the number of eosinophils. | 84.44% | 2 | Consensus |
| 8 | In COPD patients treated with dual LABA/LAMA therapy hospitalized because of one severe or two moderate exacerbations and with a number of eosinophils <100, the treatment must be escalated to single-inhaler fixed triple therapy | 51.11% | 2 | Divergence |
| 9a | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy improves COPD patients’ survival compared to dual LABA/LAMA therapy | 44.44% | 2 | Divergence |
| 9b | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy improves survival of COPD patients with frequent exacerbations compared to dual LABA/LAMA therapy | 66.67% | 2 | Majority |
| 10 | In a COPD patient receiving monotherapy LABA or LAMA it is correct to escalate to single-inhaler fixed triple therapy skipping dual LABA/ICS therapy | 62.22% | 2 | Divergence |
| 11 | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is more effective than dual LABA/ICS therapy to improve pulmonary function | 84.44% | 1 | Consensus |
| 12 | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is more effective than dual LABA/ICS therapy to improve the symptoms | 95.56% | 2 | Consensus |
| 13 | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is more effective than dual LABA/ICS therapy to improve dyspnea in symptomatic patients (CAT>10), independently of FEV1 and of the number of previous exacerbations | 95.56% | 2 | Consensus |
| 14a | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy significantly improves the health-related quality of life (measured by the SGRQ questionnaire) compared with dual LABA/ICS therapy | 95.56% | 2 | Consensus |
| 14b | In your clinical practice, single-inhaler fixed triple therapy significantly improves health-related quality of life compared to dual LABA/ICS therapy | 75.56% | 2 | Majority |
| 15a | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is more effective than dual LABA/ICS therapy reducing the number of exacerbations in a COPD patient with FEV1 < 50% | 84.44% | 2 | Consensus |
| 15b | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is more effective than dual LABA/ICS therapy reducing the number of exacerbations in a COPD patient with frequent exacerbations | 93.33% | 2 | Consensus |
| 16 | In COPD patients treated with dual LABA/ICS therapy hospitalized because of one severe or two moderate exacerbations, the treatment must be escalated to single-inhaler fixed triple therapy, independently of the number of eosinophils | 80.00% | 2 | Consensus |
| 17 | In COPD patients treated with dual LABA/ICS therapy hospitalized because of one severe or two moderated exacerbations and with a number of eosinophils < 100, the treatment must be escalated to single-inhaler fixed triple therapy | 68.89% | 2 | Majority |
| 18a | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy improves survival in COPD patients compared to dual LABA/ICS therapy | 57.78% | 2 | Divergence |
| 18b | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy improves survival in COPD patients with frequent exacerbations compared to dual LABA/ICS therapy | 62.22% | 2 | Divergence |
| 19 | Based on your clinical experience, currently efficacy differences exist among the known single-inhaler fixed triple therapies | 57.78% | 2 | Divergence |
| 20 | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is more effective than open triple therapy in improving the pulmonary function | 46.67% | 2 | Divergence |
| 21 | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is more effective than open triple therapy in improving dyspnea | 64.44% | 2 | Divergence |
| 22 | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is more effective than open triple therapy in improving quality of life | 62.22% | 2 | Divergence |
| 23 | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is more effective than open triple therapy in reducing the number of moderate and severe exacerbations | 42.22% | 2 | Divergence |
| 24 | In the subgroup of patients suffering >1 moderate-severe exacerbation in the 12 previous months, the single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is more effective than open triple therapy in reducing the number of moderate-severe exacerbations | 44.44% | 2 | Divergence |
Notes: The final results were determined considering the degree of agreement among the panellists meant consensus: ≥80%; majority ≥66%; or divergence (<66%). NAND: neither agreement nor disagreement. *Indicates the round where the degree of agreement shown was reached. In bold those words changed from round one to round two.
