| Literature DB >> 36087251 |
Raúl De Simón Gutiérrez1, Raúl Piedra Castro2.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are chronic respiratory diseases that remain uncontrolled in many patients, despite the wide range of therapeutic options available. This review analyzes the available clinical evidence on 3 budesonide/formoterol DPI devices, Spiromax®, Turbuhaler®, and Easyhaler®, in terms of patient-reported outcomes (PROs), inhaler errors, and asthma and COPD control. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Asthma; COPD; Dry powder inhalers; Inhaler error; Patient-reported outcomes; Spiromax
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36087251 PMCID: PMC9532287 DOI: 10.1007/s11882-022-01041-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Allergy Asthma Rep ISSN: 1529-7322 Impact factor: 4.919
Clinical trials reporting PROs, handling errors, and disease control with Spiromax®
| Sandler et al. [ | Single-center, crossover | Healthy volunteers | Single visit | To assess mastery, handling errors and preferences among Spiromax®, Turbuhaler® and Easyhaler® | Spiromax® was the easiest DPI to use (73.1%), followed by Turbuhaler® (12.6%) and Easyhaler® (14.3%). | |
| Rönmark et al. [ | Single-center, randomized, crossover | Healthy volunteers | Single visit | To assess proper use and preferences of Spiromax®, Turbuhaler® and Easyhaler® | Spiromax® was preferred over Turbuhaler® and Easyhaler® by most patients in terms of device handling (59%) and intuitive use/ease of use (61%). | |
| Price et al. [ | Multicenter, randomized, open-label, parallel-group, crossover | Adults with moderate-to-severe asthma | 12 weeks | To determine inhaler technique and achievement and maintenance of mastery BF Spiromax® and BF Turbuhaler® | Crossover Longitudinal | BF Spiromax® showed higher levels of DPI mastery than BF Turbuhaler® (OR 2.11 [95% CI 1.25–3.54], |
| BF Spiromax® was preferred over BF Turbuhaler® according to PASAPQ. | ||||||
| Asthma control improved with both groups according to the ACQ, (OR 0.11 [95% CI − 0.09 to 0.30], | ||||||
| Virchow et al. [ | Multicenter, phase 3b, randomized, double-blind, double-dummy | Patients ≥ 12 years with persistent asthma | 12 weeks | To evaluate the efficacy and safety of BF Spiromax® vs. BF Turbuhaler® | BF Spiromax® demonstrated non-inferiority vs. BF Turbuhaler® according to PEF. | |
| BF Spiromax® was preferred by a greater number of patients. | ||||||
| More patients wanted to continue with BF Spiromax® after the study. | ||||||
| Schreiber et al. [ | Single-center, open-label, cross-sectional | Adults with asthma or COPD | Single visit | To evaluate the correct use and preference of 10 inhalers | Asthma COPD | Spiromax® was preferred by 20% of patients, followed by Nexthaler® (15%) and Turbuhaler® (14%) or a pMDI, according to PASAPQ and FSI-10. |
DPI dry powder inhaler, BF budesonide and formoterol, OR odds ratio, CI confidence interval, PASAPQ patient satisfaction and preference questionnaire, ACQ asthma control questionnaire, PEF peak expiratory flow, COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, pMDI pressurized metered dose inhaler, FSI-10 Feeling of Satisfaction with inhaler questionnaire
Observational studies reporting PROs and handling errors with Spiromax®, Turbuhaler®, and Easyhaler®
| Giner et al. [ | Observational, multicenter, international study | Adults with asthma or COPD | Single visit | To evaluate the appropriate use and PROs of BF Spiromax® and BF Turbuhaler® | • BF Spiromax® showed a lower total number of errors vs. BF Turbuhaler® (1.4 vs. 1.9; p < 0.001) and fewer handling errors (0.5 vs. 0.8; | |
| • BF Spiromax® is easier to learn how to use ( | ||||||
| • BF Spiromax® was preferred by a greater number of patients (79.5%) over BF Turbuhaler®. | ||||||
| van der Palen et al. [ | Observational, multicenter, international, cross-sectional study | Adults with asthma or COPD | Single visit | To evaluate adherence, satisfaction, and ease of use of BF Spiromax® | • Overall, 72.5% showed medium-to-high adherence (MMAS-8 ≥ 6). | |
| • Satisfaction was 8.9 (± 1.6) (scale from 1 to 10), with 98.8% being satisfied and 85.4% very satisfied. | ||||||
| • Ease of use was 9.1 (± 1.3) (scale 1 to 10). | ||||||
| Piedra Castro et al. [ | Observational, multicenter, national study | Patients with asthma and COPD | 3 months | To evaluate the efficacy, disease control, and satisfaction of BF Spiromax® vs. BF Turbuhaler® | • BF Spiromax® was superior in terms of disease control (ACT absolute mean effect 3.3 [95% CI − 0.4 to 2.8] | |
| • BF Spiromax® was superior in terms of satisfaction: FSI-10 (in asthma, mean absolute effect 9.5 [95% CI 6.4–12.6], | ||||||
| • BF Spiromax® showed non-inferiority vs. BF Turbuhaler® in clinical efficacy according to FEV1. | ||||||
| Voorham et al. [ | Observational, cohort, retrospective, case-matched study | Adults with asthma and COPD | 1 year | To evaluate non-inferiority in disease control after switching to BF Spiromax® vs. continuing with BF Turbuhaler® | Asthma COPD | • BF Spiromax® was not inferior to BF Turbuhaler® in disease control (difference + 6.6%; [95% CI − 0.3 to 13.5]). |
| • Asthma patients using BF Spiromax® reported fewer exacerbations (RR 0.76; [95% CI 0.60–0.99] | ||||||
| • No significant differences were observed in COPD. | ||||||
| Gillissen et al. [ | Prospective observational study | Adults with asthma and COPD | 12 weeks | To evaluate satisfaction, errors, disease control, and safety in patients who switched to BF Spiromax® | COPD | • The proportion of patients who were satisfied or very satisfied increased from 60.1 to 88.8%. |
| • A total of 62.1% of patients preferred BF Spiromax® over their old inhaler. | ||||||
| • Fewer handling errors were observed with BF Spiromax® (11.9% vs. 25.5%) vs. their old inhaler. | ||||||
| • The health status of 77.4% of patients improved. | ||||||
| • Disease severity improved according to clinicians and patients. | ||||||
| Roche et al. [ | Prospective multicenter observational study | Adults with asthma | 12 weeks | To evaluate inhaler techniques, the relationship between critical errors and disease control, and factors related to device handling errors after switching to BF Spiromax® | • Overall, 67% of patients used BF Spiromax® without handling errors and 88% without critical handling errors. | |
| • Comorbidities were associated with handling errors, while concurrent illness that could affect device handling and prior training were associated with critical handling errors. | ||||||
| • Most patients (85.4%) preferred BF Spiromax® over their previous device (BF Turbuhaler® or Seretide® Diskus®). | ||||||
| • Levels of inadequately controlled-uncontrolled asthma were lower in patients using BF Spiromax® (8.6% vs. 64.6%), but higher in the presence of critical handling errors. |
COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, PRO patient-reported outcome, BF budesonide and formoterol, MMAS-8 8-item Morisky medication adherence scale, ACT asthma control test, CI confidence interval, CAT COPD assessment test, FSI-10 feeling of satisfaction with inhaler questionnaire, FEV forced expiratory volume in 1 s, RR risk ratio, SABA short-acting beta-agonist, OR odds ratio