Abstract

BackgroundInhaled corticosteroids are the recommended first-line treatment for asthma but adherence to therapy is suboptimal. The objectives of this study were to compare the efficacy and safety of once-daily (OD) evening and twice-daily (BD) regimens of the novel inhaled corticosteroid fluticasone furoate (FF) in asthma patients.MethodsPatients with moderate asthma (age ≥ 12 years; pre-bronchodilator forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) 40-85% predicted; FEV1 reversibility of ≥ 12% and ≥ 200 ml) were randomized to FF or fluticasone propionate (FP) regimens in a double-blind, crossover study. Patients were not permitted to have used any ICS for ≥ 8 weeks prior to enrolment and subsequently received doses of FF or FP 200 μg OD, FF or FP 100 μg BD and matching placebo by inhalation for 28 days each. Primary endpoint was Day 28 evening pre-dose (trough) FEV1; non-inferiority of FF 200 μg OD and FF 100 μg BD was assessed, as was superiority of all active treatment relative to placebo. Adverse events (AEs) and 24-hour urinary cortisol excretion were assessed.ResultsThe intent-to-treat population comprised 147 (FF) and 43 (FP) patients. On Day 28, pre-dose FEV1 showed FF 200 μg OD to be non-inferior (pre-defined limit -110 ml) to FF 100 μg BD (mean treatment difference 11 ml; 95% CI: -35 to +56 ml); all FF and FP regimens were significantly superior to placebo (p ≤ 0.02). AEs were similar to placebo; no serious AEs were reported. Urinary cortisol excretion at Day 28 for FF was lower than placebo (ratios: 200 μg OD, 0.75; 100 μg BD, 0.84; p ≤ 0.02).ConclusionsFF 200 μg OD in the evening is an efficacious and well tolerated treatment for asthma patients and is not inferior to the same total BD dose.Trial registrationClinicaltrials.gov; NCT00766090.

Highlights

  • Inhaled corticosteroids are the recommended first-line treatment for asthma but adherence to therapy is suboptimal

  • Baseline demographic and clinical characteristics of patients assigned to the two sets of treatment sequences (FF and fluticasone propionate (FP)) are shown in table 2

  • Efficacy The mean values of pre-dose forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) on Day 28 in each treatment group and the mean changes compared with period baseline (Day 0) are shown in table 3 for both

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Summary

Introduction

Inhaled corticosteroids are the recommended first-line treatment for asthma but adherence to therapy is suboptimal. ICS are typically developed for twice-daily dosing but once-daily evening dosing of an ICS has been reported to significantly improve adherence to therapy compared with twice-daily dosing (93.3% vs 89.3% [p < 0.001] as measured by automatic dose counter) in an open-label 12 week study of mometasone furoate [7] This is a benefit that has the potential to improve patient outcomes, given the association between poor adherence rates ( for controller medications) and uncontrolled asthma in children and adults [8,9], and the reported correlation between falling rates of adherence to ICS and higher rates of asthma-related hospitalization in adults [10]

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