Results of the Degree of Agreement of the Panelists with the Statements Regarding Safety of Single-Inhaler Fixed Triple Therapy vs LABA/LAMA, LABA/ICS and Open Triple Therapy After the two Delphi Rounds
| # | Statement | % Agreement | Round* | Final Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 25 | Based on your clinical experience, currently differences exist in the safety profile of the different known single-inhaler fixed triple therapies | 62.22% | 2 | Divergence |
| 26 | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy has the same risk of producing pneumonia than dual LABA/LAMA therapy | 86.67% | 2 | Consensus |
| 27 | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy produces similar cardiovascular adverse effects to those produced by dual LABA/LAMA therapy | 82.22% | 1 | Consensus |
| 28 | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy produces similar local adverse effects to those produced by dual LABA/LAMA therapy | 82.22% | 2 | Consensus |
| 29 | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy causes more pneumonia cases than dual LABA/ICS therapy | 80.00% | 1 | Consensus |
| 30 | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy produces similar cardiovascular adverse effects to those produced by dual LABA/ICS therapy | 88.89% | 2 | Consensus |
| 31 | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy causes more pneumonia cases than open triple therapy | 86.67% | 1 | Consensus |
| 32 | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy produces similar cardiovascular adverse effects to those produced by open triple therapy | 82.22% | 1 | Consensus |
| 33 | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy produces similar local adverse effects to those produced by open triple therapy | 84.44% | 1 | Consensus |
Notes: The final results were determined considering the degree of agreement among the panelists: consensus ≥80%; majority ≥66%; or divergence (<66%). NAND: neither agreement nor disagreement. *Indicates the round where the degree of agreement shown was reached. In bold are words changed from round one to round two.
Results of the Degree of Agreement Among the Panelists with the Statements Regarding Treatment with Single-Inhaler Fixed Triple Therapy in Specific Patient Types After the two Delphi Rounds
| # | Statement | % Agreement | Round* | Final Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 34 | In high risk, non-exacerbator COPD patients, with a number of eosinophils > 300, single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is indicated as starting therapy | 73.33% | 2 | Majority |
| 35 | In patients with more than wo exacerbations and a number of eosinophils < 100, single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is indicated as starting therapy | 75.56% | 2 | Majority |
| 36 | In patients with very severe obstruction (FEV1 <30%) who do not present exacerbations, single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is indicated as starting therapy | 42.22% | 2 | Divergence |
| 37 | The use of single-inhaler fixed triple therapy needs to be indicated by the pneumologist | 62.22% | 2 | Divergence |
| 38 | To make the decision of using single-inhaler fixed triple therapy, it must be taken into account if the patient has pneumonia precedent | 75.56% | 2 | Majority |
Notes: The final results were determined considering the degree of agreement among the panelists: consensus ≥80%; majority ≥66%; or divergence (<66%). NAND: neither agreement nor disagreement. *Indicates the round where the degree of agreement shown was reached. In bold are those words changed from round one to round two.
Results of the Degree of Agreement Among the Panelists with the Statements Regarding the Different Device Options After the two Delphi Rounds
| # | Statement | % Agreement | Round* | Final Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 39 | The Ellipta® device has shown a lesser number of critical errors compared to other devices that use triple therapy | 93.33% | 2 | Consensus |
| 40 | The fine particle with Modulite® technique has shown bigger pulmonary deposit in peripheral airways than other devices that use triple therapy | 82.22% | 2 | Consensus |
| 41 | The pulmonary deposit originated by the single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is similar to the one originated by the dual LAMA/LABA therapy | 51.11% | 2 | Divergence |
| 42 | The pulmonary deposit originated by the single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is similar to the one originated by the dual LABA/ICS therapy | 60.00% | 2 | Divergence |
| 43 | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy leads to a higher decrease in the number of critical errors than open triple therapy | 93.33% | 1 | Consensus |
| 44 | Single-inhaler fixed triple therapy leads to higher adherence to the treatment than open triple therapy | 93.33% | 1 | Consensus |
| 45 | The administration pattern of single-inhaler fixed triple therapy every 12 hours is more effective than every 24 hours pattern | 84.44% | 2 | Consensus |
| 46 | The administration pattern of single-inhaler fixed triple therapy every 24 hours improves the adherence compared to every 12 hours pattern. | 84.44% | 2 | Consensus |
Notes: The final results were determined considering the degree of agreement among the panellists: consensus ≥80%; majority ≥66%; or divergence (<66%). NAND: neither agreement nor disagreement. *Indicates the round where the degree of agreement shown was reached.
Results of the Degree of Agreement Among the Panelists with the Statements Regarding Costs of the Diverse Therapeutic Options for the COPD Patients After the two Delphi Rounds
| # | Statement | % Agreement | Round* | Final Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 47 | In patients with symptomatic COPD, the single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is more cost-effective than the dual LABA/ICS therapy | 75.56% | 2 | Majority |
| 48 | In high-risk patients according to the GesEPOC definition, the single-inhaler fixed triple therapy is more cost-effective than the dual LABA/LAMA therapy | 53.33% | 2 | Divergence |
Notes: The final results were determined considering the degree of agreement among the panelists: consensus ≥80%; majority ≥66%; or divergence (<66%). NAND: neither agreement nor disagreement. *Indicates the round where the degree of agreement shown was reached. In bold are those words changed from round one to round two.