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Spiriva might help patients with poorly controlled asthma, preliminary study finds
HealthDay News
For asthma patients whose condition is not controlled with standard inhaled steroids, the addition of Spiriva—a medication already approved for lung disease—appears to improve breathing, a new study finds.
However, the study authors and an outside expert stressed that these are early findings and much longer, larger clinical trials are needed.
The report, funded by the US National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, is published in the Sept. 19 online edition of the New England Journal of Medicine. The journal released the data early to coincide with its presentation at the European Respiratory Society meeting in Barcelona.
Tiotropium bromide (Spiriva)) belongs to a class of drugs called anticholinergics, which work by enlarging the airways to allow for easier breathing. Currently, the US Food and Drug Administration has only approved the medication for use by patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
Treating asthma has never been a one-size-fits-all proposition, so “having a new class of asthma medications could be potentially important,” said lead researcher Stephen P. Peters, MD, a professor of pulmonary, critical care, allergy, and immunologic medicine at Wake Forest University, in Winston-Salem, NC.
“People are different. Some people will respond to some medications, some respond to others,” he said.
For the study, Peters’ team tried three drug regimens on 210 asthmatics. These included: Spiriva plus an inhaled steroid; a double dose of the inhaled steroid; and an inhaled steroid plus Serevent, a long-acting beta agonist that relaxes the muscles in the airway.Patients stayed on each regiment for 14 weeks.
Spiriva plus an inhaled steroid was more effective than giving a double dose of steroids in improving breathing and controlling asthma for these tough-to-treat patients.
In addition, the combination of an inhaled steroid and Spiriva was not less effective than using an inhaled steroid plus Serevent, they said.
That’s important, Peters said, because there have been some safety concerns raised about long-acting beta agonists. These drugs carry a note on their labels warning of the possibility of severe adverse events, including death, he noted.
The results need to be confirmed in a much larger pool of patients, Peters said, and he noted that the patients were not followed long enough to see if Spiriva was able to reduce the severity of asthma attacks and hospitalizations. In addition, Spiriva’s safety profile among asthmatics still needs to be studied, he said.
Because the drug is not yet FDA-approved for use in asthma, Peters still does not recommend it for that use. “My hope is that in three to five years we will have the drug approved for asthma,” he said.
Shirin Shafazand, MD, an assistant professor of pulmonary, critical care and sleep medicine at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, said that “perhaps there is a role for Spiriva in these poorly controlled asthmatics.”
However, at this stage there is no definitive answer whether Spiriva should or shouldn’t be used in asthma, she said.
