Abstract
Abediterol (LAS100977) is a novel, long-acting β2-agonist, in development for the once-daily treatment of asthma in combination with mometasone. Here we report the results of a Phase IIa trial of single doses of abediterol added to ongoing maintenance therapy (inhaled corticosteroids) in patients with persistent mild-to-moderate asthma. This was a randomised, double-blind, placebo- and active-comparator-controlled, five-way crossover study. Male patients (18-70 years) with a clinical diagnosis of persistent asthma received abediterol (5, 10 and 25μg), salmeterol and placebo, on top of ongoing maintenance therapy. Lung function was determined using spirometry and whole body plethysmography. The primary efficacy endpoint was change from baseline in trough forced expiratory volume in 1s (FEV1) after a single dose. All three abediterol doses induced statistically significant increases in trough FEV1 vs placebo and salmeterol. Improvements in other lung function parameters were also statistically significantly greater with all abediterol doses vs both placebo (p<0.0001) and salmeterol (p<0.05) than the first assessment at 5min post-dose. These improvements were sustained to 36h post-dose. The profile of treatment-emergent adverse events judged as related to abediterol was consistent with that seen after adrenergic stimulation and occurred exclusively in patients who received abediterol 10μg or 25μg. This first-in-patient study revealed the potent, rapid and long-acting bronchodilatory effect of abediterol in patients with persistent mild-to-moderate asthma together with an overall good safety and tolerability profile. Further studies are now underway to establish the optimal efficacy-safety-tolerability profile for this compound.
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