Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Replacement of Nebulised Ipratropium With Inhaled Tiotropium in Stable COPD
Some patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) take nebulised treatments to ease the symptom of breathlessness, including the drug ipratropium. Nebulised bronchodilator drugs are taken up to 4 times through the day, and this can take up to 15 minutes each time. Although the treatment isbe effective, patients report that the time taken to set-up and use the nebuliser can be a disincentive to regular use. By contrast, an inhaler device is easy to use following appropriate instruction, and takes only a few seconds to administer. Inhaled tiotropium is a once daily treatment taken by inhaler which has been shown to be effective in COPD. We wish to assess whether inhaled Tiotropium as effective as nebulised ipratropium in patients with stable chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Tiotropium and ipratropium bromide are both antimuscarinic bronchodilators, licensed for the
treatment of COPD with a similar side-effect profile. Tiotropium administered by an inhaler
device (Handihaler®) has been shown to be superior to placebo and inhaled ipratropium
bromide in patients with COPD, in both short term and longer term studies. The superiority
of inhaled tiotropium over inhaled ipratropium bromide has been demonstrated for lung
function tests and also for measures of health status. It is not known however if inhaled
tiotropium is superior to ipratropium bromide administered via a nebuliser.
We wish to examine whether inhaled tiotropium is as effective and safe as nebulised
ipratropium bromide in patients with chronic stable COPD.
Design The study will be a randomised, crossover study. The patients will not be blinded to
the therapy but the technician performing the pulmonary function tests will be blinded to
the patients' therapy.
Duration The length of the study for each patient will be 12 weeks.
Patient group Patients would be recruited from the population of patients supplied with a
nebuliser from the respiratory department at Glasgow Royal Infirmary. Patients will be
identified from those regularly attending the out-patients department and who have stable
disease. Patients who frequently admitted to the respiratory ward with exacerbations of
their disease will be excluded. Patients will be recruited at the rate of 2 per week. The
study will be a single site study.
Following consent the patients would be asked to complete the St George's respiratory
questionnaire, undergo brief spirometry and a general heath/satisfaction questionnaire,
including the baseline and transitional dyspnoea index. Patient demographics will be
collected including; age, sex, duration of COPD, smoking history, height, weight, concurrent
therapy inhaled and oral.
The patients would then be randomised to either remain on their nebulised ipratropium for a
further 6 weeks or to be commenced on inhaled tiotropium via the HandiHaler. Patients
commenced on tiotropium would be given instruction on how to use the new inhaler and be told
not to use their nebulised ipratropium. All other medication would remain the same. The
patients randomised to ipratropium would be instructed on continue to take their nebulised
ipratropium as before. All patients would be issued with a diary card on which they would
record their pattern of nebuliser use, symptoms, adverse events and any additional
medication required eg antibiotics. Patients will also be asked to record any health
resource use, eg visits to their GP or admission to hospital on the diary card. A compliance
check in the form of a capsule count will be undertaken.
At the end of the six weeks the patients would again undergo brief spirometry, and complete
the St George's respiratory questionnaire and a general health/satisfaction questionnaire.
At this point the patient's therapy will be crossed over, such that those who were taking
the inhaler would now take the nebuliser and vice versa. There will be no wash out period
between arms of the study, since comparisons will be made between baseline and the end of
each period of treatment for lung function and questionnaires, and diary cards will be
analysed only for the final 4 weeks of each treatment period. Those patients to commence on
tiotropium would be given instruction on how to use their inhaler and those restarting
ipratropium would be asked to take their nebulised therapy as before. All patients would be
issued with a diary card on which they would record their pattern of nebuliser use,
symptoms, adverse events and any additional medication required eg antibiotics. Patients
will also be asked to record any health resource use, eg visits to their GP or admission to
hospital on the diary card.
At the end of the second 6-week period the patients would again complete the St George's
respiratory questionnaire, undergo brief spirometry and a general heath/satisfaction
questionnaire as before. A compliance check in the form of a capsule count will be
undertaken.
At the end of the study patients will be asked which therapy was preferred and a
recommendation will be made to their GP depending on their preference.
Details of the patient's last dose of inhaled therapy will be recorded at the time of
spirometry.
Patient numbers The number of patients to be included in the study is 45. The patient
numbers are based on a 90% statistical power to detect a mean change of 0.2L in FEV1 between
visits 2 and 3 as a result of treatment, using a 5% significance level paired test. This
justification is based on previous studies which conservatively indicate the standard
deviation of FEV1 values to be 0.4L. Statistical analysis will be undertaken for differences
in the mean FEV1 values between visits 2 and 3 using a paired design and parametric testing.
Results will be presented using the differences in means between treatments and the
associated 95% confidence interval. Other response variables will be similarly analysed for
evidence of any difference in treatment effect, with analysis of diary cards only for the
final 4 weeks of each treatment.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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