Asthma Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Retrospective Evaluation of the Effectiveness of Fixed-dose Combination Inhaled Corticosteroid /. Long-acting Beta Agonist (ICS/LABA) Therapy in the Management of Asthma in a Representative UK Primary Care Population
This study will evaluate and compare the effectiveness of asthma management in patients with evidence of persistent asthma following a switch in asthma therapy to combination inhaled glucocorticosteroid (ICS) / long-acting bronchodilator (LABA) therapy as either: fixed-combination fluticasone propionate / salmeterol (FP/SAL; Seretide®) via pressurised metered-dose inhaler (pMDI) or dry-powder inhaler (DPI) plus as-needed (prn) reliever therapy (salbutamol as DPI, BAI or pMDI), or fixed-combination budesonide / formoterol (BUD/FOR; Symbicort®) via DPI plus prn reliever therapy (salbutamol as DPI, BAI or pMDI or bricanyl as DPI). The final analysis plan will define exact comparators and age groups to be studied after reviewing baseline data.
Current asthma guidelines in the UK are underpinned by evidence derived from randomised
controlled trials (RCTs). Although RCT data are considered the gold standard, patients
recruited to asthma RCTs are estimated to represent less than 10% of the UK's asthma
population. The poor representation of the asthma population is due to a number of factors,
such as tightly-controlled inclusion criteria for RCTs. There is, therefore, a need for more
representative RCTs and real-life observational studies to inform existing guidelines and
help optimise asthma outcomes.
The fixed combination asthma inhalers FP/SAL (as pMDI and DPI) and BUD/FOR (as DPI) are
indicated for use in asthma when adequate asthma control is not achieved with low / medium
dose ICS therapy and prn reliever therapy (a short-acting beta-agonist [SABA]). Fixed
combination inhalers are also indicated in patients already adequately controlled on
separate ICS/LABA therapy. However, emerging trends in asthma prescribing indicate
increasing use of add-on therapies (particularly in the form of combination inhalers) in the
early stages of asthma therapy, even as first-line therapy.
The British Thoracic Society (BTS) Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN)
guidelines on the management of asthma advise that there is no difference in efficacy
between ICS/LABA therapy given as separate or combined inhalers. However, they do note that,
once a patients is on stable therapy, combination inhalers have the advantage of
guaranteeing that patients do not take their LABA without their ICS.
In practice, there is significant pressure (supported by asthma guidelines) to use the least
expensive, effective inhaled therapies available. While the effect of increased use of
combination therapies in terms of patient benefits remains uncertain, the impact on
treatment costs for the United Kingdom's (UK's) National Health Service (NHS) is unequivocal
and, to date, there are limited data available as to the absolute and relative effectiveness
of the ICS/LABA combination therapies currently licensed.
There are a number of inhaler delivery devices available for use in asthma management.
Whatever therapy is prescribed, optimal treatment response requires effective drug delivery
within the airways; selecting the most appropriate delivery device for an asthma patient,
therefore, plays an important role in optimising their asthma control. According to the
recent BTS/SIGN guidelines, there is currently no evidence of a clinical difference in the
effectiveness of therapy delivery via pMDI ± spacer compared with DPI in either adults or
children, and more recent DPIs are rated as effective as older DPIs. Effective use of DPIs
and pMDI requires entirely different inhalation techniques and there is some debate as to
whether patients prescribed different device types for their reliever and preventer
medication (requiring different techniques for each) may have poorer disease control than
those prescribed the same device type for both preventer and reliever. Combining aerosols
(e.g. pMDI preventer plus BAI reliever) is not considered to cause a problem in this
respect.
The aim of this study is to compare the absolute and relative effectiveness of currently
licensed ICS/LABA combinations - FP/SAL and BUD/FOR (and their available delivery devices) -
in children and adults with asthma whose therapy was changed or increased. Consideration
will also be given to the effect of reliever therapy inhaler and the effect of consistency
of device used (i.e. same or different devices for preventer and inhaler therapies) on
asthma control outcomes. Also to be evaluated are the associated impact of inhaler technique
review, recorded inhaler handling problems and use of a spacer in conjunction with a pMDI in
terms of achieving asthma control outcomes.
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Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Retrospective
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